Advertisement

WHO warns coronavirus 'may never go away'

Coronavirus “may never go away”, according to the World Health Organisation, after a number of virus clusters surfaced around the world as countries lift lockdowns.

Authorities in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the pandemic first began late last year, reportedly were pressing ahead to test all 11 million residents for the virus within 10 days after a handful of new infections were found.

In Lebanon, authorities reinstated a nationwide lockdown for four days beginning on Wednesday night (local time) after a spike in reported infections and complaints from officials that social-distancing rules were being ignored.

Meanwhile a top World Health Organisation official warned it was possible the new coronavirus may be here to stay.

“This virus may never go away,” Dr Michael Ryan said in a press briefing on Wednesday (local time).

Pedestrians cross a deserted street in Melbourne's central business district as Australia starts to ease its COVID-19 coronavirus restrictions.
Melbourne's CBD as Victoria eases COVID-19 lockdown measures. Source: Getty Images

Without a vaccine, he said it could take years for the global population to build up sufficient levels of immunity.

“I think it’s important to put this on the table,” he said.

“This virus may become just another endemic virus in our communities,” Dr Ryan added, noting other previously novel diseases like HIV have never disappeared, but effective treatments have been developed.

Despite the risk loosening restrictions could lead to infection spikes, European nations have been seeking to restart cross-border travel, particularly as the summer holiday season looms for countries whose economies rely on tourists flocking to their beaches, museums and historical sites.

The European Union unveiled a plan to help citizens across its 27 nations salvage their summer vacations after months of coronavirus lockdown and resurrect Europe’s badly battered tourism industry. The pandemic has prompted border closures across Europe and shut down the lifeline of cheap local flights.

A man wears a mask on a near-deserted street in the central business district as people stay home due to the COVID-19 novel coronavirus outbreak in Sydney.
A man walks through a deserted Sydney CBD. Source: Getty Images

The EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, laid out its advice for lifting ID checks at closed borders, helping to get airlines, ferries and buses running while ensuring the safety of passengers and crew, and preparing health measures for hotels.

It's not clear whether EU nations will follow that advice, since they, not Brussels, have the final say over health and security matters.

Some European countries have sought bilateral agreements with their neighbours.

Austria said its border with Germany would reopen fully on June 15, and that border checks would be reduced starting Friday.

Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said Austria was aiming for similar agreements with Switzerland, Liechtenstein and its eastern neighbors "as long as the infection figures allow.”

German Foreign Minister Heiko Mass said his country will lift a blanket warning against foreign travel for European destinations before other places, but didn't specify when. Germany’s warning against all non-essential tourist travel abroad runs until at least June 14.

The tension in balancing people’s safety against the severe economic fallout is playing out across the world. Italy partially lifted lockdown restrictions last week only to see a big jump in confirmed coronavirus cases in its hardest-hit region.

Pakistan reported 2,000 new infections in a single day after crowds of people crammed into local markets as restrictions were eased.

European countries have begun slowly easing their lockdowns, from barber shops reopening next week in Belgium to some schools starting up again soon in Portugal. But a raft of safety rules are being put in place, including reducing the number of children in Belgian preschool classes and various forms of social distancing.

Employees of Rome's Municipal Environment Company (AMA), wearing protective overall and mask, sanitise the Santuario della Madonna del Divino Amore church in the southern Castel di Leva district of Rome.
Workers for Rome's Municipal Environment Company (AMA sanitise the Santuario della Madonna del Divino Amore church in Italy. Source: Getty Images

In Sweden, which has taken a relatively soft approach to fighting the coronavirus, allowing primary schools and restaurants to remain open with some social-distancing rules, officials urged Swedes not to travel abroad for non-essential trips and to limit movement inside the country.

Travel within Sweden “of up to one to two hours by car can be made”, Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven said.

“But it does not mean that everything is as it used to be — common sense and great caution apply.”

The situation remains unclear in some countries. The US says Tanzania has not publicly released any data on COVID-19 in two weeks.

The WHO also has expressed worry about Tanzania, whose president has questioned his own government’s virus testing and refused to close churches in the belief that the virus can’t survive in the body of Christ.

A new US Embassy statement warns the risk of being infected in Tanzania’s commercial hub, Dar es Salaam, is “extremely high” and says many hospitals in the city have been overwhelmed.

A person sunbathes while wearing a protective mask in the Coney Island neighbourhood in the Brooklyn borough in New York City.
A woman sunbathes while in Coney Island, New York City. Source: Getty Images

Coronavirus vaccine distribution ‘fraught with challenges’

Meanwhile, Dr Ryan, the World Health Organisation’s chief of health emergencies, had a grim warning about coronavirus: even though an effective vaccine might be developed, it would require immense work to produce sufficient doses and distribute them worldwide.

“Every single one of those steps is fraught with challenges,” he said.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead for COVID-19, added she recognised some people were “in a state of feeling quite some despair”, but pointed out stopping the virus even without medical interventions was possible.

“The trajectory of this outbreak is in our hands,” she said.

“We have seen some countries bring the virus under control.”

In the United States, the country's top infectious disease expert issued a blunt warning cities and states could see more COVID-19 deaths and economic damage if they lift stay-at-home orders too quickly.

“There is a real risk that you will trigger an outbreak that you may not be able to control,” Dr Anthony Fauci said in Senate testimony Tuesday after more than two dozen US states began to lift lockdowns.

His comments were a sharp pushback to President Donald Trump, who wants to right a free-falling economy that has seen 33 million Americans lose their jobs.

A woman in a mask is seen lining up at Centrelink in Bondi Junction in Sydney, Australia.
People line up at Centrelink in Bondi Junction after losing their jobs. Source: Getty Images

The US has the largest coronavirus outbreak in the world by far – 1.38 million infections and over 83,000 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

China, the first nation to put a large number of citizens under lockdown and the first to ease those restrictions, has been strictly guarding against any resurgence.

In January, it put the entire city of Wuhan and the surrounding region, home to more than 50 million people, under a strict lockdown.

A cluster of six new cases recently emerged, the first local infections in Wuhan since before the lockdown was eased in early April.

Worldwide, the virus has infected more than 4.3 million people and killed some 295,000, according to the Johns Hopkins tally. Experts say the actual numbers are likely far higher.

Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@yahoonews.com.

You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter and download the Yahoo News app from the App Store or Google Play.