Santiago
The
number of coronavirus infections globally topped seven million on
Monday as deaths mounted in Latin America, but New Zealand's declaration
of victory against the pandemic offered some hope for the rest of the
world.
Europe also continued to emerge from
its lockdown, with Pope Francis proclaiming that the worst was over in
Italy although he expressed sympathy for Latin America.
"Your
presence in the square is a sign that in Italy the acute phase of the
epidemic is over," Francis said on Sunday while addressing Catholics in
Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican for the first time since the
Covid-19 crisis began.
"Unfortunately in other countries – I am thinking of some of them – the virus continues to claim many victims."
Rising
numbers of deaths were recorded from Brazil to Mexico to Peru, driving
the confirmed global death toll above 400,000 and the number of declared
infections over seven million, according to an AFP tally.
BRAZIL IN CRISIS
Brazil's
crisis is escalating and it has the world's third-highest death toll at
more than 36,000, but President Jair Bolsonaro continues to play down
the impact of the virus.
In Chile the
confirmed death toll reached 2,290 after miscalculations from March and
April were corrected, adding 1,541 to the figure, health minister Jaime
Manalich said Sunday.
The virus, which
emerged in China late last year, has forced more than half of humanity
into some form of lockdown over the past six months and driven the
global economy towards its worst downturn since the Great Depression.
China,
which has been accused of covering up the crucial early stages of the
virus, on Sunday hit back at critics, saying it "will respond in the
face of rumours, defamation, attacks and smearing".
National
Health Commission director Ma Xiaowei said reports the government
delayed sharing the virus genome sequence "seriously go against the
facts".
NEW ZEALAND MILESTONE
Elsewhere
in the Asia-Pacific region there was progress, with New Zealand Prime
Minister Jacinda Ardern telling reporters she danced around her living
room on hearing her country had reached the milestone of zero active
infections.
The South Pacific nation lifted all domestic restrictions on Monday after it went 17 days with no new infections.
This
allowed New Zealand Rugby to announce a restart to a top-flight
domestic competition this week, with fans allowed to pack into the
stadiums.
"We're incredibly proud, and
grateful, to be the first professional sports competition in the world
to be in a position to have our teams play in front of their fans
again," NZR chief Mark Robinson said.
THAILAND ESCAPES HIGH TOLL
Thailand
also hit a positive milestone after two weeks with no local infections.
The only recorded cases came from overseas arrivals who were
quarantined.
The kingdom was the first
country outside China to officially report a Covid-19 case in January
but it has largely escaped the high tolls seen elsewhere in the region,
with just 58 deaths.
Fears that large parts
of Asia could still have the worst in front of them persist, however,
with the death toll and infection rate climbing sharply in India.
Still,
after a 10-week lockdown, the government is risking lifting some curbs
to ease the devastating impacts on the economy, and malls and temples
re-opened in several Indian cities on Monday.
POST-PANDEMIC NORMAL
In
Europe, countries are slowly working towards a post-pandemic normal and
trying to revive tourism sectors in time for the summer peak season.
Britain
said it would reopen places of worship for individual prayer on June
15, but also on Monday began imposing a two-week quarantine period for
most arrivals into the country – a move that prompted legal action by
airlines.
British Airways and the low-cost
carriers EasyJet and Ryanair said in a joint statement the measure would
devastate tourism and destroy even more jobs.
The European Union has said it could re-open borders to travellers from outside the bloc in early July.
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