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By Vhahangwele Nemakonde

Digital Deputy News Editor


Covid-19 update: SA records 15,939 and 413 deaths

There has been an increase of 714 hospital admissions in the past 24 hours.


As of Friday, South Africa has recorded a total of 2 269 179 positive cases of Covid-19, with 15,939 new cases recorded since the last report, the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), a division of the National Health Laboratory Service, has announced.

This increase represents a 29.5% positivity rate.

The country has also recorded 413 Covid-19 related deaths, bringing total fatalities to 66 385 to date.

The majority of new cases today are from Gauteng (38%), followed by Western Cape (19%). Limpopo accounted for 12%; Mpumalanga accounted for 9%; North West accounted for 8%; Eastern Cape accounted for 5%; KwaZulu-Natal accounted for 4%; Free State accounted for 3%; and Northern Cape accounted for 2% of today’s new cases, said the NICD.

There has been an increase of 714 hospital admissions in the past 24 hours, and 14 154 725 tests have been conducted in both public and private sectors.

Scientists round on UK over plan to end Covid curbs

The UK government’s plan to scrap day-to-day pandemic restrictions in England next week is reckless and has no basis in science, international experts warned on Friday, with one arguing it amounts to premeditated murder.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said this week it was “highly probable” the worst of the coronavirus pandemic was over as he pressed ahead with Monday’s reopening, despite the Delta variant spreading out of control.

He has said the UK can reopen because two-thirds of adults are now fully vaccinated, but England’s Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty warned that infection rates were on track to reach “quite scary” levels.

International scientists including advisers to other governments had brutal words for Johnson.

“I’ve written that I believe that the strategy of herd immunity is actually murderous,” US scientist William Haseltine said after an emergency discussion among experts about the UK plan.

Aiming for herd immunity would mean pursuing a policy in the knowledge that it would lead to many thousands of deaths, he said. 

“It is a disaster as a policy,” he added. 

The UK government denies it is pursuing a policy of “herd immunity” by letting the Delta variant rip, but concedes that daily infection rates could surge to 100,000 in the weeks ahead, which would put further pressure on hospitals.

“I don’t think we should underestimate the fact that we could get into trouble again surprisingly fast,” Whitty said on Thursday, urging the public “to take things incredibly slowly” as restrictions ease.

From Monday — dubbed “Freedom Day” by some media — the government will lift most restrictions on public gatherings in England and allow businesses such as nightclubs to reopen.

Mandates covering face masks and work from home will be lifted as Johnson promotes a new approach of personal responsibility, although he has also urged people not to “throw caution to the winds”. 

But that is just what Johnson is doing with a policy of allowing the virus to spread, “infect people, make them ill, and have them die”, according to professor Gabriel Scally at the University of Bristol.

The government’s stated approach of lifting controls now before any winter surge of respiratory disease is marked by “moral emptiness and epidemiological stupidity”, he said.

– ‘Pingdemic’ –

The devolved governments of Scotland and Wales set their own health policy and will keep in place a legal requirement to wear face coverings in enclosed spaces such as shops and on public transport. Northern Ireland looks set to follow suit.

The scientists attending Friday’s online meeting warned that England was falling out of step not just with its neighbours in the UK but with the rest of the world.

The meeting was organised by the authors of a protest letter published by medical journal The Lancet last week that originally carried 122 signatures. 

Another 1,400 scientists have since added their names.

“In New Zealand we’ve always looked to the UK for leadership,” said Michael Baker, professor of public health at the University of Otago in Dunedin.

“You have a remarkable depth of scientific knowledge. You’ve done remarkably well in vaccine development and rollout. Remarkable clinical trials that we’re drawing on,” he said.

“And that’s why it just seems so remarkable that you’re not following even basic public health principles here.” 

Professor Shu-Ti Chiou, former head of Taiwan’s Health Promotion Administration, said she was “very concerned” that younger age groups and clinically vulnerable people were left exposed by the UK plan.

“In our culture there is a saying that it is unethical to take the umbrella away from people while it’s still raining,” Chiou said.

“And it’s actually raining very hard.”

The surge in infections sweeping Britain led to more than 530,000 people being instructed to self-isolate by a government-run app in the week to July 7, the highest total since January, according to latest data.

Some companies such as carmaker Nissan have been losing staff en masse after they were pinged by the app — in a brewing crisis described by UK newspapers as a “pingdemic”.

Butchers, another industry hit hard, have even warned of national meat shortages unless the app is made less sensitive.

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