COVID-19: Switzerland cases near 10,000, deaths top 100

Swiss health minister says country has one of the highest testing rates, over 74,000 tests were negative

Switzerland, with a population of around 8.6 million, has one of the highest rates of infections per one million people, but its death rate is much lower than Italy or Spain, which have the world's highest death tolls. PHOTO: AFP

GENEVA:
The number of coronavirus cases in Switzerland has risen to almost 10,000, with 103 confirmed deaths, the country’s health minister said on Wednesday.

“The number of people infected with the coronavirus in Switzerland is 9,765. We are nearing the top of the curve, but discipline must be maintained,” Health Minister Alain Berset said at a news conference in the capital Bern.

He said 74,146 tests had returned negative results, adding that the total number of tests was now close to one per 100 people, making Switzerland one of the countries with the highest rate of testing.

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The minister said COVID-19 had claimed 60 lives in Ticino, the canton next to Lombardy, the Italian region hardest hit by the outbreak.

“We have observed plenty of discipline and individual responsibility within the population,” said Berset.


“But we will have to ensure that this discipline continues because we are only at the beginning.”

Switzerland, with a population of around 8.6 million, has one of the highest rates of infections per one million people, but its death rate is much lower than Italy or Spain, which have the world's highest death tolls.

On Wednesday, the Swiss government extended entry restrictions on all Schengen states, which are most of the countries in the EU, a few days after announcing contact restrictions between people in line with the World Health Organization’s recommendations.

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Last week, the Swiss Federal Council, the government’s executive body, imposed restrictions on entry by land and air from Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Spain, and all non-Schengen states.

Berset also said companies that are unable to comply with the government's safety instructions would be closed.

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