Coronavirus: Covid-19 death toll hits 500,000 worldwide
- Published
More than 500,000 people worldwide have now lost their lives as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, according to Johns Hopkins University in the US.
Since the virus emerged in China late last year, there have been more than 10 million cases, Johns Hopkins reports.
Half the world's cases have been in the US and Europe, but Covid-19 is now rapidly growing in the Americas.
The virus is also affecting South Asia and Africa, where it is not expected to peak until the end of July.
Outbreaks are still spreading in many parts of the world, with one million new cases recorded in the last six days.
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The US has reported a total of 2.5 million cases and 125,000 deaths with Covid-19 so far - more than any other country.
US states that emerged from lockdown in recent weeks - notably in the south - have been reporting record increases in new infections.
The spike has led officials in Texas, Florida and other states to tighten restrictions on business again.
Statistics from several countries have shown that people from black and Asian ethnic groups are more likely to be severely affected by the virus than white people.
The country with the second-highest number of recorded cases is Brazil, with a total of 1.3 million, and deaths in excess of 57,000.
Despite a wave of new infections, the state of Rio de Janeiro has said it will allow football stadiums to reopen to fans from 10 July - initially at one-third capacity.
On Sunday China has imposed a strict lockdown near Beijing to curb a fresh outbreak. Nearly half a million people will be barred from travelling in and out of Anxin county in the province of Hebei.
In the UK - the country with the greatest number of deaths in Western Europe - the government has said it could impose its first local lockdown following a surge in new cases in the English city of Leicester.