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MINILIK SALSAWI
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Pakistan is resuming domestic flights starting May 16.
Slovenia becomes first country to declare end of coronavirus epidemic.
Germany's economy shrank by 2.2% in first quarter of 2020, its worst decline since the 2009 financial crisis.
Brazil reports 13,944 new cases of coronavirus, 202,918 cases in total.
Brazil's largest daily increase by far.
South Africa reports 665 new cases of coronavirus, 12,739 cases in total.
238 deaths, 5,676 recovered.
American pilot dies in plane crash on her way to deliver coronavirus rapid test kits to a remote Indonesian village.
China reports 3 new coronavirus cases and 12 new asymptomatic cases.
No new cases in Wuhan.
Slovenia becomes first country to declare end of coronavirus epidemic.
Germany's economy shrank by 2.2% in first quarter of 2020, its worst decline since the 2009 financial crisis.
Brazil reports 13,944 new cases of coronavirus, 202,918 cases in total.
Brazil's largest daily increase by far.
South Africa reports 665 new cases of coronavirus, 12,739 cases in total.
238 deaths, 5,676 recovered.
American pilot dies in plane crash on her way to deliver coronavirus rapid test kits to a remote Indonesian village.
China reports 3 new coronavirus cases and 12 new asymptomatic cases.
No new cases in Wuhan.
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Over 75,000 confirmed #COVID19 cases on the African continent - with more than 27,000 recoveries & 2,500 deaths. View country figures & more with the WHO African Region COVID-19 Dashboard:
https://arcg.is/XvuSX

https://arcg.is/XvuSX
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MINILIK SALSAWI
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- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
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Re: Coronavirus International updates
The death figures COVID19 on the African continent continue to progress

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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
በአሜሪካ እስከ ቀጣዩ መስከረም ወር ድረስ 10 ሚሊየን አሳማዎች ሊገደሉ ይችላሉ ተባለ።በአሜሪካ በስጋ ማቀነባበርያ ፋብሪካ ውስጥ 14ሺህ የሚጠጉ ሰራተኞች በኮሮና ቫይረስ የተያዙ ሲሆን 54 የሚሆኑ ሰራተኞች ደግሞ በቫይረሱ ህይወታቸው አልፏል፡፡
በሀገሪቱ የአሳማ ስጋ አቅራቢ የሆነው ናሽናልስ ፖርክ ድርጅት እንደገለጸው ገበሬዎች በኮሮና ቫይረስ ምክንየት ከብቶቻቸው ወደ ፋብሪካ መላክ አቁመዋል በዚህም በአሳማዎች ላይ ከፍተኛ ስጋት ደቅኖ ይገኛል ሲል አስታውቃል፡፡
ገበሬዎች ከብቶቻቸው ወደ ፋብሪካ የማይልኩ ከሆነም ከፍተኛ የሆነ የስጋ እጥረት ሊከሰት ይችላል ይህን ተከትሎም ፋብሪካዎች ትኩረታቸውን ወደ አሳማዎች ሊያደርጉ ይችላሉ ሲል ቢቢሲ ዘግቧል፡፡
ባሁኑ ሰአት በአሜሪካ የስጋ ማቀነባበርያ ፋብሪካዎች የስጋ አቅርቦታቸውን በከፍተኛ ሁኔታ የቀነሱ ሲሆን አብዛኞቹም ስራቸውን እንዳቆሙ ተነግሯል፡፡
ፕሬዝዳንት ዶናልድ ትራምፕ ባለፈው ወር ላይ የስጋ ፋብሪካዎች ሙሉ በሙሉ ክፍት ሆነው እንዲቆዩ እና የአሳማ ስጋ አቅርቦት ግን በ40 በመቶ እንዲቀንስ ትዕዛዝ አስተላልፈው ነበር፡፡

