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COVID 19: Deaths On African Continent Have Passed 1,000

* Highest Profile death from Coronavirus outbreak

The coronavirus has killed 1,000 people across Africa since the pandemic emerged late last year, and the continent has recorded nearly 17,000 infection, according to Johns Hopkins university data.

Algeria has the highest number of deaths at 364, followed by Egypt with 205, Morocco 135 and South Africa 50, according to the figures compiled on Friday.

Africa has so far suffered less than other regions from COVID-19. But limited testing in many countries has deprived African officials of a full picture of the disease’s spread.

The Nigerian president’s chief of staff, Abba Kyari, has died after contracting Covid-19, two presidency spokesmen said on Twitter, as Covid-19 deaths on the continent pass 1,000.

Kyari, who was in his 70s and had underlying health problems, including diabetes, was the top official aide to 77-year-old President Muhammadu Buhari and one of the most powerful men in the country.

“The Presidency regrets to announce the passage of the Chief of Staff to the President, Mallam Abba Kyari,” said presidency spokesman Garba Shehu in a tweet on Friday, using an honorific title for Kyari.

“The deceased had tested positive to the ravaging COVID-19, and had been receiving treatment. But he died on Friday, April 17, 2020,” he said in a second post on Twitter. Spokesman Femi Adesina also confirmed the death.

Kyari’s was the highest profile death due to the disease in the West African country, which has 493 confirmed cases and 17 deaths, according to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.

Kyari acted as the gatekeeper to Buhari. He travelled to Germany in early March with a delegation of other Nigerian officials for meetings with the company, Siemens. He attended meetings with senior government officials upon his return to Nigeria.

Buhari himself has undisclosed medical ailments and spent five months in London for treatments in 2017.

African leaders, the IMF and the World Bank have appealed for rapid international action to help African countries respond to the pandemic that will cause the continent’s economy to shrink by 1.25% in 2020, the worst reading on record.

Other developments on coronavirus include:

  • President Donald Trump said that protestors who flouted social distancing measures “seem to be very responsible people”, when commenting on demonstrations against stay-at-home orders. Some protesters have carried guns, waved Trump and Confederate flags and sought to frame the debate as a defence of constitutional freedoms.
  • Trump again cast doubt on China’s death toll, which was revised up on Friday, and said that “a lot of strange things are happening” regarding the origins of the coronavirus.
  • Germany’s confirmed coronavirus cases have risen by 3,609 to 137,439, data from the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases showed on Saturday, marking a fourth straight day of a spike in new infections.
  • Australia’s death toll from Covid-19 rose to 68 on Saturday, with 6,533 infections.
  • 12 Guatemalan migrants on deportation flight from the US tested positive for Covid-19.
  • The Kurdish-led administration in Syria’s northeast has said that the World Health Organization had found the area’s first case of coronavirus earlier this month after samples were tested in Damascus.
  • All airline passengers in Canada will be required to wear a non-medical masks or face coverings during travel to curb the spread of coronavirus.
  • Mexico’s president has said PresidentTrump has promised Mexico will be able to buy 1,000 ventilators and other intensive-therapy equipment used in treating severe cases of Covid-19.
  • China has reported that on Friday 27 new coronavirus cases were confirmed, of which 17 were linked to foreign travel. No new fatalities were recorded.