City
Epaper

Zimbabwe's COVID-19 deaths continue to rise

By ANI | Updated: December 30, 2021 22:55 IST

Zimbabwe recorded 27 COVID-19 deaths on Wednesday, the highest ever since the omicron variant began, as the country's deaths due to the virus continue to rise.

Open in App

Zimbabwe recorded 27 COVID-19 deaths on Wednesday, the highest ever since the omicron variant began, as the country's deaths due to the virus continue to rise.

On Tuesday, deaths stood at 24. While confirmed cases have levelled around 2,000 per day from a peak of 6,181 on December 10, deaths are on an upward trend, rising from a single-digit number early this month to double-digit figures now.

As of Wednesday, the country had recorded 209,655 cases, 173,916 recoveries and 4,967 deaths, according to the Ministry of Health and Child Care.

A total of 4,596 people in the country have received their booster shot since the administering of the third shot began on Monday this week.

Some 4,112,241 people have received their first jab and 3,121,783 their second shot since the national vaccination drive began in February this year. (/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

Tags: Ministry of health and child careXinhua
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalMajor UK Railway Stations Hit by Cyber Attack; Network Rail Suspends Wi-Fi Service

InternationalGreece braces for first summer heat wave

PoliticsSudan govt willing to work with all parties to end conflict

InternationalCyprus prepares for emergencies in face of approaching heat wave

PoliticsUkraine receives cluster munitions from US

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia's 79th Independence Day marked with tricolour pride in Riyadh, Dubai and New York

InternationalPutin invites Trump for "Next time in Moscow" after Alaska summit

InternationalTaiwan detects 21 Chinese aircraft, 7 naval vessels near its territory

InternationalWe're going to stop 5,000-7,000 people a week from being killed: Trump on Alaska talks with Putin

InternationalTrump heads back to Washington after inconclusive summit with Putin