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Coronavirus News LIVE Updates: Four new cases of mutant COVID-19 strain in Delhi; night curfew in National Capital on New Year's eve

Coronavirus News LIVE Updates: The night curfew will be imposed from 11 pm on 31 December to 6 am on 1 January, and again from 11 pm on 1 January to 6 am on 2 January

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Coronavirus News LIVE Updates: Four new cases of mutant COVID-19 strain in Delhi; night curfew in National Capital on New Year's eve

Representational image. AP

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LIVE NEWS and UPDATES

Dec 31, 2020 - 11:50 (IST)

Four new cases of mutant COVID-19 strain in Delhi

Four new cases of the UK strain of coronavirus have been detected in Delhi, said health minister Satyendar Jain on Thursday. "Flights have been banned and more passengers are not arriving. We are tracing and monitoring people who have already arrived," said Jain.

Dec 31, 2020 - 11:42 (IST)

Maharashtra reports highest single-day deaths

Of the 299 new fatalities due to the novel coronavirus on Thursday, 90 were registered in Maharashtra, 28 each in West Bengal and Kerala, and 21 in Delhi, said the health ministry.

A total of 1,48,738 deaths have been reported so far in the country including 49,463 from Maharashtra followed by 12,109 from Tamil Nadu, 12,081 from Karnataka,10,523 from Delhi, 9,683 from West Bengal, 8,352 from Uttar Pradesh, 7,104 from Andhra Pradesh and 5,331 from Punjab.

Dec 31, 2020 - 10:40 (IST)

Active COVID-19 cases in India stand at 2.57 lakh 

India's tally of active COVID-19 cases have stands at 2,57,656 as on Thursday. Whereas, the number of people who have been cured of the novel coronavirus has reached 98,60,280. 

Dec 31, 2020 - 10:36 (IST)

Night curfew in Delhi today and tomorrow

The Delhi Disaster Management Authority Thursday announced a curfew in the city on New Year's Eve, restricting more than five people to assemble at a public place. According to an order, no celebratory events, congregations and gatherings at public places are permitted from 11 pm of 31 December to 6 am of 1 January, 2021.

However, the order exempts licensed premises.

"Night curfew will be in force (not more than five persons to assemble at public places), and no new year celebratory events, congregations and gatherings at the public place will be permitted from 11 pm of 31 December to 6 am of 1 January, 2021, and also from 11 pm of 1 January to 6 am of 2 January. Public places will not include the licensed premises. However, there will be no restriction on interstate and intrastate movement of persons and goods during the curfew period," it added.

Dec 31, 2020 - 10:21 (IST)

US won’t get AstraZeneca vaccine until April

The COVID-19 vaccine developed by British drugmaker AstraZeneca Plc and Oxford University will likely be authorized for emergency use in the United States in April, the chief adviser for the US COVID-19 vaccine program said on Wednesday.

Operation Warp Speed chief adviser Dr Moncef Slaoui said recruitment for the British drugmaker's late-stage US trial is almost complete with over 29,000 participants enrolled.

"We project, if everything goes well with readout and emergency use authorization may be granted somewhere in April," Slaoui said.

Dec 31, 2020 - 10:18 (IST)

Night curfew in Mumbai from 11 pm today till 6 am tomorrow

Night curfew to remain in place from 11 pm on Thursday to 6 am Friday . Section 144 to remain imposed prohibiting gathering of five or more persons. No parties allowed in restaurants, pubs, bars, beaches, rooftops and boats. We'll keep watch using drones, said S Chaitanya, Mumbai Police spokesperson.

Dec 31, 2020 - 10:07 (IST)

Over 17.20 cr COVID-19 samples tested so far: ICMR

"A total of 17,20,49,274 samples have been tested for COVID-19 up to 30 December. Of these, 11,27,244 samples were tested yesterday", said Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) on Thursday. 

Dec 31, 2020 - 09:49 (IST)

India's COVID-19 recovery rate at 96%

The number of people who have recuperated from the novel coronavirus surged to 98.60 lakh, thereby pushing the national recovery rate to 96 percent, said the health ministry on Thursday.

Dec 31, 2020 - 09:46 (IST)

India reports 21,821 new cases taking total over 1.02 cr

India's COVID-19 caseload climbed to 1,02,66,674 on Thursday after 21,821 fresh infections were reported in a day, said the Union health ministry. The toll increased to 1,48,738 with 299 new fatalities, the data updated at 8 am showed.

News LATEST Updates: The night curfew will be imposed from 11 pm on 31 December to 6 am on 1 January, and again from 11 pm on 1 January to 6 am on 2 January, said an order issued on Wednesday by Vijay Dev, Delhi Chief Secretary and chairman of the Executive Committee of Delhi Disaster Management Authority (DDMA).

India's caseload climbed to 1,02,66,674 on Thursday after 21,821 fresh infections were reported in a day, said the Union health ministry. The toll increased to 1,48,738 with 299 new fatalities, the data updated at 8 am showed.

The number of people who have recuperated from the novel surged to 98.60 lakh, thereby pushing the national recovery rate to 96 percent, said the health ministry on Thursday.

Fourteen more people were found infected with the UK strain of the on Wednesday, with West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh reporting such cases for the first time and taking the tally to 20 in two days.

The Central government extended the temporary suspension of passenger flights between the UK and India for a week till 7 January and said the services would resume in a "strictly regulated" manner thereafter.

According to local authorities, a number of UK returnees in states like Maharashtra, Odisha, Karnataka and Punjab remained untraceable and efforts were on to contact them.

