Daily Covid-19 update: Case total at 790,004 after 2,302 more positive tests
The country has also recorded 58 more Covid-19 related deaths.
Picture: Andreas Solaro/AFP
As of Monday, the total number of Covid-19 cases is 790,004, with 2,302 new cases identified since the last report, Health Minister Zweli Mkhize announced.
The country has also recorded 58 more Covid-19 related deaths: Eastern Cape 32, Free State 5, Gauteng 3, KwaZulu-Natal 3 and Western Cape 15.
This brings the total deaths to 21,535.
WHO says ‘will do everything’ to find Covid-19 origins
The World Health Organization insisted on Monday it would do everything possible to find the animal origins of Covid-19, insisting that knowledge was vital to preventing future outbreaks.
“We want to know the origin and we will do everything to know the origin,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.
He insisted the UN health agency was intent on getting to the bottom of the mystery, and urged critics who have accused it of handing the reins of the probe to China to stop “politicising” the issue.
“WHO’s position is very, very clear. We need to know the origin of this virus, because it can help us prevent future outbreaks,” Tedros said.
The United States, which with more than 262,000 deaths is the country hardest hit by the pandemic, has been harshly critical of the WHO’s handling of the crisis and has accused it of kowtowing to China and of dragging its feet on investigating how the outbreak first started.
Other critics have also voiced concern that the agency may have allowed China to dictate the terms of an international investigation into the origins of the virus, which first surfaced in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.
Since then, more than 1.46 million people have died and nearly 63 million have been infected worldwide.
The WHO has for months been working to send a team of international experts, including epidemiologists and animal health specialists, to China to help probe the animal origin of the novel coronavirus pandemic and how the virus first crossed over to humans.
The organisation sent an advance team to Beijing in July to lay the groundwork for the international probe.
But it has remained unclear when the larger team of scientists would be able to travel to China to begin epidemiological studies to try to identify the first human cases and their source of infection. – AFP
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