Coronavirus: Brazil's President Bolsonaro Tests Positive
He
took the test, his fourth, on Monday after developing symptoms, including a
high temperature.
Mr
Bolsonaro has repeatedly played down risks of what he has called the
"little flu", saying he would not be seriously affected. He has
opposed lockdowns, which he says hurt the economy.
Brazil
has the second-highest number of Covid-19 cases and deaths in the world, after
the US.
He made the
announcement in a TV interview on Tuesday, saying the fever he had been
experiencing had gone down and that he felt "very well".
Mr
Bolsonaro said that he had started experiencing symptoms on Sunday. He said he
had had a high temperature, a cough and had felt unwell.
He added that on
Monday he had felt worse, which prompted him to take the coronavirus test.
Mr
Bolsonaro is in a higher-risk group because of his age, 65.
He
said he was taking hydroxychloroquine - championed by US President Donald Trump
- and azithromycin, an antibiotic, to treat the illness. Neither has been
proven to be effective against the virus.
Contact tracing and
tests will be carried out for the people Mr Bolsonaro has met recently.
His
previous three tests for the virus all came back negative.
The
executive director of the World Health Organization, Dr Mike Ryan, wished
President Bolsonaro "a speedy and full recovery from this disease",
adding: "I think the message to us all is: we are vulnerable to this
virus."
Back in April, Mr
Bolsonaro said that even if infected, he would "not have to worry as I
wouldn't feel anything, at most it would be like a little flu or a little
cold".
The
number of Covid-19-related deaths and infections - at that time under 3,000 and
40,000 - has since soared.

Despite
this, President Bolsonaro has argued that regional lockdowns are having a more
damaging effect than the virus itself, and accused the media of spreading panic
and paranoia.
His
other comments on the virus include:
§
11 March:"From what I have seen until now, there are other kinds
of flu which have killed more people than that [coronavirus] one"
§
18 March: "Today
we have information, that because we have a more tropical climate [in Brazil]
we've almost reached the end [of the pandemic], or it's already over... the
virus doesn't spread as fast in warm climates like ours"
§
20 March: "After
being stabbed, I'm not going to be brought down by a little flu"
He
has since continued to rail against measures that he deems
"dictatorial" such as the closing beaches or requirements to wear
face coverings.
On
Monday, he made further changes to a law that would require Brazilians to wear
masks in public.
He has attended a
number of public events without a mask, even when local rules required him to
wear one.
On
Sunday, Foreign Minister Ernesto Araújo posted a photo on social media showing
himself with President Bolsonaro and others attending an Independence Day
celebration at the US embassy in Brasilia.
None
of those in the photo is wearing a mask or observing social distancing.
The
US embassy said that the ambassador had
had lunch with Mr Bolsonaro and others on 4 July. It added that the
ambassador had no symptoms but that he would undergo testing.
The ambassador had
earlier tweeted a picture of himself with President Bolsonaro.
Infections in Brazil
and Latin America as a whole took a while to take hold but then started to
rise, initially for Brazil in its Amazonas region but then more starkly in Rio
de Janeiro and São Paulo.
Brazil
became only the second country to pass one million cases on 20 June and has
continued to rise, passing 1.5 million. Many experts believe deficiencies in
testing mean the overall figures for cases and deaths could be considerably
higher.
Nevertheless
lockdowns began to be lifted in many areas even as the cases surged. Both Rio
and São Paulo have reopened bars and restaurants in the past week.
Two
health ministers - both doctors - have left their posts after disagreements
with the president.
One
ray of hope though is Brazil's renowned expertise in vaccines. Two major
vaccine tests, in partnership with AstraZeneca and Sinovac, are to begin final
phase testing on thousands of Brazilian volunteers.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-
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