City
Epaper

Karnataka logs 629 new COVID-19 cases in last 24 hours

By ANI | Updated: September 28, 2021 19:50 IST

A total of 629 new COVID-19 cases, 17 deaths and 782 recoveries were reported in Karnataka in the last 24 hours, said the state's health department on Tuesday.

Open in App

A total of 629 new COVID-19 cases, 17 deaths and 782 recoveries were reported in Karnataka in the last 24 hours, said the state's health department on Tuesday.

According to the state's health department, the cumulative cases in the state has gone up to 29,74,528, which include 12,634 active cases.

Total 37,763 people have succumbed to the COVID infection so far in Karnataka, while the recovery tally stands at 29,24,102.

Presently, the positivity rate in the state is below 1 per cent and the case fatality rate is below 3 per cent.

( 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

InternationalBhupender Yadav discusses environmental cooperation with global leaders in Brazil

BusinessReckitt Launches One-of-Its-Kind Commemorative Postage Stamps Honouring India's Sanitation Heroes on World Toilet Day

NationalLeopard enters Rajasthan minister’s bungalow in Jaipur; search operation underway

BusinessDr. Rasha Kelej and the Gambia First Lady co-chair the 12th Merck Foundation Africa Asia Luminary 2025

NationalCong flags US panel's report terming Pahalgam massacre an 'insurgent attack', questions Centre's silence

National Realted Stories

NationalBengal SIR: ECI sets target for daily digitisation of enumeration forms

NationalUddhav Thackeray takes dig at Shinde's Shiv Sena, says bear the fruits of your karma

NationalDelhi Class 10 Student Suicide: Parents, Students Protest After Teen Allegedly Driven to Death by Teacher Harassment

National'Congress' arrogance is drowning it', says Abu Azmi as SP opts to go solo in BMC polls

NationalRush continues at Sabarimala; fresh restrictions to curb overcrowding