The Centre had last week directed that about 33,000 passengers who had arrived in India from 25 November to 23 December midnight, will be tracked and subjected to RT-PCR tests along with their contacts by states and Union Territories, and the positive samples will be sent for genome sequencing.

To detect cases of the new strain, the government has now directed genome sequencing of samples from all passengers who arrived in India from 9 to 22 December and tested positive for or were symptomatic as it ramped up the surveillance and containment strategy.

Experts have maintained that so far it has not been found that the new strain increases the severity of the disease, though it is considerably more transmissible.

At least six cases of the new strain were reported on Monday. Among the new cases, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh reported one and two respectively among the UK returnees, according to state authorities.

The Union Health Ministry said the mutated UK strain has so far been detected in eight samples at the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) in Delhi.

Official sources said among the eight people was the woman who left Delhi and travelled to Andhra Pradesh last week by train. The remaining seven are in quarantine at the Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Narayan Hospital (LNJP) in the National Capital.

The ministry said that one case each was detected at the Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB) in Delhi, the National Institute of Biomedical Genomics (NIBMG), Kalyani (near Kolkata), and the National Institute of Virology (NIV) Pune and seven were at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro-Sciences Hospital (NIMHANS)Bengaluru.

Two cases have been detected at the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB) in Hyderabad, it said.

Uttar Pradesh Additional Chief Secretary Health Amit Mohan Prasad said that the two cases were found in Meerut and Gautam Buddh Nagar and samples of their contacts were also being taken.

Tests of those returning from the United Kingdom after 9 December are continuing and till now around 2,500 samples have been sent to the labs, he said, adding that so far 10 people have tested positive.

In West Bengal, a senior health official said that son of a senior official of the state Health Department, tested positive for the mutant strain after returning from London 10 days ago.

"The youth is undergoing treatment at the Calcutta Medical College and Hospital's super-specialty section. He is under observation. We have advised all those who have come in contact with him to isolate themselves," the official told PTI.

Six others who had come in contact with the youth at the airport also underwent genetic analysis but tested negative for the new COVID strain, he said.

The youth, however, was not having "serious health issues" and was "quite okay" at the moment, the official said.

Cases of the UK strain have already been reported by Denmark, Netherlands, Australia, Italy, Sweden, France, Spain, Switzerland, Germany, Canada, Japan, Lebanon and Singapore.

More than 40 countries, including India, have banned travel to and from the UK, a move several scientists said was necessary in the wake of the rapid spread of the strain which was first detected in September in the UK.

On Wednesday, Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri Puri tweeted: "Decision has been taken to extend the temporary suspension of flights to and from the UK till 7 January 2021."

"Thereafter strictly regulated resumption will take place for which details will be announced shortly," he said.

Indian authorities have stressed the need to remain vigilant, noting that though the cases have been declining in the country, they are on the rise globally and the new strain detected in the UK had spread to several countries.

Aviation regulator DGCA announced that the -induced suspension of scheduled international passenger flights has been extended till 31 January.

"However, international scheduled flights may be allowed on selected routes by the competent authority on a case-to-case basis," the Directorate General of Civil Aviation added.

Scheduled international passenger services have been suspended in India since 23 March due to the pandemic. But special international flights have been operating under the Vande Bharat Mission since May and under bilateral "air bubble" arrangements with selected countries since July.

India has formed air bubble pacts with 24 countries including the US, the UK, the UAE, Kenya, Bhutan and France. Under an air bubble pact between two countries, special international flights can be operated by their airlines between their territories.

Indian student groups in the UK on Wednesday urged the government to consider emergency travel options in extremely exceptional cases during the current suspension of air travel.

The Indian High Commission in London said that it is on standby for any "emergency visa" requirements. However, organising flights during a travel ban will prove a challenge for anyone desperate to travel to India.

In India, a standard operating protocol for states and UTs to tackle the mutant variant of SARS-CoV-2 was issued on 22 December.

The National Task Force has said that there is no need to change either the existing National Treatment Protocol or existing testing protocols due to the mutant variant.

The NTF recommended that in addition to the existing surveillance strategy, it is critical to conduct enhanced genomic surveillance.

Standard defence mechanisms such as masks, sanitisation and physical distancing will work to contain the new strain, experts have said.

The government has also launched the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomic Consortia (INSACOG) comprising 10 lab.

A high-level Inter-Ministerial Steering Committee will guide the consortium, formed to ascertain the status of new variant of the virus, Renu Swarup, Secretary, Department of Biotechnology, said.

Karnataka chief minister BS Yediyurappa on Wednesday appealed to the UK returnees who are untraceable to get themselves tested.

A total of 2,500 people have come to the state from the the UK from 25 November to 22 December in two flights - Air India and British Airways.

Out of them, tests have been conducted on 1,903 passengers. Of these, 29 tested positive.

The state Health Department has approached the Home Department and the police for tracing returnees who have gone untraceable.

Pune Mayor Murlidhar Mohol said they have has sought the help of police to locate some of the UK returnees who were untraceable.

A list of over 540 people who returned to Pune district from the UK between 25 November and 23 December, was received by the local administration.

"We have already tested 270 people. However, the whereabouts of some people are not known. We have already given a list of such people to police and sought their help to locate them," Mohol said on Tuesday.

Odisha government had earlier appealed to the UK returnees to come forward and cooperate with the administration in curbing the spread of .

Director of Public Health Niranjan Mishra said on Tuesday that 119 returnees had been contacted, but 62 remained out of the reach.

Updated Date: December 31, 2020 12:02:04 IST

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