Yahoo – AFP,
Pascale TROUILLAUD, May 10, 2020
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| A funeral worker wearing protective clothing as a preventive measure against the coronavirus walks through Caju Cemetary in Rio de Janeiro on May 9 (AFP Photo/ Carl DE SOUZA) |
Rio de
Janeiro (AFP) - Brazil, the hardest-hit Latin American country in the
coronavirus pandemic, has surpassed 10,000 deaths, according to figures
released Saturday by the Ministry of Health.
While
Brazil's numbers are high -- 10,627 deaths and 155,939 confirmed cases --
scientists think the real figures could be 15 or even 20 times worse, given the
country's inability to carry out widespread testing.
Congress
and the Supreme Court decreed an official mourning period of three days and
lawmakers asked Brazilians to follow health authorities' recommendations to
reduce infection rates while the country prepares for "a safe and
definitive return back to normal."
Meanwhile
President Jair Bolsonaro, who opposes stay-at-home measures due to their impact
on the country's economy, was seen jet skiing on Lake Paranoa in Brasilia,
according to the Metropoles news website.
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| Cemetary workers place the coffin of a coronavirus victim in a grave cubicle at Caju Cemetary in Rio de Janeiro on May 9 (AFP Photo/Carl DE SOUZA) |
Officials
told AFP he did not plan to make a statement on the country reaching 10,000
deaths.
In the last
24 hours alone, the nation saw 10,611 new cases and 730 fatalities, Brazil's
second-highest daily death toll, after a record set on Friday (751 deaths).
'Situation is dire'
Resisting
pressure from Bolsonaro, the governors of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro states
have said they will extend the partial quarantine measures in force since March
until the end of May.
The
pandemic has given rise to ongoing governmental clashes, pitting the president
against governors and mayors who have implemented social distancing and
confinement measures to contain the virus' spread -- efforts supported by the
country's Supreme Court.
In
announcing that his state's lockdown would be prolonged, Sao Paulo Governor
Joao Doria said Friday: "We are at the height of this pandemic. The
situation is dire."
His
southeastern state of almost 46 million inhabitants has seen more than 3,600
deaths and over 44,400 cases.
Neighboring
Rio de Janeiro state, home to more than 16 million people, follows with 1,653
deaths and 16,929 infections. Less populated states such as Ceara, Pernambuco
and Amazonas already have around a thousand dead each.
Amazonas,
home to a number of indigenous tribes that are extremely vulnerable to the
virus, has recorded 232 deaths per million inhabitants, almost three times the
rate in Sao Paulo state.
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Workers dig
graves at Nossa Senhora Cemetery in Manaus, Brazil on May 8
amid the
coronavirus pandemic (AFP Photo/MICHAEL DANTAS)
|
While
Brazil's coronavirus peak is not expected for several more weeks, seven states
have already seen their intensive care units fill to 90 percent capacity.
Bolsonaro,
who has compared the coronavirus to a "little flu," tweeted Saturday
that the country's "army of unemployed continues to grow" in
reference to a factory closure in the northeast, before asking "is chaos
coming?"
On Thursday
the country's economy minister, Paulo Guedes, said Brazil could face
"economic collapse" in a month's time due to stay-at-home measures.
According
to the IMF, Brazil risks a 5.3 percent contraction in GDP this year.




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