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India In Talks With 13 Countries To Establish Bilateral Air Bubble; Pakistan, China Not In List

India is in talks with 13 countries to resume scheduled flight operations, Minister of State for Civil Aviation Hardeep Puri said on Tuesday.

“We continue to further strengthen the reach & scope of VBM (Vande Bharat Mission). Air Travel arrangements are already in place with USA, UK, France, Germany, UAE, Qatar & Maldives. We are now taking these efforts forward & are negotiating with 13 more countries to establish such arrangements,” Puri tweeted.

Travel bubble is a bilateral agreement between two countries to expedite the travel process of travelers of both the countries amidst the travel restrictions due to COVID-19. Such corridors are being created where both countries have successfully curbed the growth of the virus.

“These 13 countries include Australia, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Nigeria, Bahrain, Israel, Kenya, Philippines, Russia, Singapore, South Korea & Thailand,” he added.

Puri said air bubbles have also been proposed with our neighbours Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Nepal and Bhutan. However, the list of neighbouring countries does not include Pakistan.

South African cricketers are getting death threats: Graeme Smith

Graeme Smith claims that he has received death threats after the expressing his support for Black Lives Matter (BLM).

During a webinar hosted by a financial services company on Tuesday (August 18), the Graeme Smith, who was the captain of South Africa and currently Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) director of cricket, said: “It’s been a really challenging experience. All of us have found ourselves in a really heated space. We’ve taken an immense amount of abuse, death threats. It’s been an eye-opening experience. It has shocked me how heated things have got.”

Earlier on July 6, Lungi Ngidi was asked whether BLM should be a matter of concern in the cricketing field between the South African players during an online press conference. He said it would, and welcomed it, he was criticised after that comment for bringing such topic in the cricketing profession.

“Lungi, to my mind, said nothing wrong,” Smith said. “He expressed an opinion. He didn’t make a statement. He expressed the fact that the team was going to get together and have a conversation. In no way did he deserve to be attacked. What happened to him and the way the guys came at him is entirely wrong.”

The episode has been a painful one. “Within the space we’ve handled it extremely maturely,” Smith said. “We got together, we listened, the conversation was open, people shared, and we decided to support each other on this movement. The conversation’s open, people can listen, people can debate. We can talk to each other.”

“I get that in South Africa we’ve got so many issues. In some ways, it’s felt like we’re bearing the brunt for the government not having delivered on a number of things over the years and the frustration over that. You pick up the paper or you click online and you see all the negativity and the disappointment and the frustration in people’s lives, and livelihoods being affected, he added.

“When we jumped in in December cricket had fallen into really tough times; from performance on the field and within the business side,” Smith said. “My job was more cricket-focused, but then you start having to repair a number of relationships – from sponsors to player bodies to fixing TV-rights deals, deals that were done in the past but haven’t been paid for… and, and, and… You make it through the summer through trial and error, you rebuild some things. And then COVID hits and you face the next phase of those challenges.”

“Cricket is such an extensive sport,” Smith said. “You think down to the private coaching, the clubs, the schools, the whole pipeline. How we get that open is going to be a huge challenge. Opening up international travel so that cricket…home tours for us is how we generally earn the major part of our income, and at the moment that’s all on hold. We’re working with the government to see what the plans are. It’s challenging.”

Smith is hopeful for South Africa’s women’s team to fulfill their commitment to take part in the two T20Is and four ODIs in England in September: “I must commend the ECB. The money that they’re investing on even trying to get our ladies over there – looking to charter planes then putting them into bio bubbles. They’ll be spending an extensive amount of money to get this tour underway.”

“Covid has hit corporates and business extensively,” Smith said. “Finding people that have the money to spend is very challenging. You want to be putting out the right stories. You want the people who want to be associated with your brand want to be proud to be there. That’s what we’ve got to create. We’ve got to clean up the game.

“The money that gets invested into growing the game and transformation and the development of the game – those are the stories you want to be making headlines. But I think cricket gets in its own way too often. Whether it’s people finding themselves in the wrong position at the right time or bad decision-making, or egos that get into positions of power, it’s unfortunate and it takes away from the beauty of our sport.”

“The way the guys have handled things is fantastic,” Smith said. “The messages are good coming out of there. We’ve got to be able to listen and understand the stories that other guys are bringing to the fore; where they’re coming from. The goal is to try to move forward in the right direction and create a better path.”

