Más Información

Comparece ante juez contralmirante Fernando Farías, detenido por huachicol fiscal; solicitará asilo político a Argentina, afirma abogado

"La ley es para todos", dice la Marina tras captura de contralmirante Fernando Farías; hace un llamado a honrar el uniforme

"Capitán Sol", pieza clave en red de huachicol fiscal que sigue prófugo; era enlace de los hermanos Farías, acusa testigo

"Queremos regresar a Banamex al lugar que merece", dice Chico Pardo tras cambios; Edgardo del Rincón es el nuevo director general
From the Amazon city of Manaus to the seemingly endless urban sprawl of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro , freshly dug graves have been filling up quickly for weeks with the bodies of Brazilians killed by COVID-19 .
Recommended: Coronavirus COVID-19 Global Cases Mapped
Deaths from the coronavirus hit some cities so hard starting last month that officials were unprepared for the crush of bodies even though regional governments imposed measures aimed at halting the spread of the virus .
Meanwhile, President Jair Bolsonaro railed against business shutdowns as more harmful than the virus itself—and the country’s first lockdown was not ordered until this week , when there were already more than 7,000 deaths .
The city’s hospitals are close to capacity and health workers complain that they don’t have enough essential drugs to treat patients.
Bolsonaro, who has repeatedly called COVID-19 “ a little flu ” and refuses to wear a mask at his public events, has been criticized by protesters who lean from their apartment windows to bang pots and pans.
In Manaus , a city of 2.2 million in the vast Amazon region , the death surge was so extreme that trenches for common graves were dug in one cemetery and caskets were piled atop each other.
Some scientists said over 1 million in Brazil are probably infected. The country is heading into winter, which can worsen respiratory illnesses.
sg
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]