በሀገሪቱ የአሳማ ስጋ አቅራቢ የሆነው ናሽናልስ ፖርክ ድርጅት እንደገለጸው ገበሬዎች በኮሮና ቫይረስ ምክንየት ከብቶቻቸው ወደ ፋብሪካ መላክ አቁመዋል በዚህም በአሳማዎች ላይ ከፍተኛ ስጋት ደቅኖ ይገኛል ሲል አስታውቃል፡፡
ገበሬዎች ከብቶቻቸው ወደ ፋብሪካ የማይልኩ ከሆነም ከፍተኛ የሆነ የስጋ እጥረት ሊከሰት ይችላል ይህን ተከትሎም ፋብሪካዎች ትኩረታቸውን ወደ አሳማዎች ሊያደርጉ ይችላሉ ሲል ቢቢሲ ዘግቧል፡፡
ባሁኑ ሰአት በአሜሪካ የስጋ ማቀነባበርያ ፋብሪካዎች የስጋ አቅርቦታቸውን በከፍተኛ ሁኔታ የቀነሱ ሲሆን አብዛኞቹም ስራቸውን እንዳቆሙ ተነግሯል፡፡
ፕሬዝዳንት ዶናልድ ትራምፕ ባለፈው ወር ላይ የስጋ ፋብሪካዎች ሙሉ በሙሉ ክፍት ሆነው እንዲቆዩ እና የአሳማ ስጋ አቅርቦት ግን በ40 በመቶ እንዲቀንስ ትዕዛዝ አስተላልፈው ነበር፡፡

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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Somalia - Puntland State
14 new positives cases:
- Karkaar: 7
- Mudug: 4
- Nugaal: 3
Total in the state:
116 confirmed cases of covid19, 5 deaths and 3 recoveries.

Senegal
121 new cases covid19 (including 2 community), 2 new deaths and 48 new healings.
Total in the country:
- 2310 confirmed cases
- 25 deaths (CFR 1.1 %)
- 890 healings.

Mauritania
17 new cases of covid19 in 2 days, bringing the country's total to 26 cases, 2 deaths and 6 healings (+1 to be confirmed).
New Wilayas affected:
- Assaba: 1 case
- Hodh El Charqui: 1 case

Comoros
Always 11 confirmed cases covid19 contrary to what has been read here and there.
To have the right information on confirmed, cured and deceased cases in the country -
The Union dashboard: https://stopcoronavirus.km

GABON

14 new positives cases:
- Karkaar: 7
- Mudug: 4
- Nugaal: 3
Total in the state:
116 confirmed cases of covid19, 5 deaths and 3 recoveries.
Senegal
121 new cases covid19 (including 2 community), 2 new deaths and 48 new healings.
Total in the country:
- 2310 confirmed cases
- 25 deaths (CFR 1.1 %)
- 890 healings.
Mauritania
17 new cases of covid19 in 2 days, bringing the country's total to 26 cases, 2 deaths and 6 healings (+1 to be confirmed).
New Wilayas affected:
- Assaba: 1 case
- Hodh El Charqui: 1 case
Comoros
Always 11 confirmed cases covid19 contrary to what has been read here and there.
To have the right information on confirmed, cured and deceased cases in the country -
The Union dashboard: https://stopcoronavirus.km
GABON
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Evolution of cases in Afghanistan, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Morocco, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan, since 100th confirmed case.
Most covid19 Tests done in APAC,
India 2,039,952
Australia 978,976
S. Korea 726,747
Malaysia 424,306
Pakistan 344,450
Thailand 286,008
Vietnam 275,000
Japan 233,144
Singapore 224,262
New Zealand 216,787
APAC Most COVID19 Recovered %
Hong Kong 95.9
New Zealand 94.9
Thailand 94.3
China 94.3
Australia 90.2
S. Korea 89.1
Malaysia 79.3
Japan 61.2
India 34.1
Pakistan 27.3
Indonesia 23.1
Singapore 22.2
Philippines 20.3
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MINILIK SALSAWI
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- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
The COVID19 pandemic is increasing the threat of malnutrition & food insecurity in Africa.
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Taiwan rejects China's main condition for WHO participation
Taiwan’s health minister rejected on Friday China’s main condition for the island to be able to take part in the World Health Organization - acceptance that it is part of China - before a WHO meeting being held during the coronavirus pandemic.
Taiwan says the coronavirus pandemic has made it more urgent than ever for it to have proper access to the WHO.
China says Taiwan can participate only under the “one China” principle, involving acceptance that it is a part of China.
Read More - https://www.reuters.com/article/us-heal ... SKBN22R0HM