“Sport is brutal, and that’s the challenge,” Smith said. “Cricket is brutal. It’s a high-performing environment. Your personal performance is always under scrutiny. You also have the element of people who feel begrudged by not getting that opportunity, not getting enough of a chance. It’s a fine line between the two. Cricket is such a brutal game when it comes to that. There’s going to be so many people across the cricketing fraternity who have been affected by that.

“There’s lost heroes everywhere. That’s why it’s important to have these conversations and to open that channel. We’re growing the game, we want to see the game represent all the people, we want to be successful. Let’s get it going. That’s what taking a knee [at the 3TC game] meant for us – we’re all together. I haven’t seen the team have such an honest conversation in a few years, which is great. People could share, listen to all sides, have an open discussion, and represent not only the BLM movement but the GBV [Gender Based Violence] movement as well, and raise R3-million [USD173,000] for charity. How do you become a better person? How do you affect your environment in a positive way? Everyone’s hanging onto their cause and forgetting about the bigger picture at this stage.”

When Chetan Chauhan saved the life of Sikh teammates in 1984 after the assassination of Indira Gandhi

Playing with a broken thumb in Australia against the legandary duo of Dennis Lillie and Jeff Thompson or whether scoring three consecutive centuries with a broken jaw in the Ranji Trophy Chetan Chauhan showed himself as a gutsy cricketer in his career. But Chauhan, didn’t survived Covid-19 and died from its complications on Sunday.

Former North Zone players have recollected how Chauhan came save Navjot Singh Sidhu and Rajinder Ghai in train when a complete outrage was in the entire nation against the Sikh community after the assassination of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. “The incident took place on ‘Jhelum Express’ when the players of North Zone and Central Zone were returning from Pune after playing their Duleep Trophy semifinal. Recollecting the incident,” former Haryana off-spinner Sarkar Talwar told TOI.

“The match ended on October 30 and the next morning when we were getting ready for the airport, we came to know that the PM had been assassinated. So our team manager (Prem Bhatia) got us first-class tickets on Jhelum Express. It was a nightmare journey and it took us four days to reach Delhi.”

“At one of the stations, around 40-50 people entered the compartment looking for people from the Sikh community. We had three Sikh players – Navjot Singh Sidhu, Rajinder Ghai and Yograj Singh – in our team. I vividly remember, Chetan Chauhan and Yashpal Sharma had a heated argument with the mob and once they realised that they were Indian cricketers, the mob got off the compartment,” recollected Talwar.

Former Indian all-rounder Yograj Singh even advised Sidhu to cut his hair to get unoticed. “It was very scary, they were burning trains and after their face-off with Chetan Chauhan and Yashpal, I asked Sidhu that let me cut your hair. He refused and said, ‘Paaji I have been born as a Sardar and will die like one’,” recalls Yograj Singh, father of cricketer Yuvraj Singh. “I remember one of the people from the mob shouted at Chetan paaji and said, ‘We are here to kill the sardars, nothing will happen to you.’ Chetan paaji yelled back, ‘They are my brothers and you can’t touch them.’ The way Chetan Chauhan dealt with the situation was quite commendable,” he added.

Gursharan Singh, who was in the other compartment too recollected the incident and said, “If not for Chetan Chauhan, I don’t think that any of us would have survived. I and Rajinder Hans (former left-arm spinner from Uttar Pradesh) were on a different bogie and when we came to know about the incident, it left us very scared. But Chetan Chauhan came to us and reassured us that we would be safe and the mob would not trouble us.” Rajinder Ghai.

Speaking to TOI Ghai said, “I don’t know how we survived. It was horrifying. Chetan Chauhan gave us the second life.” He added, “We got out of the train at Okhla station because Yashpal Sharma’s house was close by. We stayed there for a week before Sidhu’s father sent help to rescue us.”

Dream11 wins title sponsorship rights of IPL 2020

The race for the title sponsorship of Indian Premier League (IPL) ends with Dream11 winning the deal for Rs 222 Crore. Dream11 is one of the market leading fantasy gaming company. In comparison with what Vivo was paying for the same rights, the discount is whopping 50% , vivo signed the deal earlier for the same rights for Rs 440.

“In the given circumstances, we are happy with the deal. These rights are only for four months and only for this edition of the IPL,” IPL Chairman Brijesh Patel said.

Dream 11 outbid the other two bidders, both of which are education tech platforms – Bjyu’s (Rs 201 crore) and Unacademy (Rs 171 crore). The same was confirmed by Patel.

Earlier Vivo, was awarded the IPL title rights for a colossal Rs 20199 crore for five years, 2018 onwards. Later this year due to prevailing anti-china sentiment in the country, it was mutually decided by BCCI and vivo to suspend their partnership.

