Brazil has reported 3,650 COVID-19 death toll in a day on Friday, the health ministry said, as the pandemic spins out of control in Latin America’s largest economy.
Since February, Brazil has seen record after record in fatalities and new cases of infection as the country second hardest hit anywhere in the world, after the United States, with more than 307,000 dead from the pandemic.
It broke through the threshold of 3,000 fatalities in one day on Tuesday.
Over the past week, the average daily toll is 2,400 – more than triple what it was in early January.
The toll has risen steadily due to factors including people’s abandoning social distancing norms and a new virus variant that emerged here and is believed to be more contagious than the original strain.
Another big problem is that the country’s vaccination drive is moving slowly. So far only 5.9 percent of the population of 212 million has received at least one dose of coronavirus vaccine.
President Jair Bolsonaro announced this week he was launching a crisis committee to deal with the pandemic, a change of course amid mounting pressure over a situation he has repeatedly minimized.
The announcements appeared to do little to tame criticism of Bolsonaro, who has flouted expert advice on lockdowns and face masks, pushed a drug regimen that scientists say does not work, and spoken out against vaccines.
(AFP)