
Audio By Carbonatix
Coronavirus-related deaths worldwide crossed 3 million on Tuesday, according to a Reuters tally, as the latest global resurgence of Covid-19 infections is challenging vaccination efforts across the globe.
Worldwide Covid-19 deaths are rising once again, especially in Brazil and India. Health officials blame more infectious variants that were first detected in the United Kingdom and South Africa, along with public fatigue with lockdowns and other restrictions.
According to a Reuters tally, it took more than a year for the global coronavirus death toll to reach 2 million. The next 1 million deaths were added in about three months.
Brazil is leading the world in the daily average number of new deaths reported and accounts for one in every four deaths worldwide each day, according to a Reuters analysis.
The World Health Organization acknowledged the nation’s dire condition due to coronavirus, saying the country is in a very critical condition with an overwhelmed healthcare system.
“Indeed there is a very serious situation going on in Brazil right now, where we have a number of states in critical condition,” WHO epidemiologist Maria Van Kerkhove told a briefing last Thursday, adding that many hospital intensive care units are more than 90% full.
India reported a record rise in Covid-19 infections on Monday, becoming the second nation after the United States to post more than 100,000 new cases in a day.
India’s worst-affected state, Maharashtra on Monday began shutting shopping malls, cinemas, bars, restaurants, and places of worship, as hospitals are being overrun by patients.
The European region, which includes 51 countries, has the highest total number of deaths at nearly 1.1 million.
Five European countries including the United Kingdom, Russia, France, Italy and Germany constitute about 60% of Europe’s total coronavirus-related deaths.
The United States has the highest number of deaths in any country in the world at 555,000 and accounts for about 19% of all deaths due to Covid-19 in the world. Cases have risen for the last three weeks but health officials believe the nation’s rapid vaccination campaign may prevent a rise in deaths. A third of the population has received at least one dose of a vaccine.
At least 370.3 million people or nearly 4.75% of the global population have received a single dose of Covid-19 vaccine by Sunday, according to latest figures from research and data provider firm Our World in Data.
However, the World Health Organization is urging countries to donate more doses of approved Covid-19 vaccines to help meet vaccination targets for the most vulnerable in poorer countries.
Latest Stories
-
World Bank backs Nigeria 2026–2032 plan with $1.25 billion to spur jobs, private investment
38 minutes -
South African manufacturing sentiment worsens in June, Absa PMI shows
46 minutes -
Oil falls for a third straight day after US, Iran talks conclude in Doha
55 minutes -
World Bank approves Morocco clean energy project after ending climate lending target
1 hour -
Balogun scores and is sent off as US reach last 16
1 hour -
Government begins process to bring home Ghanaian killed in South Africa
1 hour -
We expect urgent action – Ghana presses AU over xenophobic attacks after citizen killed in South Africa
2 hours -
OpenAI proposes handing Trump administration 5% stake, FT reports
2 hours -
Funeral Invitation: Elder Dr. (Pharm.) Samuel Kwasi Nkansah
3 hours -
Oil prices fall 1% to 4-month lows as progress in US-Iran talks cools supply concerns
5 hours -
Mass school kidnappings in Nigeria in recent years
5 hours -
Over 900 arrested during South African anti-migrant protests
5 hours -
Kenyan court charges eight schoolgirls with their fellow students’ murder
5 hours -
Canada to make Eurovision Song Contest debut in 2027
5 hours -
Google has exceeded $1 billion Africa investment target
5 hours