The surge raised India's coronavirus tally to over 3.5 million, and came as the government announced the reopening of the subway in New Delhi and began easing restrictions to help the battered economy, reports AP.
India said it will move ahead with limited sports and religious events next month.
With a population of 1.4 billion, India now has the fastest-growing daily coronavirus caseload of any country, reporting more than 75,000 new cases for four straight days.
One of the reasons is testing. India now conducts nearly 1 million tests every day, compared with just 200,000 two months ago.
A significant feature of India’s Covid-19 management is the growing rate of recovered patients. On Sunday, the recovery rate reached nearly 76.5 percent.
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The Health Ministry credited its strategic policy of “testing aggressively, tracking comprehensively and treating efficiently” in supervised home isolation and hospitals to tackle the virus.
Death tally rises
But Covid-19 fatalities continue to mount and soon India will have the third-largest death toll, after the US and Brazil, even though it has had far fewer deaths than those two countries.
India is now reporting around 1,000 coronavirus deaths every day. So far, more than 63,000 Indians have died from the disease.
Even as eight states remain among the worst-hit regions and contribute nearly 73 percent of the total infections, the virus is now spreading fast in the vast hinterlands, with health experts warning that September could be the most challenging month yet.
Last week, members of a small secluded tribe in the remote Andaman and Nicobar Islands tested positive for the coronavirus.
So far, the biggest contributor to the new surge has been the western state of Maharashtra, home to the commercial capital of Mumbai. It alone has accounted for more than 24,000 deaths and nearly 21 percent of all cases.
India’s economy — the fifth largest in the world — has been severely hit by the pandemic. But despite the surging cases, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his team have been pushing for a return to normalcy to ease the economic pain.
The federal government on Saturday said the crowded subway, a lifeline for millions of people in New Delhi, will reopen gradually starting Sept 7. Schools, colleges and movie theaters will remain closed until the end of September.