Spain reports more than 100,000 coronavirus cases, new daily death toll record

Spain has the world’s second-highest coronavirus death toll after Italy. (Reuters)
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Updated 02 April 2020
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Spain reports more than 100,000 coronavirus cases, new daily death toll record

  • Overall fatalities caused by the disease rose to 9,053 from 8,189 on Tuesday

MADRID: Spain’s death toll surged over 9,000 on Wednesday as infections passed the 100,000 mark, but the rate of new cases continued to slow, suggesting the epidemic had peaked, health chiefs said.

Spain has the Europe’s second-highest death toll after Italy, with the virus so far claiming 9,053 lives after a record 864 people died over the past 24 hours, while the number of confirmed cases reached 102,136.

But on a day-to-day basis, the rate of new infections continued its week-long downward trend.

And most importantly, the number of people in hospital and those in intensive care was falling, suggesting the epidemic had reached its peak, Fernando Simon, head of the health ministry’s emergency coordination unit.

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The main priority now is to ensure that the health system is capable of guaranteeing adequate coverage for all patients.

“This is important,” said Simon who himself was diagnosed with the virus this week.

“Right now the central issue is not whether we have reached the peak or not, it seems we’re already there, and the numbers are going down.”

The main priority now was to ensure that the health system was capable of guaranteeing adequate coverage for all patients, Simon said.

Officials said the figures gave a “very positive” indication that the unprecedented lockdown put in place on March 14, confining Spain’s population of nearly 47 million to their homes, was working.

Crunching the numbers, Wednesday’s figures showed new cases increasing by just over 8.0 percent, compared with nearly 11 percent on Tuesday and 20 percent a week ago.

They also showed the death rate decreasing at a rate of 10.6 percent compared with 27 percent a week ago, with Dr. Maria Jose Sierra from the emergencies coordination unit saying the recent fatalities were those “who were infected two or three weeks ago.”

Maria Linero, a 28-year-old doctor working at a private hospital in central Madrid but who did not want to give her family name, said they had seen a drop in numbers in recent days.

“Last week, we were getting between 30 to 40 per day. Today, we’ve had 20. It’s going down, little by little so we’re on the right track,” she told AFP.

In one of the hospital’s centers, they were currently treating 446 people of whom 63 were in intensive care, she said, describing it as “the lowest figure we’ve seen since the start of the epidemic.”

“Unfortunately this epidemic has shown us that we are not at all prepared to deal with this number of people.”

Spain’s health care system has been stretched to its limit by a massive influx of seriously ill patients, and last weekend, Simon warned that even if the epidemic peaked, the pressure on the intensive care system would be subject to a lag of at least a week.

Spain is also struggling with a worrying rise in cases among health care personnel, with some 12,300 infected.

And thousands of others are also struggling with the psychological burden of being on the front line.

“You see there is no capacity and no resources which leads to extremely hard decisions that people take home with them,” said Maria Fernanda Visconti, a Venezuelan specialist in risk prevention at work who is responsible for staff and resources at Madrid’s La Princesa hospital and two other facilities.

“There are people who just break down during a session, telling me they live in a tiny flat with their elderly mother,” she told AFP.

“Or one nurse came to work the day after her mother died, but she wasn’t there at the time because she was working and feels horribly guilty.”

Even the non-medical staff are under huge strain, with many sick, Visconti said, describing the overall situation as “chaotic” with many suffering from “a huge sense of powerlessness and frustration.”

Madrid has been by far the worst-hit area, with Wednesday’s figures raising the death toll to 3,865, with the region suffering close to 30,000 cases, leaving hospitals and mortuaries overwhelmed.

On the upside, the number of people recovering has been steadily growing, rising to 22,647 on Wednesday after another 3,388 were declared virus-free, the figures showed. Nearly half of that number are in the Madrid region.


US abstains in UN vote voicing support for Ukraine

Updated 3 sec ago
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US abstains in UN vote voicing support for Ukraine

  • The resolution also called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire and “comprehensive, just and lasting peace“
  • The US delegation had pressed for a separate vote on paragraphs involving Ukraine’s territorial integrity and international law but this idea was rejected

UNITED NATIONS: The UN General Assembly voiced support for Ukraine Tuesday on the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion, with the United States among countries abstaining from the vote.
The assembly passed a resolution saying it was committed to “the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders.”
It passed by a tally of 107 countries in favor, 12 against and 51 abstentions, which included the United States.
The resolution also called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire and “comprehensive, just and lasting peace.”
The US delegation had pressed for a separate vote on paragraphs involving Ukraine’s territorial integrity and international law but this idea was rejected.
The transition from Joe Biden to Donald Trump in the White House last year has seen firm, unconditional US support for Ukraine cool dramatically.
Trump has brought Russian leader Vladimir Putin back in from the diplomatic cold and Washington has repeatedly refused to condemn the Russian invasion of 2022.
US deputy ambassador Tammy Bruce said she welcomed the UN appeal for a ceasefire.
But she said the resolution includes “language that is likely to distract” from diplomatic efforts to end the war rather than support them. She did not identify these words.
Still, leaders of the G7 global powers, including Trump, on Tuesday reaffirmed their “unwavering support for Ukraine” in a statement on the fourth anniversary of the invasion.
A month after Trump returned to power in January 2025, the United States voted against a UN General Assembly resolution calling for a “just and lasting peace” to end the war.
The US delegation later won Security Council passage of a Russian-backed resolution that called for peace but made no mention of Ukraine’s territorial integrity, frustrating Ukraine’s European allies.
Until then, the council had failed to speak out on the war because Russia consistently used its veto power.
“Despite peace efforts led by the US and supported by Europe, Russia continues to demonstrate no genuine willingness to stop this aggression,” Ukraine’s Deputy Foreign Minister Mariana Betsa said.
Russia’s deputy ambassador Anna Evstigneeva answered, saying Ukraine should focus on diplomacy to end the war “rather than initiating yet another politicized vote.”
In Washington, Ukraine’s Ambassador to the US Olga Stefanishyna urged the Trump administration to intensify pressure on Russia.
“We hope that the US government this particular day... will get to the understanding that the language which is understood by Russians is not the dialog or diplomatic effort, it’s the pressure,” Stefanishyna told reporters.
She expressed hope that US lawmakers would soon pass a bill imposing tariffs and secondary sanctions on countries doing business with Russia in order to choke its economy and ability to finance the war.
Stefanishyna added that Ukraine is in desperate need of air defenses at a time when Russia has been intensifying its attacks on civilians and critical infrastructure during a brutal winter.
While acknowledging that “it’s too premature to speak about any settlement in the nearest period of time,” she said that any deal to end the war must include powerful US and EU Security guarantees.