GENEVA, Switzerland
The World
Health Organization (WHO) said that its “best estimates” indicate that roughly
one in ten people globally may have been infected with Covid-19.Relatives at a mass burial of people at the Parque Taruma cemetery in Manaus, Brazil
The comments were made by Dr.
Michael Ryan, the head of emergency operations at WHO, on Monday, as he addressed
the organization’s 34-member executive board focusing on Covid-19.
Ryan said that the figures vary
from urban to rural, and between different groups, but “the vast majority of
the world remains at risk”.
“We are now heading into a
difficult period as the disease continues to spread,” he warned.
The estimated amount to more than
760 million people based on a current world population of about 7.6 billion —
which is twenty times the number of confirmed cases as tallied by both WHO and
Johns Hopkins University—now at more than 35 million worldwide.
The assertion was reinforced by
Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the Director-General of WHO, who later on led a
minute of silence to honour the victims of Covid-19 and appreciate the work of
frontline workers.
Ryan said Southeast Asia faced a
surge in cases while Europe and the eastern Mediterranean were seeing an
increase in deaths.
Moreover, he added that the
situations in Africa and the Western Pacific were “rather more positive.”
India is currently the country
registering the highest number of daily cases globally, with around 60,000 new
infections in the past twenty-four hours, two days after crossing 100,000 total
fatalities.
Ryan said that the pandemic would
continue to evolve, but that tools exist to suppress transmission and save
lives.
“Many deaths have been averted and many more lives can be protected,” he said.
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