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JAPAN REPORTS RECORD CORONAVIRUS CASES

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Nov 12, 2020
  • 2 min read

Japan reported Wednesday a near-record 1,547 cases of the novel coronavirus, the highest level since early August, amid signs of what some health experts say is a "third wave" of infections as cooler temperatures arrive and people spend more time indoors without enough ventilation, Kyodo News reported.

The nationwide tally, compiled by Kyodo News based on official information, inched closer to the single-day record of 1,596 logged on Aug. 7 after areas with big urban populations saw a spike in the number of new cases.


Tokyo confirmed 317 cases, topping the 300 mark for the first time since Aug. 20, bringing its cumulative total to 33,377, the highest by far among the country's 47 prefectures.


Osaka, Hyogo and Saitama prefectures all reported record single-day increases since the outbreak of the virus, while there has also been a rapid rise of cluster infections in northern regions such as Hokkaido, a popular tourist destination.


"This can be regarded as a third wave (of the coronavirus)," Toshio Nakagawa, head of the Japan Medical Association, told a press conference.


Tokyo has been seeing an uptick in infections since the beginning of November, with the average daily number of new cases in the capital over the previous seven days exceeding 250, which is equivalent to that of late August, the month that the spread of the virus peaked in Japan.


Osaka, which has the second-highest cumulative total, reported 256 new cases and its neighboring prefecture of Hyogo confirmed 70 cases of the virus.


Saitama Prefecture, near Tokyo, reported 116 new cases, while Hokkaido confirmed an additional 197 infections, exceeding more than 100 cases for the seventh straight day. On Monday, the country's northernmost main island registered a record high of 200 cases.


The latest numbers bring Japan's nationwide cumulative total to 112,767 cases, including around 700 from the Diamond Princess, a cruise ship that was quarantined in Yokohama in February. The death toll now stands at 1,876.





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