Brazil’s COVID-19 death toll crosses the one lakh mark

It is the second-hardest hit country after the United States

August 09, 2020 09:56 pm | Updated 10:10 pm IST - Rio de Janeiro

Marking the dead:  A health union member in Sao Paulo, Brazil, holding a sign reading “Mourning for the 1,00,000 dead” during a tribute to the victims of the virus.

Marking the dead: A health union member in Sao Paulo, Brazil, holding a sign reading “Mourning for the 1,00,000 dead” during a tribute to the victims of the virus.

Brazil on Saturday surpassed 1,00,000 COVID-19 deaths and three million cases of infection, crossing the grim milestone after President Jair Bolsonaro said he had a “clear conscience” on his response to the outbreak.

With 1,00,477 fatalities and 30,12,412 confirmed cases, the South American nation of 212 million people is the second hardest-hit country in the global pandemic, after the United States. The Health Ministry reported 905 new deaths in the past 24 hours, as well as 49,970 fresh cases. But the official figures are most likely an undercount, with experts estimating that the total number of infections could be up to six times higher due to insufficient testing.

Brazil has seen 478 deaths per million people, a figure roughly equivalent to that of the United States (487), but lower than that of Spain (609) or Italy (583).

4 days of mourning

Senate speaker Davi Alcolumbre announced four days of mourning in Congress to pay tribute to the country’s 1,00,000-plus virus victims.

The COVID-19 outbreak in Brazil is showing no sign of slowing as it enters its sixth month. The country’s first confirmed COVID-19 case was identified in Sao Paulo on February 26, with the first death on March 12, also in the city. Brazil marked 50,000 deaths a hundred days later, but then doubled that total in just half the time. Infections have accelerated in recent weeks in the countryside as well as inland regions and areas where the virus was late in arriving, particularly the country’s south and center-west.

In southeastern States such as Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, hardest-hit by the virus in absolute numbers, the situation has stabilised, while the virus’s presence has declined in northern regions after reaching catastrophic levels in April and May. At Copacabana beach in Rio, activists from the NGO Rio de Paz released 1,000 red balloons on Saturday while standing between 100 black crosses stuck in the sand, in a tribute to the victims. Former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Twitter denounced “the arrogance of a President who has chosen to describe this cruel virus as a little flu, defying science and even death, and who bears in his soul the responsibility for all the lives lost.”

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