The Edition
facebook icon twitter icon instagram icon linkedin icon

Latest

COVID-19: Maldives records 26 new cases, 104 recoveries

Shahudha Mohamed
09 December 2020, MVT 22:19
A man wearing a face mask in the midst of the ‘new normal in capital Malé, shortly after the lockdown restrictions were lifted. PHOTO: MIHAARU
Shahudha Mohamed
09 December 2020, MVT 22:19

The Health Protection Agency (HPA), on Wednesday, announced that 26 additional individuals tested positive for COVID-19 while 104 more recovered.

According to the agency, 23 of the cases were identified from the Greater Male' Region, while one case was identified from an operational resort and the remaining two tested positive from a liveaboard.

Maldives currently records a total of 13,274 virus cases of which 629 are active cases, in addition to 12,591 recoveries and 47 deaths.

During August, authorities tightened the safety measures implemented in the Greater Male' region, following an alarming upsurge of COVID-19 cases after the state initiated efforts to steer the country towards a 'new normal' with the phased easing of lockdown restrictions.

After a long period of recording over 100 daily cases, the numbers fell to two-digits during the most part of September. Throughout October the numbers had slipped further down below 50, with a few spikes on rare occasions, including the recent spikes as a result of four new virus clusters.

Within this same period, the number of recoveries saw a significant increase, bringing the number of recovered cases to over 93 percent.

Despite the sustained decrease in virus cases, HPA has renewed calls for citizens to adhere to protective measures to contain the spread of the virus, cautioning against a public sentiment that the outbreak has been “controlled”.

On March 12, WHO classified the spread of COVID-19 as a global pandemic. To date, the new strain of novel coronavirus has infected over 68.8 million people and claimed over 1.5 million lives around the world. However, out of those infected, more than 47.7 million people have recovered.

Share this story

Discuss

MORE ON NEWS