Daily Covid-19 update: 7,150 new cases as another 555 deaths confirmed

A total of 8,156,239 tests have been completed to date.


As of Thursday, 28 January 2021, the cumulative number of detected Covid-19 cases is 1,437,798 with 7,150 new cases identified, Health Minister Zweli Mkhize has confirmed.

555 more Covid-19 related deaths were reported, with 150 from Eastern Cape, 10 from Free State, 70 from Gauteng, 249 from Kwa-Zulu Natal (KZN), 7 from Limpopo, 21 from Mpumalanga, 3 from Northern Cape and 45 from Western Cape.

This brings the total number of Covid-19 related deaths to 43,105.

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“We convey our condolences to the loved ones of the departed and thank the health workers that treated the deceased,” the minister said.

Recoveries now stand at 1,272,197 representing a recovery rate of 88,3%.

Meanwhile, a total of 8,156,239 tests have been completed with 48,406 new tests conducted since the last report.

READ MORE: Third wave likely within months, say health experts

Here are the latest developments in the coronavirus crisis:

WHO enter Wuhan

A team of experts from the World Health Organization leave quarantine in Wuhan to begin a heavily scrutinised probe into the origins of the pandemic, after Washington urged a “robust and clear” investigation.

Vaccine may nix strains

The vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech appears effective against worrying new virus mutations in Britain and South Africa, the firms says.

Stay locked down

The WHO’s European branch says it is too early to ease tight restrictions in Europe despite a drop in new cases in most countries.

Germany travel ban

Germany is banning most travellers from countries hardest hit by the new variants including Britain, Portugal, South Africa and Brazil, to stop the strains from reversing recent progress on lowering infections.

More doses for Africa

The African Union has secured an additional 400 million doses of vaccines for its members.

Vietnam cluster

Vietnam records its first outbreak in almost two months, with more than 80 new cases reported as authorities begin testing tens of thousands of people to contain the spread.

Games without fans?

Olympic chief Thomas Bach says organisers are committed to holding a “successful and safe” Tokyo Games this year, dismissing cancellation talk as “speculation” – but admits for the first time that fans may not be allowed.

Looming loans crisis

The eurozone’s big banks have successfully weathered the crisis so far but could be exposed to major losses on loans, the European Central Bank says.

Sea of red

Global stocks fall further as investors track surging infections, vaccine worries and a stuttering economic recovery.

EasyJet’s 90% slump

British no-frills airline EasyJet says revenues collapsed by almost 90 percent in its last quarter as the pandemic ravages travel demand.

American Airlines says it lost $8.9 billion last year.

Cases top 100 million

At least 2,176,000 people have died of coronavirus since the outbreak emerged in China in December 2019, according to an AFP tally from official sources.

More than 100,829,878 cases have been registered.

The US has suffered the highest toll with 429,202 deaths, followed by Brazil with 220,161 and India with 153,847.

The number of deaths globally is underestimated. The toll is calculated from daily figures published by national health authorities and does not include later revisions by statistics agencies.

READ NEXT: SA’s Covid-19 infections slowing, but don’t celebrate yet

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