The Covid-19 situation is ‘seriously concerning’ as 828 new cases were reported in the north



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Strong political, medical and scientific calls were made on Wednesday for people not to be pleased with the threat of Covid-19, as the incidence of the virus remained at a high level in Northern Ireland.

As the Northern Department of Health in its daily bulletin recorded 828 new cases of coronavirus on Wednesday, the Deputy Prime Minister, Michelle O’Neill, warned: “We are in a very serious situation.”

He told the Assembly Committee of the Executive Office that the latest figures are “seriously worrying in terms of the exponential increase in positive cases and, at the same time, the number of people who have been admitted to the hospital.”

Prime Minister Arlene Foster at the same meeting accepted that people were “fed up” with Covid-19, but insisted that ministers were not “crying like a wolf” because of the seriousness of the situation.

The Health Department reported one more death from Covid-19, bringing the total number to 586. The number of confirmed virus cases since the start of the pandemic now stands at 16,187.

It’s a two-finger salute to the rest of us, the medically vulnerable, and our healthcare workers.

In the last seven days there were 4,417 new cases in the North. The highest incidence is still in the Derry and Strabane council area, where there were 637 cases per 100,000 residents last week.

It is followed by the Newry, Morne and Down area with 338 cases per 100,000 inhabitants and Belfast with 318 cases per 100,000.

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