Coronavirus cases surge in Africa as third wave gains pace: WHO

In 22 African countries, cases rose by more than 20 per cent in the week to June 13. PHOTO: REUTERS

BRAZZAVILLE (AFP) - Coronavirus infections in Africa are surging as a third wave of the pandemic gathers pace on the continent, fuelled by the spread of more contagious variants, the World Health Organisation said on Thursday (June 17).

"Africa is in the midst of a full-blown third wave. The sobering trajectory of surging cases should rouse everyone into urgent action," WHO's regional director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, told an online news conference.

According to WHO data, the number of new Covid-19 cases in Africa rose to over 116,500 in the week ending June 13, up from nearly 91,000 the previous week.

In 22 African countries, cases rose by more than 20 per cent in the week to June 13, with the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Namibia and Uganda reporting their highest number of new weekly cases since the pandemic began.

The WHO said that "a lack of adherence to transmission prevention measures has fuelled the new surge that coincides with colder seasonal weather in southern Africa and as more contagious variants spread."

The continent has been hit less hard by the pandemic than most other regions, recording 135,885 deaths from 5,107,939 cases so far.

But the more-transmissible Delta variant, which was first detected in India, has been reported in 14 African countries and the Alpha and Beta variants - first detected in Britain and South Africa respectively - have been found in over 25 African countries.

"The rise in cases and deaths is an urgent wake-up call for those countries lagging behind" in their vaccination programmes, Dr Moeti said.

"A number of African countries have shown that they can move vaccines quickly, so while we welcome the recent international vaccine pledges, if we are to curb the third wave, Africa needs doses here and now."

The WHO said that vaccination roll-outs in Africa were picking up speed, "with over five million doses administered in the past five days, compared with around 3.5 million doses per week for the past three weeks".

Almost 12 million people are now fully vaccinated, "but this is still less than one per cent of Africa's population," the WHO said.

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