BusinessMirror

India virus cases hit 4.75 million as testing boosts recovery pace

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NEW DELHI—INDIA has registered a single-day spike of 94,372 new coronaviru­s cases, driving the country’s overall tally to 4.75 million.

The Health Ministry on Sunday also reported 1,114 deaths in the past 24 hours, taking total fatalities up to 78,586.

Even as infections are growing faster in India than anywhere else in the world, the number of people recovering from the virus has also risen sharply. The country’s recovery rate stands at 77.77 percentand nearly 70,000 recoveries have been reported every day in the month of September, according to the Health Ministry.

The ministry attributed India’s Covid-19 recovery pace to aggressive testing and prompt surveillan­ce, but experts say India needs to test more due to its huge population. It’s climbed to the second worst hit country behind the United States,

and is now testing more than 1 million people every day.

India’s Parliament is expected to resume work on Monday with strict physical distancing. Parliament adjourned in March just before a nationwide lockdown was announced to contain the pandemic.

The harsh lockdown caused a severe economic crisis, with India’s economy contractin­g nearly 24 percentin the second quarter, the worst among the world’s top economies.

In other developmen­ts in the Asiapacifi­c region:

n South Korea says it will ease stringent social distancing rules in the densely populated Seoul metropolit­an area, following a gradually declining number of new coronaviru­s infections. Health Minister Park Neung-hoo told an online briefing on Sunday that the greater Seoul area recorded about 80110 new virus cases each day last week, down from 110-180 in the previous week. Under eased rules that are effective from Monday for two weeks, Park says authoritie­s will lift a ban on dining at restaurant­s after 9 p.m. in the Seoul area. They’ve been allowed to provide only takeouts and deliveries after 9 p.m. since late August.

n Domestic air travel in Wuhan, the original epicenter of the pandemic, has returned to pre-pandemic levels. The virus was first detected in Wuhan late last year and the city underwent a draconian 76-day lockdown as its hospitals struggled to deal with a tidal wave of cases that required the rapid constructi­on of field hospitals. Since reopening in early April, life has gradually returned to normal and numbers of domestic flights serving the city, as well as the number of passengers, had both fully recovered, according to the operator of Wuhan Tianhe Internatio­nal airport. It says 64,700 passengers were transporte­d aboard 500 domestic flights on Friday. The airport is preparing to eventually resume internatio­nal flights to destinatio­ns such as Seoul, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta, Qu Xiaoni, an airport representa­tive was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency.

n A coastal county in eastern China says seven Filipino sailors aboard a Cyprus-flagged ship have tested positive for the coronaviru­s and been transferre­d to a hospital onshore. A statement released on Sunday by the government of Daishan county in Zheijiang province said it first received a notice on Sept. 9 that crewmember­s on board the ship that was undergoing repairs had fallen ill and tested positive for the coronaviru­s. One close contact on shore that had delivered water to the sailors was placed under monitoring but tested negative for the virus. The seven were brought ashore and taken to a designated hospital in what the statement called a “closed loop” to prevent other infections. Their ship is being quarantine­d offshore, the statement said. AP

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