Coronavirus: 472.000+ cases in New Europe,17.780 died
In Germany 195674, Balkans (71341), Belarus (62698)
04 July, 14:37The total number of fatalities in the region is 17.780 (+123), out of which 9003 registered in Germany, 1687 in Romania, 1492 in Poland, 1212 in Ukraine 705 in Austria, 587 in Hungary, 563 in Moldova, 405 in Belarus 351 in Czechia, 321 in North Macedonia, 287 in Serbia, 232 in Bulgaria. Between June 22 and June 29, the highest growth of the total number of COVID19-related fatalities was recorded in Kosovo (+46,2%), Albania (+31,8%), Montenegro (+22,2%) and North Macedonia (+20,2%).
The highest number of cases of COVID-19 in the area was registered in Germany (195674, +446 in the last 24 hours), followed by Belarus (62698, +274), Ukraine (46763, +875), Poland (35146, +371), Romania (27746, +450), Austria (17952, +138), Moldova (17150, +252), Serbia (15195, +359) and Czechia (12178, +132). In Slovenia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Romania and in the Western Balkans (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Albania) 71341 confirmed cases and 3065 deaths were registered as of July 3.
In Central- and Eastern Europe, Belarus has registered about 6605 cases of COVID-19 per million inhabitants, followed by Moldova (4251) and North Macedonia (3198), compared to 3984 in Italy, while the lowest rate was observed in Greece (321 per million) and Slovakia (312 per million), according to a count by ANSA based on WHO data. In the region, North Macedonia has registered the highest number of deaths per one million population in the region (155), followed by Moldova (140) and Germany (108), Slovakia the lowest (5). Italy has recorded around 576 deaths per million inhabitants.
Between June 22 and June 29, the highest weekly increase of total confirmed cases was observed in Montenegro (+32,9%), Kosovo (+23,9%), Albania (+23,6%), Bulgaria (+20,1%), Bosnia-Herzegovina (+19,7%) and North Macedonia (+19,3%). In Slovakia, Slovenia, Greece, Austria, Germany, Lithuania, Hungary, Latvia and Estonia the weekly increase of new cases was between 5% and zero. (ANSA).