Mexico coronavirus chief sidesteps calls to resign

| | Mexico City
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Mexico coronavirus chief sidesteps calls to resign

Sunday, 02 August 2020 | AP | Mexico City

Mexico coronavirus chief sidesteps calls to resign

The head of Mexico's efforts to fight the coronavirus pandemic has sidestepped calls to resign after Mexico posted a record case increase and the country's death count rose to overtake the United Kingdom as the third-highest in the world.

Assistant Health Secretary Hugo L pez-Gatell said late Friday that I express my respect to the nine of Mexico's 32 state governors who called for his resignation, adding "I hope we can continue to work together.

On Saturday, Mexico reported yet another new daily high for confirmed cases 9,556, which raised Mexico's total cases so far to almost 425,000. The country also posted 784 more confirmed COVID-19 deaths, raising its accumulated total to 47,472.

A letter calling for L pez-Gatell's immediate resignation bore the names of 10 state governors, all from opposition parties, was made public Friday, but later one of those governors said he had not approved the letter and distanced himself from it.

The letter blamed the administration of President Andr s Manuel L pez Obrador for an erratic handling of the epidemic and a lack of efficient response" that simultaneously boosted Mexico's death toll to the third-highest in the world while suffering an 18.9% drop in economic activity in the second quarter compared to the same period last year.

Mexico has imposed a very lax and partial lockdown of economic activity that has not stopped high levels of contagion, but has strangled the economy. Rather than testing or contact tracing, the government has focused on expanding hospital facilities.

The federal government has given confusing and mixed messages about whether to wear face masks. L pez Obrador himself almost never wears one, and said Friday I will use a face mask when there is no more corruption, a reference to his administration's anti-graft crusade, which he views as the country's main priority.

Many governors have been stung by the federal government's four-color stoplight scheme indicating whether a state is allowed to reopen businesses gradually.

Criteria like the rate of infection or hospital occupation levels are used to determine the colors, ranging from red for the shutdown of all but essential businesses, to green for near-normality. But many have disputed the way those criteria are determined. 

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