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Clik here to view.ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AFP) – Ethiopia on Sunday announced the first two deaths of patients suffering from COVID-19, as officials ramped up testing to get a clearer picture of the outbreak there.
The first victim was a 60-year-old Ethiopian woman who had spent six days in intensive care, a health ministry statement said, with the second a 56-year-old Ethiopian man diagnosed with COVID-19 last Thursday.
“It is my deepest regret to announce the first death of a patient from #COVID19 in Ethiopia,” Health Minister Lia Tadesse said in announcing the country’s first fatality on Twitter.
Four hours later, Lia published a second post expressing “great sadness” as another death emerged.
Ethiopia, a country of more than 100 million people, confirmed its first case of COVID-19 on March 13 and has recorded just 43 in total — mostly people with a history of recent foreign travel.
But testing has been extremely limited.
As of Friday, the country had conducted just 1,222 tests, according to the Ethiopian Public Health Institute.
South Africa, by comparison, has performed tens of thousands of tests.
Ethiopian officials said Saturday they were conducting an additional 647 tests, notably of targeted health workers, transportation sector workers who have “direct contact with passengers” and randomly selected people in Addis Ababa, the capital, and the city of Adama in the Oromia region.
It was intended to help determine whether there has been undetected community transmission, said Dr Adisu Kebede, director of national laboratory capacity building.
“There are also a few cases that we identified that have no travel history and things like that, and from their contacts, you can guess that there is community transmission already,” Adisu said.
“The WHO recommended ‘test, test, test,’ so we had to test more people,” he added.
The country has “around 23,000” testing kits available, the vast majority donated last month by Chinese billionaire Jack Ma, Adisu said.
It has no rapid testing capacity and can currently process no more than 500 tests per day, Adisu said. The goal is to push that figure to over 1,000 by the end of the month.
ABIY RESISTS LOCKDOWN
Ethiopia has closed land borders and schools, freed thousands of prisoners to ease overcrowding, sprayed main streets in the capital with disinfectant and discouraged large gatherings.
Orthodox Christian leaders have encouraged worshippers to pray at home, and police were deployed Sunday to prevent large crowds from descending on one of the capital’s main cathedrals.
Orthodox Christians make up 40 percent of the country’s population.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, last year’s Nobel Peace Prize laureate, has refrained from imposing the kinds of lockdown seen elsewhere in the region, including in Uganda, Rwanda and Mauritius.
“We can’t impose a lockdown like more developed nations, as there are many citizens who don’t have homes,” Abiy said Saturday. “Even those who have homes have to make ends meet daily.”
The total number of COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic patients in Ethiopia has reaches 43 after five more new confirmed cases is reported this morning.
Quoting the Ministry of Health of Ethiopia, the state broadcaster – ETV reported this afternoon out of the new five coronavirus infected people found in the country, two are Eritrean nationals, while one is Libyan and the other two are Ethiopians. The Ministry stated that over the past 24 hours 59 COVID-19 laboratory tests are conducted in Ethiopia. Of the total four people have recovered from the pandemic.
So far there is no one died of coronavirus in Ethiopia. Meanwhile over 300 people died in Africa, while some 7,000 people are infected by the pandemic, according to report of Johns Hopkins University. Of which 130 death is in Algeria and 71 in Egypt. Morocco has also reported 66 death by the coronavirus. South Africa and Cameroon among others have also reported 9 deaths each so far.
Globally, over 64,000 people have died by coronavirus pandemic since the outbreak of the virus in China’s Hubei province. Over 1.2 million people are also infected by the virus. Over 247,000 people have recovered from coronavirus globally so far.
Italy, Spain, The United States and France are the top countries losing thousands of their nationals by the pandemic. The four countries have registered a total death of around 45,000 people by coronavirus pandemic, out of which 15,362 death is registered in Italy.
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