Around 75% of Brazil's population has been vaccinated
Brazil’s Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga speaks during a press conference about the Covid-19 vaccination plan for children aged 5 to 11, at the Ministry of Health in Brasilia, on 5 January 2022 . Photo by Sergio Lima / AFP
Brazil announced on Sunday it will “in the coming days” lift public health emergency measures in place for over two years, citing a drop in the number of Covid-19 deaths and infections.
More than 660,000 people died of the virus in Brazil, one of the hardest-hit countries second only to the United States.
But the number of infections and deaths has fallen dramatically as authorities ramped up immunisation, with about 75% of its 212 million people now fully vaccinated.
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Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga said on Sunday the public health emergency declared on 3 February 2020 – when the virus started spreading globally after it first emerged in Wuhan, China – will soon end.
“We have the conditions to announce today the end of the health emergency,” Queiroga said on television, adding that the announcement will be formalised by a decree “in the next few days”.
“This, however, does not mean the end of Covid-19. We will continue to live with the virus,” the minister said.
The decision came after Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro, who famously dismissed the virus as “a little flu”, asked his minister a few weeks ago to decree an “end to the pandemic” and called for a return to normalcy.
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Earlier this month, Brazil also loosened restrictions for international travellers, scrapping a 14-day quarantine for vaccinated foreign visitors.
The far-right Covid-skeptic president is up for re-election this year, and has come under fire in the past for his handling of the pandemic.
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