For months, India and Brazil have taken up a disproportionate number of COVID-19 headlines, with stories emerging of bloated bodies in the Ganges and collapsing hospital systems. The New York Times says the eye of the pandemic's storm has shifted to a new location: the fourth most populous country, Indonesia. As a disaster management researcher puts it to the Washington Post, "It’s frustrating, if not catastrophic. I am not trying to exaggerate the situation, but we, Indonesia, might no longer be just a hot spot, we might be a burned spot." By the numbers:
- New infections stood at 57,000 on Thursday, a seven-fold increase over a month prior, and one that some health experts believe is a vast undercount due to the limited testing being done (one Indonesia epidemiologist suspects the true count could be as high as 300,000).
- On Saturday, the Guardian reports the number was just shy of 52,000, meaning the country had outpaced India and Brazil for the third day straight. The only country to record more new infections on Saturday was the UK, at about 54,500, but it has a much higher testing rate.
- Friday's deaths stood at 1,205, bringing its total to 71,000—still well below that of the US, which is home to about 60 million additional people.