City
Epaper

Bangladesh's COVID-19 cases rise to 485,965, deaths to 6,967

By ANI | Updated: December 10, 2020 19:20 IST

Bangladesh recorded 1,861 new confirmed COVID-19 cases and 37 new deaths on Thursday, raising its total tally to 485,965 with 6,967 deaths, the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) said.

Open in App

Bangladesh recorded 1,861 new confirmed COVID-19 cases and 37 new deaths on Thursday, raising its total tally to 485,965 with 6,967 deaths, the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) said.

The number of recovered patients increased to 410,452 including 4,486 new recoveries from the coronavirus epidemic, said the DGHS.

Official data showed that 16,265 samples were tested in the last 24 hours across Bangladesh. The COVID-19 fatality rate in Bangladesh currently stands at 1.43 percent and the recovery rate at 84.46 percent.

Bangladesh recorded the highest daily case spike of 4,019 on July 2 and the highest number of deaths of 64 on June 30. (/Xinhua)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalCong MP Tharoor, MEA Secy (West) hold talks on strengthening India-Europe ties

InternationalTrump discloses Israel's halt of bombing in Gaza, urges Hamas to move quickly

International"May look like a small promise, but it is big thing," Indian Envoy to Trinidad and Tobago on Artificial Limb Fitment Camp

InternationalUnion Minister Hardeep Puri holds talks with Brazililian officials on Indian investments

InternationalTrump says Israel accepted 'withdrawal line', ceasefire to be implemented post Hamas' nod

International Realted Stories

InternationalShops, businesses closed amid protests in PoJK

InternationalEarthquake of magnitude 6.0 rocks Japan

InternationalUS-Pakistan proximity unlikely to dent Pakistan-China ties: Expert

InternationalNahyan bin Mubarak attends major celebration of Iraqi community heritage in Expo Dubai

International"It would be pretty hard for China to actually take that seat": JNU professor on Beijing replacing US as "global hegemon"