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People wait in a queue to register their names to have their nasal swab samples taken to test for Covid-19 at a hospital in Jammu, India Channi Anand/PA Images

India's confirmed Covid-19 cases passes 5 million as it closes in on US for highest number globally

A further 90,000 new cases were confirmed in the last 24 hours, alone.

THE NUMBER OF confirmed coronavirus cases in India has surpassed 5 million.

The country’s Health Ministry reported 90,123 new cases in the past 24 hours, raising its confirmed total to 5,020,359, about 0.35% of its population of nearly 1.4 billion. It said 1,290 more people died in the past 24 hours, for a total of 82,066 deaths.

India’s total coronavirus caseload is closing in on the United States’ highest tally of more than 6.6 million cases and is expected to surpass it within weeks.

India reported a record daily high of 97,570 cases on 11 September and has added more than 1 million cases in September alone.

Experts warned that India’s case fatality rate could increase in coming weeks with lockdown restrictions relaxed except in high-risk areas.

But authorities ruled out imposing a second countrywide lockdown as recoveries were growing at more than 78%. Its death rate is 1.6%, far lower than 3% each in the United States and Brazil, according to the Johns Hopkins Medicine and University.

Dr Gagandeep Kang, an infectious diseases expert from Christian Medical College in the southern Indian state of Vellore, said that the number of cases increasing in India was inevitable. But the country still had the opportunity to try and restrict cases through a strategy of testing and isolating the affected places.

She said that “the goal was for India to do enough testing to bring down the test positivity rate, or fraction of tests that test positive to less than 5% or even less than 1%.”

Most of India’s deaths are concentrated in its large cities – Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai and Pune. But smaller urban centres in Mahrashtra like Nagpur or Jalgaon have also reported more than 1,000 deaths.

Health secretary Rajesh Bhushan said that only about 6% of the coronavirus patients in India were on oxygen – 0.31% on ventilators, 2.17% on intensive care unit beds with oxygen and 3.69% on oxygen beds.

Maharashtra state with more than 1 million cases remains the worst affected region in India, followed by Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh. These states account for more than 60% of coronavirus cases in the country.

The Health Ministry said 155 health workers, including 46 doctors, have died so far due to Covid-19.

India’s meagre health resources are poorly divided across the country. Nearly 600 million Indians live in rural areas, and with the virus spreading fast across India’s vast hinterlands, health experts worry that hospitals could be overwhelmed.

Nationwide, India is testing more than a million samples per day, exceeding the World Health Organisation’s benchmark of 140 tests per million people. But many of these are antigen tests, which look for virus proteins and are faster but less accurate compared to RT-PCR, the gold standard for confirming the coronavirus by its genetic code.

With the economy contracting by a record 23.9% in the second quarter leaving millions jobless, the Indian government is continuing with relaxing lockdown restrictions that were imposed in late March. The government announced in May a £206 billion stimulus package, but consumer demand and manufacturing are yet to recover.

A large number of offices, shops, businesses, bars and restaurants have reopened. Restricted domestic and international evacuation flights are being operated every day along with train services.

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    Mute RJ.Fallon
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    May 20th 2018, 12:12 PM

    “privatisation Drive” , another ” lets grab all they have” scam. Like ourselves, soon to be left with nothing to call our own.

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    Mute Aidan Mitchell
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    May 20th 2018, 12:16 PM

    @RJ.Fallon: beating up a 75 year old man should sort that right out…

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    Mute BananaRepublic1922
    Favourite BananaRepublic1922
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    May 20th 2018, 12:20 PM

    @RJ.Fallon: we have nothing to call our own its all been given away by our treasous politicians….this republic has been sold right under our feet and stupid paddy doesnt give a f@@k.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    May 20th 2018, 12:47 PM

    @BananaRepublic1922:
    Good.
    I rather see them sold than the Irish taxpayer being on the hook for them
    I worked in the semi state sector for years, my god the people in them would get some fright if there jobs were actually at risk.

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    Mute Sean Conway
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    May 20th 2018, 12:48 PM

    @RJ.Fallon: Millionaire FF/FG politicians are just waiting for an excuse to sell IW from under our noses.

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    Mute Robert O'Rourke
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    May 20th 2018, 12:31 PM

    It isn’t the Greeks it’s the Chinese he’s after.

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    Mute Boyne Sharky
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    May 20th 2018, 5:26 PM

    We can all sympathise with how they may feel, seeing their country being sold out from under them, but beating the ever loving sh.. it out of a 75 year old man isn’t the way to solve anything. That’s the sort of thing that makes their cause worthless, it makes them worse than those they’re angry about. A big muscled lad picking on the weakest in society, yeah that sends a great message.

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    Mute John Fergus
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    May 20th 2018, 7:13 PM

    With a meeting of eurozone finance ministers set for 21 June, teams of experts from the EU, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have met with the Greek government in recent days to discuss its privatisation drive, an overhaul of the civil service and the deregulation of the state-dominated energy market.
    In a statement that gave no detail on the agreement, the EU’s executive said a staff-level accord had been reached.

    This is the main piece of the article that deserves attention. The people they carried out the attack were labelled as being far right wing by the office of the countries left-wing leader. A cynical person would question this.
    Perhaps the attackers were people that voted for Tsipras and Syriza in 2015 and now are utterly dismayed at how their country is and sold out from under their feet.
    In any event I don’t know I wasn’t there.
    The sad thing is there is no end in sight, Greece cannot effectively survive in the euro it is the totally wrong currency for them.

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    Mute John Fergus
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    May 20th 2018, 8:46 PM

    @John Fergus: don’t get me wrong it’s tragic what happened. Those responsible for beating a 75-year-old man should be figuratively hung. That being said the official line on this is likely skewed to benefit those giving it.

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    Mute Danny Rafferty
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    May 21st 2018, 1:14 AM

    @John Fergus: Currency? If your economy was a basket case to begin with, does it matter much about the currency? Interestingly, most Greeks want to stay in the Euro, apparently – go figure?

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    Mute Gerry Fallon
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    May 20th 2018, 6:07 PM

    Disgusting hitting a 75 year old man.
    Unforgivable.

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    Mute Jasun Ó Cearnaigh
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    May 20th 2018, 11:33 PM

    Would it have been OK If he was 30 and not 75?

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