Asia Today: India's virus cases now 4th highest in world

NEW DELHI (AP) — India’s coronavirus caseload has become the fourth-largest in the world, overtaking Britain, by adding 10,956 new cases in yet another biggest single-day spike.

India's two-month lockdown kept transmissions low but in a large population of 1.3 billion, people remain susceptible and the campaign against the virus is likely to go on for months, said Balram Bhargava, director-general of the Indian Council of Medical Research.

India's lockdown was imposed nationwide in late March but has eased since, and it is now largely being enforced in high-risk areas. The spiking caseload came after India allowed the reopening of shops, shopping malls, factories and religious places.

Subways, schools, colleges and cinemas, however, remain shuttered nationwide.

The increase reported Friday raised India's total cases to 297,535, including 8,498 deaths, according to the Health Ministry. The death toll increased 396 in the past 24 hours.

India's number of confirmed cases is behind only the United States, Brazil and Russia.

Mumbai, New Delhi and Chennai are the worst-hit cities in the country, and Bhargava said urban residents have a greater chance of contracting the virus. Infections in rural areas have surged, however, after migrant workers who left cities and towns after they lost jobs returned to their hometowns.

In other developments in the Asia-Pacific region:

— MORE JAPAN ECONOMIC MEASURES: Japan’s parliament approved more money to soften the economic blow from the pandemic. The 32 trillion yen ($300 billion) second supplementary budget includes support for small businesses, including programs to finance their rents and adjust employment. It also has funding for dealing with future waves of infections and developing vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. Japan’s economy, the world’s third largest, slipped into recession in the last quarter. Business activity has slowly resumed after a state of emergency was lifted in late May. The country has confirmed 17,332 cases and 922 deaths as of Thursday.

— SCHOOL OPENING SUSPENDED IN BEIJING: China’s capital is suspending plans to restart classes for the first three years of elementary school next week amid reports of new cases of local transmission in the city. Beijing’s municipal government said it wants to ensure the health and safety of students and teachers. Local authorities announced on Thursday a 52-year-old man had become the city’s first confirmed case of local transmission in weeks after he arrived at a clinic complaining of fever. The official Xinhua News Agency said two other cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Beijing on Friday. The man whose diagnosis was announced Thursday had reportedly visited a market on June 3. The hall where he shopped has now been closed for disinfection, state media reported. It wasn’t clear if there was a connection between the three new cases.