Taiwan’s health minister rejected on Friday China’s main condition for the island to be able to take part in the World Health Organization - acceptance that it is part of China - before a WHO meeting being held during the coronavirus pandemic.
Taiwan says the coronavirus pandemic has made it more urgent than ever for it to have proper access to the WHO.
China says Taiwan can participate only under the “one China” principle, involving acceptance that it is a part of China.
Read More - https://www.reuters.com/article/us-heal ... SKBN22R0HM
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Ethiopia coronavirus: 287 cases, IOM reports 10,000 migrant returnees
May 15: 287 cases, returnees hit 10,000 – UN says
Total confirmed cases = 287 (new cases = 15)
Total recoveries = 112 (new recoveries = 4)
Total deaths = 5
Active cases = 168
All the new cases involve men. Seven with travel history, seven with contact from confirmed case and one with no contact with a confirmed case. The majority of them were from Addis Ababa.
The UN’s migration agency has told the BBC that about 10,000 undocumented migrants have returned to the country majority of them from the Middle East, since Covid-19 was declared a global pandemic.
According to the International Organisation of Migration (IOM), the pandemic has had a severe impact on its efforts to secure the safe passage of migrants.
“The return has to be conducted in a manner that ensures that migrants stay healthy throughout the process. So, we’re having to implement measures that we wouldn’t ordinarily implement.
“Our position is very clear that large migratory movements across borders in a pandemic context are not advisable,” said Maureen Achieng.
The figure includes 11 young men who survived a tragedy in March that claimed the lives of dozens in Mozambique while travelling to South Africa in a shipping container on the back of a lorry.
They were discharged from an isolation centre on Wednesday where they were being held and are expected to join their families in the coming days.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed today held a meeting with religious leaders in the country, in attendance were leaders of the Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant churches as well as the Islamic Ulama council.
May 15: 287 cases, returnees hit 10,000 – UN says
Total confirmed cases = 287 (new cases = 15)
Total recoveries = 112 (new recoveries = 4)
Total deaths = 5
Active cases = 168
All the new cases involve men. Seven with travel history, seven with contact from confirmed case and one with no contact with a confirmed case. The majority of them were from Addis Ababa.
The UN’s migration agency has told the BBC that about 10,000 undocumented migrants have returned to the country majority of them from the Middle East, since Covid-19 was declared a global pandemic.
According to the International Organisation of Migration (IOM), the pandemic has had a severe impact on its efforts to secure the safe passage of migrants.
“The return has to be conducted in a manner that ensures that migrants stay healthy throughout the process. So, we’re having to implement measures that we wouldn’t ordinarily implement.
“Our position is very clear that large migratory movements across borders in a pandemic context are not advisable,” said Maureen Achieng.
The figure includes 11 young men who survived a tragedy in March that claimed the lives of dozens in Mozambique while travelling to South Africa in a shipping container on the back of a lorry.
They were discharged from an isolation centre on Wednesday where they were being held and are expected to join their families in the coming days.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed today held a meeting with religious leaders in the country, in attendance were leaders of the Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant churches as well as the Islamic Ulama council.
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Coronavirus in Africa: 75,380 cases; 2,563 deaths; 27,205 recoveries
There are now more than over 70,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus across the continent, with a number of African countries imposing a range of prevention and containment measures against the spread of the pandemic.
