KEY POINTS
  • Dr. Soumya Swaminathan from the World Health Organization said a second wave of infection is "a very real risk" as the virus is still present in the community.
  • "We don't know if it will be a second wave, a second peak or a continuing first wave in some countries," the health agency's chief scientist told CNBC Tuesday.
  • Asymptomatic cases of transmission cannot be completely ruled out even though they may be less likely to transmit the coronavirus, she said.
Commuters wearing protective masks ride the L subway line during rush hour in the Williamsburg neighborhood in the Brooklyn borough of New York, U.S., on Monday, June 8, 2020. Only 1.2% of New Yorkers tested Sunday were infected with the new coronavirus, the lowest rate since the pandemic began. "Why are we reopening? Because these numbers say we can," Governor Andrew Cuomo said said at a news conference in Manhattan. Photographer:

Stringent public health measures have helped stem the transmission of the coronavirus, but there's "every chance" of a resurgence as economies reopen, the chief scientist of the World Health Organization warned Tuesday. 

"We don't know if it will be a second wave, a second peak or a continuing first wave in some countries, it (the infection rate) really hasn't come down that much at the time of reopening and so all of these possibilities are very real," Dr. Soumya Swaminathan told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia."