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COVID-19: WHO Warns Of Fourth Wave As Nigeria Confirms 433 Cases, Two Death Thursday 

Covid-19
Nigeria on Thursday recorded two additional fatalities from the coronavirus pandemic with 433 fresh cases reported across 16 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
This was contained in an update shared on the Facebook page of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) late Thursday night.
The data indicates that Nigeria’s total infection from the pandemic currently stands at 203,514 while the fatality toll increased to 2,668.
It also noted that four states- Nasarawa, Ogun, Osun, and Sokoto – recorded no fresh cases.
Breakdown
The breakdown shows that the FCT also displaced Lagos, Nigeria’s coronavirus epicenter, with more cases on the log on Thursday. The country’s capital city reported 191 new cases while Lagos followed with only 79 cases and Anambra State with 63 cases.
In Nigeria’s South-south region, Rivers, Delta, Edo, Akwa Ibom, and the Bayelsa States recorded 27, nine, seven, five, and two cases respectively.
Apart from Lagos, other Southwestern states of Oyo, Ondo, and Ekiti States registered ten, eight, and four cases respectively.
Also, apart from the FCT, Plateau State in the North-central reported 13 cases on Thursday.
In the Northeast region, both Gombe and Borno States reported six and five cases respectively, while the North-west States of Zamfara and Kano States recorded two and one cases respectively.
Only Enugu State from the South-east appears on the infection chart on Thursday with a single case.
Variants
The regional director added that the Delta variant had been found in 38 African countries while the Alpha variant currently ravages 45 countries and the Beta variant in 40 of the 52-nation continent.
She said: ”Health workers, services, and communities can and should use this time to regroup and prepare for the next wave.
“With end-of-year travel and festive celebrations fast approaching, fresh increases in cases should be expected in the coming months.
“Without widespread vaccination and other preventive measures, the continent’s fourth wave is likely to be the most brutal yet.”
Vaccination
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has also declared that COVID-19 vaccine shipments to Africa must rise by seven times from about 20 million per month to 150 million each month on average.
Matshidiso Moeti, the organization’s regional director for Africa, said this during a virtual news conference on Thursday.
She noted that the rise is necessary if the continent is to fully vaccinate 70 percent of its people by September 2022.
She added that the United States pledged to share 500 million more COVID-19 vaccines to low-income countries between now and 2021, bringing its total pledges to more than 1.1 billion doses.
Ada Peter
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