Corona Updates You Must Track: Domestic Flights Resume With Hiccups, 6,535 New Cases In 24 Hours

Mumbai is showing a continuous surge in coronavirus cases with the death toll crossing 1,000-mark. The city could emerge as a global hotspot for COVID-19

offline
Mumbai is showing a continuous surge in coronavirus cases with the death toll crossing 1,000-mark. The city could emerge as a global hotspot for COVID-19

As India entered the second week of Lockdown 4.0, the country’s coronavirus count is showing no signs of a let-up with 6,535 new cases being reported in the last 24 hours. With this, India is inching towards the 1.5 lakh case-mark—total cases on Tuesday morning stood at 1,45,380. Domestic flights have resumed partial operations, but many airports across several states are yet to open, forcing cancellation of several flights on Monday. 

Follow all the important developments related to coronavirus and Lockdown 4.0 here:   

India cases and toll: India has witnessed a huge surge in coronavirus cases in the fourth phase of lockdown, which came into effect on 18 May. Since the past week, at least 5,000 fresh cases of coronavirus have been reported every day from across the country. On Tuesday, India’s COVID-19 count rose to 1,45,380 with 6,535 new cases and 146 deaths in the last 24 hours. According to Ministry of Health and Family Welfare data, India has 80,722 active cases while 60,490 people have been cured and 4,167 people succumbed to the illness.

Where Maharashtra, Delhi stand: Mumbai and Delhi, the financial and political capitals of the country respectively, have been badly hit by the coronavirus. Maharashtra has reported 52,667 COVID-19 cases so far, of which Mumbai alone accounts for close to 32,000 cases. The COVID-19 toll in the city has crossed the 1,000-mark. Along with Moscow in Russia and Sao Paulo in Brazil, Mumbai could emerge as a global hotspot for COVID-19.

Delhi has reported 14,053 confirmed coronavirus cases till Tuesday morning; of these, 6,771 people have recovered while 276 lost their lives to the illness. The capital’s public transport life, Delhi Metro, is likely to resume services soon, but with social distancing norms in place. Every second seat in a coach will have to be left vacant with just about 50 passengers in one coach. ...

Read more!