WHO reports record number of new coronavirus cases as death toll nears 600,000

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A record number of new confirmed coronavirus cases were recorded across the globe on Saturday, with more than 250,000 cases reported, the World Health Organization said.

It was the first time the number of new single-day infections topped a quarter-million, the health agency added, with 259,848 cases recorded. The United States, Brazil, South Africa, and India, which has reached more than one million cases on Friday, reported the biggest increases.

The previous record — set 24 hours earlier — was 237,743 cases.

The WHO said the number of global deaths was approaching 600,000. It said 7,360 new deaths were recorded worldwide on Saturday, the biggest daily rise since early May.

The grim milestone comes amid concerns about the virus re-emerging in Asia and Europe.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said Sunday that the city has recorded more than 100 new cases, in a single-day record for the semi-autonomous territory. Calling the situation “critical,” she said there was no sign “that the situation is being brought under control.” The city has been grappling with the third peak of the coronavirus epidemic since the beginning of July, with a growing number of locally transmitted infections. Lam said social distancing measures announced last week will be extended for another 7 days until at least July 29, and non-essential civil servants will work from home starting Monday to help stop the spread of the virus. She added that she would ask the justice department to consider extending the mandatory face mask requirement on public transport to include all indoor public places.

In mainland China, where the pandemic is believed to have started, 16 new coronavirus cases were reported Sunday, 13 of them in Urumqi, the capital of China’s far western region of Xinjiang. The city went into “wartime mode” on Saturday, with no mass gatherings allowed and residential communities sealed off, according to the Information Office of the Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

Meanwhile, in Spain, which has suffered one of the worst outbreaks in Europe, authorities urged 4 million people in the country’s north-eastern region of Catalonia, including residents of Barcelona, to stay home in the strongest measure to stem virus spread since the country emerged from a nationwide state of emergency last month. Gatherings of more than 10 people have been banned because most infections came from social gatherings, according to local health officials. Police in Barcelona closed down access to a large area of the city’s beaches on Saturday after too many sunbathers ignored authorities’ request to stay at home.

Elsewhere, Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday that some 25 million Iranians may have been infected with coronavirus, as the government reimposed restrictions in the capital and elsewhere. The figure, from a report Rouhani cited in a televised speech, corresponds to nearly 30 percent of Iran’s 85 million population. However, Mostafa Qanei, head of Iran’s coronavirus scientific committee, clarified in a later interview that Rouhani’s remark is based on research by the health ministry that estimates 25 million have come in contact with the virus, developing mild symptoms and without needing hospitalization.

In Australia, residents of the country’s second-largest city Melbourne must now wear masks when leaving their homes amid a rise in cases. The state of Victoria, which Melbourne is capital of, has forced nearly 5 million people into a partial six-week lockdown earlier his month. The state’s health officials reported 363 new cases on Sunday, after 217 cases the previous day. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Saturday delayed the opening of parliament for several weeks as the number of infections rose.

(The story originally published by Reuters and the Associated Press)

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