Advertisement

Argentina COVID-19 deaths hit 60,000 in pandemic's 'worst moment'

By Juan Bustamante

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentina is going through its "worst moment" of the COVID-19 pandemic, the health minister said on Wednesday, as deaths from the virus hit 60,000 amid a sharp second wave that has forced the country to re-impose some lockdown measures.

Health Minister Carla Vizzotti warned that the South American country's healthcare system was at risk, especially in the metropolitan area around the capital Buenos Aires, which had forced the government to restrict movement and suspend indoor activities.

"We are living through the worst moment of the pandemic now," she told a daily briefing, adding the country was seeing an important rise in the circulation of new variants, with the virus surging in the capital and beyond.

"It's growing exponentially in most of the country."

Argentina, which is rolling out an inoculation program largely around Russia's Sputnik V vaccine, has recorded some 2.77 million COVID-19 cases and has set a series of new daily records for infections in recent weeks. The death toll rose by 291 on Wednesday to 60,083.

A local laboratory on Tuesday said it had produced a test batch of Sputnik V ahead of planned large-scale manufacture later this year. Vizzotti said it was "great news" though cautioned it needed to be quality controlled and that the time frame would depend on how that process went.

Carlos Camera, an Argentine infectious disease expert, said there was a possibility of health systems being overwhelmed, which was the cause of new restrictions that had sparked some protests amid a fragile economic rebound.

"What was not foreseen was the size with which this second wave has hit and above all the speed of it compared to the speed we've managed with vaccinations," said Camera.

Carolina Caceres, a nurse at the Tornu hospital in Buenos Aires, was protesting on Wednesday with others calling for better salaries for health workers.

"In this second wave of infections, nurses are dealing with all the pressure to sustain the public health system in this pandemic, without wages and without recognition," she told Reuters. "We really can't take it anymore."

(Reporting by Juan Bustamante; Writing by Adam Jourdan; Editing by Aurora Ellis and Alistair Bell)