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WHO says Africa escaped 'exponential' rise in cases

  • Africa recorded 34 706 deaths from over 1.4 million coronavirus cases. 
  • South Africa is the continent's worst-affected country.
  • Around 91% of the infections in sub-Saharan Africa concerned people less than 60 and over 80% of these cases were asymptomatic, the WHO said. 


Africa has escaped the "exponential" rise in coronavirus cases seen elsewhere probably due to low population density and a hot and humid climate, the UN health agency said.

Africa recorded 34 706 deaths from 1 439 657 cases, according to an AFP tally on Friday - far behind the other continents. The United States alone has 202 827 deaths from 6 979 937 cases.

READ | Widespread Covid-19 vaccinations not expected until mid-2021 - WHO

"The transmission of Covid-19 in Africa was marked by relatively fewer infections which have subsided in the last two months," the World Health Organisation said in a statement in French from its regional office in the Congo capital Brazzaville.

"In the last four weeks 77 147 new cases were recorded against 131 647 in the four preceding weeks," said the statement, received by AFP on Friday.

READ HERE | South Africa reached out to us, not through weakness, but strength - WHO commends SA

WHO said some of the worst-hit countries such as Algeria, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Madagascar, Nigeria, Senegal and South Africa had seen infections steadily fall in the past two months.

South Africa is the continent's worst-affected country. According to the latest official statistics on Friday, there 667 049 cases of which 16 283 were fatal.

The WHO said the "low population density, the hot and humid climate, the high level and the high percentage of youths combined" to probably contribute to the low infection rates.

"Around 91% of the infections in sub-Saharan Africa concerned people less than 60 and over 80% of these cases were asymptomatic," it said.

Amil Umraw | The need for masks: The battle against Covid-19 is far from won

The decline is a testimony to the decisive public health measures taken by all the governments in the region, the WHO's Africa director Matshidiso Moeti said during a virtual meeting on Thursday.

South Africa, the continent's most industrialised economy, shuttered its borders at the start of a strict nationwide lockdown on March 27 to limit the spread of the virus.

Restrictions on movement and business have been gradually eased since June, but borders stayed sealed to avoid importing the virus from abroad.

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