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UPDATE 1-Asia becomes second region to exceed 10 million coronavirus cases

Published 10/24/2020, 02:21 PM
Updated 10/24/2020, 02:30 PM
© Shutterstock

(Updates to reflect that pictures are available)
By Anurag Maan
Oct 24 (Reuters) - Asia surpassed 10 million infections of
the new coronavirus on Saturday, the second-heaviest regional
toll in the world, according to a Reuters tally, as cases
continue to mount in India despite a slowdown and sharp declines
elsewhere.
Behind only Latin America, Asia accounts for about
one-fourth of the global caseload of 42.1 million of the virus.
With over 163,000 deaths, the region accounts for some 14% of
the global COVID-19 toll.
The Reuters tally is based on official reporting by
countries. The true numbers of cases and deaths are likely much
higher, experts say, given deficiencies in testing and potential
underreporting in many countries.
Despite the Asian spikes, the region overall has reported
improvement in handling the pandemic in recent weeks, with daily
caseloads slowing in places like India - a sharp contrast to the
COVID-19 resurgence seen in Europe and North America.
Within the region, South Asia led by India is the worst
affected, with nearly 21% of the reported global coronavirus
cases and 12% of deaths. This contrasts with countries like
China and New Zealand that have crushed infections and Japan,
where COVID-19 had been stubbornly entrenched but not
accelerating.
India is the worst-hit country in the world after the United
States, although infections are slowing in the world's
second-most populous country. India is reporting more than
57,000 cases of the virus a day, viewed on a weekly average,
with 58 new cases per 10,000 people in Asia's third-largest
economy, according to a Reuters analysis.
India is averaging 764 COVID-19 deaths a day, the worst in
the world and accounting for one in every 13 global pandemic
deaths.
The country has reported nearly 7.8 million infections,
behind the U.S. tally of 8.5 million, and nearly 118,000 deaths,
versus 224,128 in the United States. Unlike the recent U.S.
surge, however, India's slowdown saw the lowest daily caseload
in nearly three months on Wednesday. But India's infections may surge again, doctors fear, with a
holiday approaching and winter bringing more severe pollution
from farmers burning stubble, worsening the breathing
difficulties that many COVID-19 patients suffer.
India's eastern neighbour Bangladesh is Asia's second-worst
hit country, with nearly 400,000 cases. But daily infections
have slowed to 1,453, less than 40% of the July peak.
Although the pandemic is slowing in Bangladesh, the world's
biggest apparel producer after China faces harsh recession as a
second wave of COVID-19 hits key markets in Europe and the
United States.
Even if the country is making progress on controlling the
disease, leaders of the key garment sector say international
retailers are delaying orders or demanding steep price cuts,
forcing them to lay off their workers. Some 1 million workers
were furloughed or laid off. About one-third of those have been
rehired since July, according to union leaders. In Southeast Asia, Indonesia surpassed the Philippines last
week as the worst-hit nation with more than 370,000 infections.
The world's largest Muslim-majority nation, Indonesia has
struggled to get its outbreak under control. With the country
due to host soccer's under-20 World Cup next year, the
government is racing to secure a supply of vaccines still under
development, which some epidemiologists say means seeking a
"silver bullet" solution before full vaccine efficacy and safety
is known. The Philippines, which last week reported its biggest daily
tally in a month, has put partial coronavirus restrictions
around the capital Manila until Oct. 31 to check COVID-19.
Despite Asia's patchy record, a World Health Organization
expert said on Monday that Europe and North America should
follow the example of Asian states in persevering with
anti-COVID measures and quarantine restrictions for infected
people. Mike Ryan, head of the UN agency's emergencies programme,
said the global death toll from COVID-19 could double to 2
million before a successful vaccine is widely used and could be
even higher without concerted action to curb the pandemic.

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