According to the latest data by the John Hopkins University and Africa Center for Disease Control on COVID-19 in Africa, the breakdown remains fluid as countries confirm cases as and when. There is no virus-free country in Africa as of May 13.
We shall keep updating this list largely sourced from the John Hopkins University tallies, Africa CDC and from official government data.
Major African stats: May 15 at 7:00 GMT:
Confirmed cases = 75,380
Number of deaths = 2,563
Recoveries = 27,205
Active cases = 45,612
Infected countries = 54
Countries in alphabetical order
Algeria – 6,422
Angola – 48
Benin – 339
Botswana – 24
Burkina Faso – 773
Burundi – 15
Cameroon – 2,954
Cape Verde – 315
Central African Republic – 143
Chad – 399
Comoros – 11
Congo-Brazzaville – 391
DR Congo – 1,242
Djibouti – 1,284
Egypt – 10,829
Equatorial Guinea – 583
Eritrea – 39
Eswatini – 187
Ethiopia – 287
Gabon – 1,104
(The) Gambia – 23
Ghana – 5,530
Guinea – 2,473
Guinea-Bissau – 913
Ivory Coast – 1,971
Kenya – 758
Lesotho – 1
Liberia – 215
Libya – 63
Madagascar – 230
Malawi – 63
Mali – 779
Mauritania – 20
Mauritius – 332
Morocco – 6,607
Mozambique – 115
Namibia – 16
Niger – 876
Nigeria- 5,162
Rwanda – 287
Sao Tome and Principe – 235
Senegal – 2,189
Seychelles – 11
Sierra Leone – 408
Somalia – 1,284
South Africa – 12,739
South Sudan – 231
Sudan – 1,818
Tanzania – 509
Togo – 238
Tunisia – 1,032
Uganda – 160
Zambia – 654
Zimbabwe – 37
There are now more than over 70,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus across the continent, with a number of African countries imposing a range of prevention and containment measures against the spread of the pandemic.
According to the latest data by the John Hopkins University and Africa Center for Disease Control on COVID-19 in Africa, the breakdown remains fluid as countries confirm cases as and when. There is no virus-free country in Africa as of May 13.
We shall keep updating this list largely sourced from the John Hopkins University tallies, Africa CDC and from official government data.
Major African stats: May 15 at 7:00 GMT:
Confirmed cases = 75,380
Number of deaths = 2,563
Recoveries = 27,205
Active cases = 45,612
Infected countries = 54
Countries in alphabetical order
Algeria – 6,422
Angola – 48
Benin – 339
Botswana – 24
Burkina Faso – 773
Burundi – 15
Cameroon – 2,954
Cape Verde – 315
Central African Republic – 143
Chad – 399
Comoros – 11
Congo-Brazzaville – 391
DR Congo – 1,242
Djibouti – 1,284
Egypt – 10,829
Equatorial Guinea – 583
Eritrea – 39
Eswatini – 187
Ethiopia – 287
Gabon – 1,104
(The) Gambia – 23
Ghana – 5,530
Guinea – 2,473
Guinea-Bissau – 913
Ivory Coast – 1,971
Kenya – 758
Lesotho – 1
Liberia – 215
Libya – 63
Madagascar – 230
Malawi – 63
Mali – 779
Mauritania – 20
Mauritius – 332
Morocco – 6,607
Mozambique – 115
Namibia – 16
Niger – 876
Nigeria- 5,162
Rwanda – 287
Sao Tome and Principe – 235
Senegal – 2,189
Seychelles – 11
Sierra Leone – 408
Somalia – 1,284
South Africa – 12,739
South Sudan – 231
Sudan – 1,818
Tanzania – 509
Togo – 238
Tunisia – 1,032
Uganda – 160
Zambia – 654
Zimbabwe – 37
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
Re: Coronavirus International updates
Poll reveals half of African business leaders do not think that African Governments are taking women’s issues into consideration as they develop policies to address COVID-19
In a live poll conducted by Africa.com on May 13 as part of its webinar series, Crisis Management for African Business Leaders, 47% of webinar participants do not think that African governments are taking women’s issues into consideration as they develop policies to address COVID-19. 28% think that African governments are taking women’s issues into consideration as they develop policies to address COVID-19. 25% had no opinion on the matter.
A second question asked respondents if they agreed with the statement, “Compared to Western countries, do professional women have community resources and support to remain resilient to the challenges posed by COVID-19?” 70% disagreed with this statement, 18% agreed, and 12% neither agreed nor disagreed.

