go study why scientists are calling it the Africa conundrum. I'm not going to argue minutiae. The data is in and analyzed and published
That's not how discussion works. If you are going to make an assertion, you should be ready to back it up when asked. Passing research onto others says to us that you don't have a solid foundation for what you are saying.
And, two things:
1) What I was saying comes from publications of the World Health Organization, and the scientific journal Nature - I double checked them before I spoke.
Africa urgently needs to guarantee its own health security.
www.nature.com
Almost two years after Africa identified its first case of COVID-19 (14 February 2020), the World Health Organization (WHO) finds that, if current trends continue, the continent can control the pandemic in 2022. However, WHO warned that continued vigilance is key.
www.afro.who.int
2) What comes up when one searches on "The African Conundrum" isn't about covid, but a book about the overall developmental hole Africa is in, where it came from, and how they can get out of it.
www.barnesandnoble.com
When I finally do get to something covid-related, some pages deep in Google, it is a paper discussing how the low covid morbidity in Africa can be explained by the age distribution in sub-saharan Africa: to wit, the continent is full of young people, who don't get as severe disease. Again, not a lot of mystery there.
The demographic age structure of sub-Saharan Africa contributes significantly to the low morbidity and mortality of COVID-19 compared to other regions in the world.
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
So, basically, when I do study your point, I find it is not supported. If you want to be convincing, you're going to have to bring your own information, from reputable sources, to the table.