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Coronavirus: India's Covid-19 cases surge past one million
India added a record number of Covid-19 cases - nearly 35,000 - in the last 24 hours, breaching the one million mark.
It has the world's third-largest case load, after the US and Brazil - the only three countries so far to record more than a million coronavirus cases.
India's active cases account for about a third of its total tally as it has been reporting a high recovery rate and a low death rate from the virus.
But deaths have been rising. At 25,602, they are eighth-highest in the world.
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India's number of cases has been on the rise - with nearly record daily surges - in recent weeks. It overtook Russia earlier this month to occupy the third spot for the highest number of coronavirus cases globally.
Although India confirmed its first case at the end of January, the pandemic took hold slowly. Experts believe it was staved off to some extent because of an early decision by the government - in March - to stop all international flights and enter a strict lockdown that lasted nearly two months.
But the restrictions came at a devastating economic and human cost, and after India reopened at the end of June and testing increased, case numbers soared.
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Experts say the capital, Delhi, and some other states squandered the opportunity given by the lockdown to test, trace and isolate effectively.
While the capital territory has since seen a dip in cases, they continue to rise in other parts of India.
The western state of Maharashtra is still the biggest hotspot with the highest case count- more than 280,000 - among all the states.
But potential new hotspots are emerging as states in the south - Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh - and in the east - Bihar, West Bengal - record a rapid rise in daily case numbers.
They have responded with local lockdowns - the southern city of Chennai (Madras) has emerged from a recent lockdown and Bangalore, also in the south, is currently under a week-long lockdown.
Although India has fully reopened, intermittent local lockdowns are likely to be the new normal as the country wrestles with the pandemic.
Is India's death rate really that low?
Aparna Alluri and Shadab Nazmi
The best news for India when it comes to the coronavirus pandemic is the unusually low death rate.
In absolute numbers, it's the eighth highest tally in the world. But per million of the population, it is low.
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There have been a lot of questions around India's Covid-19 death figures, and most experts agree that they are probably being underreported.
But they also say that alone doesn't explain the significant gap between India and Western Europe, for instance.
And India's Covid-19 death rate is also similar to other countries in the region - such as Bangladesh and Indonesia.
Read more to find out what India's Covid data tells us about how the pandemic is playing out here..
Read more of the BBC's original stories on the pandemic in India
- The controversy over 'India's first virus fatality'
- The 'tin pot' RWA dictators running life in India's cities
- Why celebrating Covid-19 'success models' is dangerous
- 'Our home turned into a hospital overnight'
- Why India's Covid-19 contact tracing app is controversial
- World's largest postal service turns lifesaver
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