A third question showed optimism. Respondents were asked if they agreed with the statement, “I expect that one of the major shifts occurring as a result of the pandemic is that African women will gain ground in business and society.” The majority agreed with this statement. 44% agreed, 33% disagreed, and 23% neither agreed nor disagreed.
Approximately 1,500 business leaders participated in the poll. Participants came from 46 countries across the African continent, with the largest representation coming from Nigeria, followed by South Africa, Kenya, Ghana and Ethiopia. 60% of the participants have one of the following titles: CEO, managing director, president, principal, partner, CFO, chair, chief, director, executive director, group head, general manager, or manager. Of the remaining 40%, the leading titles are professor, analyst and consultant.

The largest sectors represented are financial services and professional services, followed by energy and manufacturing. A smaller tier consisted of real estate, health care, agriculture, health care, and media, arts & entertainment.
The live poll was conducted as part of a webinar series, Crisis Management for African Business Leaders, organized by Africa.com. The session at which the poll was conducted is titled “Women Have Proven to Be Effective Leaders During COVID-19. Is This the Path to Power?” The panel discussion featured the Prime Minister of Namibia, Her Excellency Saara Kuugongelwa-Amadhila; Her Excellency, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Under-Secretary-General
of the United Nations and Executive Director of UN Women; Oby Ezekwesili, Senior Economic Adviser, Africa Economic Development Policy Initiative; Ann Juuko, Chief Executive, Stanbic Bank, Uganda; Suzan Kereere, Global Head Merchant Sales and Acquiring, Visa Inc.; and Natasha Wang, Women Deliver Young Leader.

Africa.com Chair and CEO Teresa Clarke commented “The poll results are supported by the qualitative data we collected from the 17,000 registrants for the webinar series. We asked registrants what their greatest concern is with respect to COVID-19. Many respondents referenced the disproportionate burden that lockdowns place on women, and the economic vulnerability of market women.”
The panel discussion is part of a series on crisis management developed by Africa.com and faculty from Harvard Business School. The next webinar discussion will take place on Wednesday, May 20, “What’s the Real Story Behind Africa’s COVID-19 Figures?” featuring WHO Africa region head, Dr. Rebecca Natalie Moeti; Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, Chief Executive Officer of Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, and David Kaye, UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression.
In a live poll conducted by Africa.com on May 13 as part of its webinar series, Crisis Management for African Business Leaders, 47% of webinar participants do not think that African governments are taking women’s issues into consideration as they develop policies to address COVID-19. 28% think that African governments are taking women’s issues into consideration as they develop policies to address COVID-19. 25% had no opinion on the matter.
A second question asked respondents if they agreed with the statement, “Compared to Western countries, do professional women have community resources and support to remain resilient to the challenges posed by COVID-19?” 70% disagreed with this statement, 18% agreed, and 12% neither agreed nor disagreed.

A third question showed optimism. Respondents were asked if they agreed with the statement, “I expect that one of the major shifts occurring as a result of the pandemic is that African women will gain ground in business and society.” The majority agreed with this statement. 44% agreed, 33% disagreed, and 23% neither agreed nor disagreed.
Approximately 1,500 business leaders participated in the poll. Participants came from 46 countries across the African continent, with the largest representation coming from Nigeria, followed by South Africa, Kenya, Ghana and Ethiopia. 60% of the participants have one of the following titles: CEO, managing director, president, principal, partner, CFO, chair, chief, director, executive director, group head, general manager, or manager. Of the remaining 40%, the leading titles are professor, analyst and consultant.

The largest sectors represented are financial services and professional services, followed by energy and manufacturing. A smaller tier consisted of real estate, health care, agriculture, health care, and media, arts & entertainment.
The live poll was conducted as part of a webinar series, Crisis Management for African Business Leaders, organized by Africa.com. The session at which the poll was conducted is titled “Women Have Proven to Be Effective Leaders During COVID-19. Is This the Path to Power?” The panel discussion featured the Prime Minister of Namibia, Her Excellency Saara Kuugongelwa-Amadhila; Her Excellency, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Under-Secretary-General
of the United Nations and Executive Director of UN Women; Oby Ezekwesili, Senior Economic Adviser, Africa Economic Development Policy Initiative; Ann Juuko, Chief Executive, Stanbic Bank, Uganda; Suzan Kereere, Global Head Merchant Sales and Acquiring, Visa Inc.; and Natasha Wang, Women Deliver Young Leader.

