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India on Wednesday recorded the highest single-day jump of 507 COVID-19 deaths and also a majority of cases -- close to four lakh -- in June to make it the worst month for the country prompting some states to go for varying degrees of lockdown.
Maharashtra, Delhi and Tamil Nadu have accounted for over 70% of 17,400 coronavirus deaths, according to the Union Health Ministry data.
The data updated at 8 am on Wednesday showed that 18,653 new infections were reported in 24 hours, taking the tally to 5,85,493. At the same time, the recovery rate was also steadily improving to touch nearly 60%.
It is for the fifth consecutive day that coronavirus cases have increased by more than 18,000. The country has seen a surge of 3,94,958 infections or nearly 68 per cent of the total in June, according to an analysis of the ministry data.
The number of active cases stands at 2,20,114, while 3,47,978 people have recovered, and one patient has migrated, the data showed, indicating that around 59.43% of patients have recovered so far.
India reported its first case on January 30 from Kerala when a student who had returned from Wuhan, China tested positive. It is now the fourth worst-affected country in terms of cases after the US, Brazil and Russia.
Health officials in Karnataka reported the country's first COVID-19 death on March 12 after samples of a 76-year-old man, who was a suspected coronavirus patient and passed away two days earlier, tested positive for the disease.
In a bid to halt the rapid surge in new infections, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Manipur and Nagaland are among the states which have extended the lockdown beyond June 30 for varying periods up to July 31 without any more relaxations.
Mumbai police issued prohibitory orders under Section 144 of CrPC in the city, restricting movement of people in public places, and said the measure was taken to check the rising COVID-19 cases. With 903 new patients reported on Tuesday, the coronavirus case tally in Mumbai increased to 77,197 while the death toll rose to 4,554 with 93 more fatalities.
The order said curbs on movement for non-essential work came into force from Wednesday and shall remain so till July 15, unless withdrawn earlier. It prohibited "presence or movement of one or more persons in public places or gathering of any sort", a senior police official said.
The second phase of 'Unlock ' also came into force from Wednesday after the month-long 'Unlock 1', a graded exit from the national lockdown imposed on March 25, ended on Tuesday. Though there will be "phased re-opening" of activities that had been barred to contain the spread of coronavirus, educational institutions, Metro rail services, cinema halls and gyms will continue to remain shut. Political, academic, cultural, religious, sporting events and other large congregations will also continue to be prohibited.
Domestic and international (under the Vande Bharat mission) flights and passenger trains, already operational in a limited manner, will be further expanded in a calibrated manner, according to the Ministry of Home Affairs(MHA) guidelines.
Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said the situation in the national capital has been brought under control for now with the "combined efforts" of the AAP government, Centre and other organisations, but cautioned people against any lapse in social and personal behaviour that may again lead to a rise in cases.
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, meanwhile, launched his government's fortnight-long "Kill Corona" campaign, which aims to screen every household in the state for the infection.
In Maharashtra, Home Minister Anil Deshmukh said as many as 4,938 police personnel have tested positive for coronavirus so far and 60 of them have succumbed to the viral infection. He said 38 of the 60 deceased were from the Mumbai Police force. As many as 3,813 of the 4,938 infected police personnel have recovered from COVID-19 while over 1,000 others are currently under treatment, the home minister said in a statement.
Of the total 17,400 deaths reported so far, Maharashtra accounted for the highest 7,855 fatalities followed by with number of deaths in brackets Delhi(2,742), Gujarat (1,846), Tamil Nadu (1,201), Uttar Pradesh (697), West Bengal (668), Madhya Pradesh (572), Rajasthan (413) and Telangana (260).
The other states reporting more than 100 deaths are Karnataka (246), Haryana (236), Andhra Pradesh (187), Punjab (144) and Jammu and Kashmir (101).
Maharashtra has also reported the highest number of cases at 1,74,761 followed by Tamil Nadu at 90,167, Delhi at 87,360, Gujarat at 32,557, Uttar Pradesh at 23,492, West Bengal at 18,559 and Rajasthan at 18,014, according to the Health Ministry data.
The number of COVID-19 cases has gone up to 16,339 in Telangana, 15,242 in Karnataka, 14,595 in Andhra Pradesh, 14,548 in Haryana, and 13,593 in Madhya Pradesh. Bihar with 10,043 cases is the other state which has crossed the 10,000 mark.
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