Brazil stops releasing Covid-19 death toll and wipes data from official site
The Brazilian government has been accused of
totalitarianism and censorship after it stopped releasing its total numbers of
Covid-19 cases and deaths and wiped an official site clean of swaths of data.
Health ministry insiders told local media the move
was ordered by far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, himself – and was met with
widespread outrage in Brazil, one of the world’s worst-hit Covid-19 hotspots,
with more deaths than Italy and more cases than Russia and the UK.
“The authoritarian, insensitive, inhuman and
unethical attempt to make those killed by Covid-19 invisible will not succeed.
We and Brazilian society will not forget them, nor the tragedy that befalls the
nation,” said Alberto Beltrame, president of Brazil’s national council of state
health secretaries, in a statement.
Brazil currently has the world’s second-highest
number of cases, at 672,846, according to the Johns Hopkins university site,
and has overtaken Italy, with 35,930 deaths. Johns Hopkins removed Brazil from
its global count on Saturday but later reinstated it.
On Friday night, Brazil’s government stopped
releasing the cumulative numbers of confirmed Covid-19 cases and obits in its
daily bulletin and only supplied daily numbers. A health ministry site was
taken offline and returned on Saturday without the total number of deaths and
confirmed cases, as well as numbers of cases under investigation and those that
recovered. The death counts were reported as 904 on Saturday, 1,005 on Friday
and 1,473 on Thursday.
The move was widely criticised across Brazilian
society, with doctors, medical associations and state governors attacking what
they called an attempt to control information. Federal prosecutors announced an
investigation on Saturday and gave the interim health minister 72 hours to
explain the move, using the Brazilian constitution and freedom of information
law as justification.
“The
manipulation of statistics is a manoeuvre of totalitarian regimes,” tweeted
Gilmar Mendes, a supreme court judge. “The trick will not exempt responsibility
for the eventual genocide.” Rodrigo Maia, speaker of the lower house of
Congress, called for the data to be replaced for “transparency”.
“You can’t face a pandemic without science,
transparency and action,” Paulo Câmara, governor of the north-eastern state of
Pernambuco, posted on Instagram. “Manipulation, omission and disrespect are the
striking marks of authoritarian administrations. But this won’t destroy the
effort of the whole nation. We will continue producing, systematising and
releasing the data.”
Moves to control Covid-19 numbers began earlier in
the week. On Wednesday, the ministry pushed back the release of its daily
bulletin from 7pm to 10pm, after the nightly television news. “That’s the end
of Jornal Nacional reports,” Bolsonaro said on Friday, referring to Brazil’s
biggest TV news programme.
The data was “adapted” because it did not “portray
the moment the country is in”, tweeted the president, who has flaunted
isolation measures, dismissed the disease as a “little flu” and shrugged off
Brazil’s rising death toll because, he said, death was “everybody’s destiny”.
Health ministry technicians told Brasília’s Correio
Braziliense that “Bolsonaro freaked out” and blamed the president for the
decision to “misrepresent” the numbers.
The country currently has no health minister, having
lost two since the pandemic began. The acting health minister, Eduardo
Pazuello, is an army general with no health experience who has stuffed the
ministry with military officers.
On Friday, Carlos Wizard, a billionaire Mormon
businessman with no health experience who is taking over as secretary of
science, technology and strategic supplies at the health ministry, called the
current data “fanciful or manipulated”.
“There are many people dying for other causes and
public managers, purely interested in having bigger budgets for their towns,
their states, were putting everybody as Covid. We are revising these obits,” he
told the O Globo newspaper. In fact, health specialists have argued that there
is widespread under-reporting of cases and deaths in Brazil, in part due to a
lack of testing.
“Only someone who does not know the public health
system could make this statement,” André Longo, health secretary of Pernambuco
state, told the Guardian. “It stains the history of Brazilian public health.”
Doctors across Brazil said the lack of information
would hinder management of the pandemic as cases moved from big cities into its
vast interior. “How is a manager going to reallocate resources and organise
vacancies and transporting the sick if they don’t have data?” said Guilherme
Pivoto, an infectious diseases specialist in Manaus, one of Brazil’s worst-hit
cities.
Pressure on hospitals in big cities like Manaus,
Fortaleza and Rio de Janeiro has eased and states like São Paulo and Rio de
Janeiro have begun slowly allowing shops and businesses to reopen.
But managing that
transition requires accurate and clear information, said Alberto Chebabo, an
infectious diseases specialist at Rio de Janeiro’s Federal University hospital
and vice-president of the Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases.
“We have room in intensive care … but the hospital
still has many patients,” he said. “Many decisions are taken on basis of these
numbers not just in Brazil, but in whole world … It is an inadmissible lack of
transparency.”




