Covid infections remain steady in Pakistan
NIH data shows infectivity ratio stands at 0.77%: Former Italy PM under investigation over Covid response
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Pakistan has registered another 32 Covid-19 infections with not a single fatality during the last 24 hours (Wednesday), showed the statistics released by the National Institute of Health (NIH) on Thursday morning, reported 24NewsHD TV channel.
According to the NIH data, the death toll in the country remained unchanged at 30,641 whereas the number of total infections now climbed up to 1,577,030 after adding the fresh 32 cases.
COVID-19 Statistics 02 March 2023
— NIH Pakistan (@NIH_Pakistan) March 2, 2023
Total Tests in Last 24 Hours: 4,580
Positive Cases: 32
Positivity %: 0.70%
Deaths: 00
Patients on Critical Care: 12
(shared by NCOC-NIH)
During the last 24 hours (Wednesday), 4,580 tests were conducted throughout Pakistan whereas the positivity ratio stood at 0.70%. The number of patients in critical care stood at 12.
Former Italy PM under investigation over Covid response
The former Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte is facing a judicial inquiry over the government's response to the Covid-19 outbreak in early 2020, media reports said Wednesday.
Prosecutors in Bergamo, the northern city that was one of the epicentres of the coronavirus outbreak in Europe, targeted Conte after wrapping up their three-year inquiry, according to the reports.
Conte, now president of the populist Five Star movement, was prime minister from 2018 to 2021 and oversaw the initial measures taken to halt the spread of what would become a global pandemic.
Investigating magistrates suspect that Conte and his government underestimated the contagiousness of Covid-19 even though available data showed that cases were spreading rapidly in Bergamo and the surrounding region.
They note that in early March 2020 the government did not create a "red zone" in two areas hit hardest by the outbreak, Nembro and Alzano Lombardo, even though security forces were ready to isolate the zone from the rest of the country.
Red zones had already been decreed in late February for around a dozen other nearby municipalities including Codogno, the town where the initial Covid case was reportedly found.
Conte's health minister Roberto Speranza as well as the president of the Lombardy region, Attilio Fontana, are also under investigation, the reports said.
Bergamo prosecutors allege that according to scientific experts, earlier quarantines could have saved thousands of lives.
Conte, quoted by Il Corriere della Sera and other media outlets, said he was "unworried" by the inquiry, saying his government had acted "with the utmost commitment and responsibility during one of the most difficult moments of our republic."
Similar cases have been lodged against officials elsewhere, alleging that authorities failed to act quickly enough against a virus that has killed an estimated 6.8 million people worldwide since early 2020.
In January, France's top court threw out a case against former health minister Agnes Buzyn, a trained doctor, over her allegedly "endangering the lives of others" by initially playing down the severity of Covid-19.
With inputs from AFP.