Africa.com Chair and CEO Teresa Clarke commented “The poll results are supported by the qualitative data we collected from the 17,000 registrants for the webinar series. We asked registrants what their greatest concern is with respect to COVID-19. Many respondents referenced the disproportionate burden that lockdowns place on women, and the economic vulnerability of market women.”
The panel discussion is part of a series on crisis management developed by Africa.com and faculty from Harvard Business School. The next webinar discussion will take place on Wednesday, May 20, “What’s the Real Story Behind Africa’s COVID-19 Figures?” featuring WHO Africa region head, Dr. Rebecca Natalie Moeti; Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, Chief Executive Officer of Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, and David Kaye, UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression.
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MINILIK SALSAWI
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Re: Coronavirus International updates
Most COVID19 Tests per million people in Middle East & North Africa
UAE 158,074
Bahrain 130,425
Israel 56,258
Kuwait 55,372
Qatar 51,547
Djibouti 16,882
S. Arabia 14,783
Jordan 12,953
Palestine 8,567
Iran 7,854
Morocco 2,184
Egypt 1,029
Most COVID19 Tests done in Middle East & North Africa,
UAE 1,560,923
Iran 658,604
S.Arabia 513,587
Israel 485,922
Kuwait 236,004
Bahrain 220,812
Qatar 148,173
Iraq 140,573
Jordan 131,985
Egypt 105,000
Most COVID19 Recovered % in Middle East & North Africa.
Iran 78.7
Israel 75.9
Iraq 64.5
Morocco 51.1
Algeria 49.0
S.Arabia 44.5
Bahrain 41.1
UAE 32.9
Oman 29.2
Kuwait 28.3
Egypt 24.2
Qatar 12.1
Most COVID19 Deaths % in Middle East & North Africa
Algeria 8.2
Iran 5.9
Egypt 5.3
Sudan 4.6
Tunisia 4.4
Iraq 3.7
Morocco 2.9
Israel 1.6
UAE 1.0
Kuwait 0.7
Saudi Arabia 0.6
Most COVID19 Deaths in Middle East & North Africa.
Iran 6,902
Egypt 571
Algeria 529
S.Arabia 292
Israel 266
UAE 208
Morocco 190
Iraq 115
Kuwait 96
Sudan 91
Most COVID19 Cases in Middle East & North Africa.
Iran 116,635
S.Arabia 49,176
Qatar 29,425
UAE 21,084
Israel 16,589
Kuwait 12,860
Egypt 10,829
Morocco 6,623
Algeria 6,442
Bahrain 6,418
UAE 158,074
Bahrain 130,425
Israel 56,258
Kuwait 55,372
Qatar 51,547
Djibouti 16,882
S. Arabia 14,783
Jordan 12,953
Palestine 8,567
Iran 7,854
Morocco 2,184
Egypt 1,029
Most COVID19 Tests done in Middle East & North Africa,
UAE 1,560,923
Iran 658,604
S.Arabia 513,587
Israel 485,922
Kuwait 236,004
Bahrain 220,812
Qatar 148,173
Iraq 140,573
Jordan 131,985
Egypt 105,000
Most COVID19 Recovered % in Middle East & North Africa.
Iran 78.7
Israel 75.9
Iraq 64.5
Morocco 51.1
Algeria 49.0
S.Arabia 44.5
Bahrain 41.1
UAE 32.9
Oman 29.2
Kuwait 28.3
Egypt 24.2
Qatar 12.1
Most COVID19 Deaths % in Middle East & North Africa
Algeria 8.2
Iran 5.9
Egypt 5.3
Sudan 4.6
Tunisia 4.4
Iraq 3.7
Morocco 2.9
Israel 1.6
UAE 1.0
Kuwait 0.7
Saudi Arabia 0.6
Most COVID19 Deaths in Middle East & North Africa.
Iran 6,902
Egypt 571
Algeria 529
S.Arabia 292
Israel 266
UAE 208
Morocco 190
Iraq 115
Kuwait 96
Sudan 91
Most COVID19 Cases in Middle East & North Africa.
Iran 116,635
S.Arabia 49,176
Qatar 29,425
UAE 21,084
Israel 16,589
Kuwait 12,860
Egypt 10,829
Morocco 6,623
Algeria 6,442
Bahrain 6,418
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MINILIK SALSAWI
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Re: Coronavirus International updates
UK reports 3,560 new cases of coronavirus and 384 new deaths.
Total of 236,711 cases and 33,998 deaths.
UK's update:
- Number of new cases up
- Number of new deaths down
- Number of new people tested down
Total of 236,711 cases and 33,998 deaths.
UK's update:
- Number of new cases up
- Number of new deaths down
- Number of new people tested down
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:
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MINILIK SALSAWI
- Senior Member
- Posts: 11477
- Joined: 24 Aug 2012, 12:02
- Contact:

