Brazil COVID-19 Cases Top 4 Million

Brazilian soldiers take part in the cleaning and disinfection of the Municipal Market in Belo Horizonte: Brazil topped four million Covid-19 cases on September 3. AFP
Brazilian soldiers take part in the cleaning and disinfection of the Municipal Market in Belo Horizonte: Brazil topped four million Covid-19 cases on September 3. AFP
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Brazil COVID-19 Cases Top 4 Million

Brazilian soldiers take part in the cleaning and disinfection of the Municipal Market in Belo Horizonte: Brazil topped four million Covid-19 cases on September 3. AFP
Brazilian soldiers take part in the cleaning and disinfection of the Municipal Market in Belo Horizonte: Brazil topped four million Covid-19 cases on September 3. AFP

Brazil surpassed four million coronavirus cases on Thursday, as an international panel looking into the global response to the pandemic vowed to uncover how it was able to spread worldwide.

"This is a strong panel poised to ask the hard questions," said former Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, co-chair of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response (IPPR), which will rake over the heavily criticized World Health Organization-led response.

There were almost 44,000 new cases over the previous 24 hours alone, and 834 fatalities.

"In the last two months, we have seen a curve that mixes regions that are increasing, with others that are decreasing," said Paulo Lotufo, professor of epidemiology at the University of Sao Paulo, pointing to spikes in the south and center-west, while cases were falling in the major cities of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, as well as in the north, AFP reported.

But experts warned the situation could suddenly worsen again if local and regional governments give in to pressure from business groups to reopen the economy too soon, and if social distancing measures are abandoned.

As the death toll rose, the IPPR said its members would have unfettered access to the WHO's files.

The WHO "made it clear that their files are an open book. Anything we want to see, we see," said former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark, who co-heads the panel with Sirleaf.

"We can't count on it being another century until a pandemic like this comes around," Clark said. The WHO has been accused of being slow off the mark to react to the initial Covid-19 outbreak in China.

"If another took off like this in short order, how devastating that would be, now that we know the extent of damage that can be done," Clark said.



China Tells Rubio to Behave Himself in Veiled Warning

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi speaks during a joint briefing with Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty in Beijing’s Diaoyutai State Guesthouse on December 13, 2024. (Reuters)
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi speaks during a joint briefing with Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty in Beijing’s Diaoyutai State Guesthouse on December 13, 2024. (Reuters)
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China Tells Rubio to Behave Himself in Veiled Warning

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi speaks during a joint briefing with Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty in Beijing’s Diaoyutai State Guesthouse on December 13, 2024. (Reuters)
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi speaks during a joint briefing with Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty in Beijing’s Diaoyutai State Guesthouse on December 13, 2024. (Reuters)

China's veteran foreign minister has issued a veiled warning to America's new secretary of state: Behave yourself.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi conveyed the message in a phone call Friday, their first conversation since Marco Rubio's confirmation as President Donald Trump's top diplomat four days earlier.

“I hope you will act accordingly,” Wang told Rubio, according to a Foreign Ministry statement, employing a Chinese phrase typically used by a teacher or a boss warning a student or employee to behave and be responsible for their actions.

The short phrase seemed aimed at Rubio's vocal criticism of China and its human rights record when he was a US senator, which prompted the Chinese government to put sanctions on him twice in 2020.

It can be translated in various ways — in the past, the Foreign Ministry has used “make the right choice” and “be very prudent about what they say or do” rather than “act accordingly.”

The vagueness allows the phrase to express an expectation and deliver a veiled warning, while also maintaining the courtesy necessary for further diplomatic engagement, said Zichen Wang, a research fellow at the Center for China and Globalization, a Chinese think tank.

“What could appear to be confusing is thus an intended effect originating from Chinese traditional wisdom and classic practice of speech,” said Wang, who is currently in a mid-career master's program at Princeton University.

Rubio, during his confirmation hearing, cited the importance of referring to the original Chinese to understand the words of China's leader Xi Jinping.

“Don’t read the English translation that they put out because the English translation is never right,” he said.

A US statement on the phone call didn't mention the phrase. It said Rubio told Wang that the Trump administration would advance US interests in its relationship with China and expressed “serious concern over China’s coercive actions against Taiwan and in the South China Sea.”

Wang was foreign minister in 2020 when China slapped sanctions on Rubio in July and August, first in response to US sanctions on Chinese officials for a crackdown on the Uyghur minority in the Xinjiang region and then over what it regarded as outside interference in Hong Kong.

The sanctions include a ban on travel to China, and while the Chinese government has indicated it will engage with Rubio as secretary of state, it has not explicitly said whether it would allow him to visit the country for talks.