WHO: Covid-19 deaths spike 43% in Africa in one week

Africa witnessed a 43 percent surge in coronavirus linked deaths in the last one week, the World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed.

The surge was attributed to a lack of intensive-care beds and oxygen after fatalities rose to 6,273 in the week of July 5-11, compared with 4,384 in the previous week.

The agency’s regional director, Matshidiso Moeti, told a virtual press conference that the rise was “a clear warning sign that hospitals in the most affected countries are reaching breaking point.”

The WHO said the rise in deaths paralleled a chronic shortage of vaccines, a spread in the more contagious Delta variant, which was now being detected in 21 African countries, along with public fatigue over prevention measures.

Africa has officially recorded over six million cases of COVID-19, although experts are worried it could likely be a big underestimate

Separately, after talks with the World Bank on Thursday, African leaders appealed for “at least $100 billion” in commitments of financial support by year’s end to help their countries “recover better” from the pandemic.

“There’s still a lot to be done to overcome this crisis,” said Ivory Coast President, Alassane Ouattara, who opened the meeting in Abidjan.

“Less than three percent of Africa’s total population has received a first dose of vaccine, compared to around 54 percent in the United States and European Union.”

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