Total Covid-19 Deaths By Country: Revisiting The Horror

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Zororo Makamba Zimbabwe's first Covid-19 victim March 2020

Zimbabwe’s first officially recorded COVID-19 death was Zororo Makamba, a youthful media personnel, a death that sent tremors across the country as the novel virus announced, I’m closer to home.

Until then, many Zimbabweans had watched the crisis unfold from a distance, in China, in Europe, in the United States. But when Makamba succumbed to the virus in March 2020, the pandemic suddenly became real. It was no longer breaking news from abroad. It was here.

Hospitals braced. Borders tightened. Streets emptied. Families prayed. Globally, the numbers would later swell into the millions. COVID-19 may no longer dominate headlines, but its scars remain. Families still grieve. Survivors still carry memories of ventilators, oxygen queues and frantic hospital calls. Businesses collapsed. Borders shut. Dreams paused.

Below is a comprehensive historical list of officially recorded COVID-19 deaths by country, based on Worldometer data during the pandemic reporting period.

Total Recorded COVID-19 Deaths by Country

1. USA – 1,219,487

2. Brazil – 711,380

3. India – 533,570

4. Russia – 402,756

5. Mexico – 334,958

6. UK – 232,112

7. Peru – 222,161

8. Italy – 196,487

9. Germany – 183,027

10. France – 167,642

11. Indonesia – 162,063

12. Iran – 146,811

13. Colombia – 143,200

14. Argentina – 130,841

15. Spain – 121,760

16. Poland – 120,598

17. Ukraine – 112,418

18. South Africa – 102,595

19. Turkey – 102,174

20. Japan – 74,694

21. Romania – 68,929

22. Philippines – 66,864

23. Chile – 64,497

24. Canada – 59,034

25. Hungary – 49,048

26. Czechia – 43,517

27. Vietnam – 43,206

28. Bulgaria – 38,748

29. Greece – 37,869

30. Malaysia – 37,348

31. South Korea – 35,934

32. Thailand – 34,586

33. Belgium – 34,376

34. Pakistan – 30,664

35. Tunisia – 29,500

36. Bangladesh – 29,435

37. Portugal – 28,126

38. Sweden – 27,407

39. Iraq – 25,375

40. Egypt – 24,930

41. Australia – 24,414

42. Netherlands – 22,992

43. Austria – 22,542

44. Slovakia – 21,224

45. Myanmar – 19,400

46. Kazakhstan – 19,100

47. Serbia – 18,400

48. Georgia – 17,200

49. Sri Lanka – 16,900

50. Morocco – 16,300

51. Bosnia & Herzegovina – 16,200

52. Switzerland – 14,452

53. Moldova – 12,160

54. Nepal – 12,000

55. Israel – 12,707

56. Finland – 10,300

57. Azerbaijan – 10,000

58. Saudi Arabia – 9,530

59. North Macedonia – 9,300

60. Panama – 8,727

61. Armenia – 8,670

62. Denmark – 8,300

63. Afghanistan – 7,870

64. Ethiopia – 7,540

65. Algeria – 6,880

66. Norway – 5,880

67. Zimbabwe – 5,740

68. Venezuela – 5,856

69. Kenya – 5,689

70. Belarus – 5,490

71. China – 5,272

72. Sudan – 4,230

73. Zambia – 4,077

74. Uganda – 3,652

75. Albania – 3,600

76. Malawi – 3,300

77. Nigeria – 3,230

78. Cambodia – 3,056

79. Mongolia – 2,120

80. Mozambique – 2,200

81. Kosovo – 2,200

82. UAE – 2,302

83. Singapore – 2,024

84. Uzbekistan – 1,650

85. Angola – 1,900

86. Kyrgyzstan – 1,540

87. Rwanda – 1,500

88. Tanzania – 846

89. Qatar – 702

90. Tajikistan – 524

91. Maldives – 316

92. Laos – 210

93. Burundi – 50

94. Bhutan – 21

Source: Worldometer (historical data as last updated during reporting period).

While statistics tell one story, the human cost tells another. For Zimbabwe and many African nations, limited health infrastructure made every surge a national emergency. Globally, the pandemic reshaped public health systems, vaccination strategies and emergency preparedness forever.

COVID-19 may have receded, but its lessons remain urgent.

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