Nagaland extends COVID-19 lockdown till 30 June; fourth extension since 14 May
A government spokesperson acknowledged the inconvenience faced by people but said that the lockdown will continue

Representational image. AP
Kohima: The Nagaland government on Wednesday further extended the ongoing state-wide lockdown till 30 June, a senior official said.
The restrictions were scheduled to end on 18 June.
"The high-powered committee on COVID-19 headed by Chief Minister Neiphiu Rio, in a meeting today, decided to extend the lockdown till 30 June," Government co-spokesperson and advisor Mmhonlumo Kikon told PTI.
Asked about the reason for the extension, he said, "The COVID situation in the state is improving but we are still not out of the woods. The positivity rate is declining but it needs to go down below five percent. Also, we need to inoculate more than 50 percent of the population."
This is the fourth extension of the lockdown in the state since 14 May.
"We acknowledge the inconvenience faced by the people but given the circumstances, we have to continue with the lockdown for now," Kikon said.
He said that district task forces on COVID-19 will work out relaxations or stricter restrictions as per the local situation.
During the start of the lockdown on 14 May, Nagaland's COVID-19 tally was 17,531. It soared to 23,854 till Tuesday.
However, the state has been recording more recoveries than fresh cases. The recovery rate among the coronavirus patients has improved from 71.98 percent on May 17 to 82.81 percent on Tuesday.
The caseload includes 19,753 cured people, while the number of active cases has come down to 2,972. Nagaland has so far registered 459 fatalities.
also read

Media reports on COVID-19 vaccine data of private hospitals 'not accurate', says Centre
The ministry referred to a few media reports that said that 25 percent doses have been allocated to private hospitals, but they account for only 7.5 percent of total jabs

UN says pandemic created an 'unparalleled' employment crisis, impact may last for years
An uneven economic recovery is expected to begin in the second half of 2021, driven by progress in vaccinations and large-scale fiscal spending, said the world body