“The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and vivo Mobile India Pvt Ltd have decided to suspend their partnership for Indian Premier League in 2020,” a BCCI statement on August 6 read.

The BCCI is primarily of the view that with a digital platform coming on board, It will boost IPL’s fan engagement that has been lying passive over the last few months, especially due the covid19.

Sources said the Tatas apparently wanted some “barter deal” in return for the IPL 2020 rights fee and the BCCI did not agree. If the Tata Group had bagged the IPL title rights, it would have been a first for them in cricket.

Dream11 is already a big spender on cricket. They are associated with at least six IPL teams and also with the International Cricket Council. With IPL coming up, Dream11 aims to rake in the moolah due to the return of live cricket.

The fantasy cricket league platform, which has MS Dhoni as its brand ambassador, gets funding from Chinese company Tencent but insiders say their bid this time was fuelled by a major Indian telecom major wanting a stranglehold on the online gaming world.

I had nightmares and kept wondering about my comeback after the pandemic: KL Rahul

KL Rahul was overwhelmed when he walked into the cricket ground for the first time five months recently. He was shedding tears, but the tears were out of joy and the happiness to get back in the field.

“After running on concrete and treadmill for months, when you step onto the ground you feel like you’re walking on a cloud,” the India top-order batsman told TOI in an exclusive chat. “It’s difficult to explain the feeling. I was half in tears, half smiling. In fact, I just couldn’t stop smiling. Just to be able to get out and run on the ground felt so good.”

KL Rahul is now preparing for his challenges as a skipper of Kings XI Punjab in the 13th edition of the Indian Premier League which will be held in the United Arab Emirates next month. He looked excited for captaining in the IPL for the first time. The 27-year-old is also looking forward to work with the former India skipper and legendary bowler Anil Kumble, who is the head of the cricket operations for the Punjab based franchise.

“Not having that chance to go to the gym or practice was frustrating,” he said. “But we adapted well. We managed to put together gyms at home. Some of us started cycling, running in the car parks of apartments. We didn’t have a choice. There were days when I was annoyed and frustrated, but I kept telling myself there were a lot of others having it much harder and tougher in life.”

Tougher still was quelling anxiety. “I was scared,” he admitted. “I kept wondering if my skills would remain the same when I returned to the sport. I had nightmares. A couple of times I woke up in the middle of the night because I dreamt I had forgotten how to pick the line and length. It scared the hell out of me. To be honest, when I went back to play the first session, it was horrible because I was rusty.”

“I’m lucky because we share a great understanding. We go a long way and he’s seen me from my younger days. I’ve always looked up to Anil Bhai. He has led the country, has a wealth of experience, and has played this format as well. His knowledge of the game will be of great help in my first year as captain. His guidance and experience will be valuable. It will help me make good decisions in the middle,” pointed out Rahul.

Rahul is uncertain about his captaincy role. “As a leader, you will have to be mindful of the fact that a lot of players will be rusty. We will all be nervous because we are restarting the game with a major tournament without much action in recent times. So, it’s important for a leader to make the players feel comfortable and let them know that it’s okay to feel like that initially. That said, it will be a good learning experience for each one of us because we have a great set of coaches and support staff,” he said.

“I haven’t really thought about it. I’m still looking forward to going there and finishing the six-day quarantine and getting back to training and preparing with the boys. All I know is that the weather’s going to be hot. So, we have to be in good shape to withstand that. Most likely it’s going to be slow and turning wickets. We have a good set of spinners in our line-up and our batsmen are well equipped. That gives me a lot of confidence going into the tournament,” signed off Rahul.

Broad and Anderson moved up in the ICC Test rankings, while Bumrah went down to number nine

Fast bowlers Stuart Broad and James Anderson of England have jumped in the Test rankings after some fine bowling in the second Test against Pakistan at Southampton.

Broad has jumped up one spot up and now he is at the second position in the bowling rankings, Broad managed to secure a haul of 4/56 in the second Test match and on the other hand Anderson has surged two step up to 14th position afater his figures of 3/60 in the same match.

Pakistani pacer Mohammad Abbas scalped two wickets for 28 runs when England came to bat in the first game. The English team declared at the score of 110/4, he gained two places to reach the eighth position in that list but is still away from his career-best third spot back in October 2018.

India’s premier pacer Jasprit Bumrah degraded by a place and is currently placed at the ninth position in bowler’s rankings. Babar Azam, Pakistan’s batsman is now back at a career-best fifth position, which he secured in February.

England remain in third position with 279 points in the World Test Championship points table, where as Pakistan are fifth in the list with 153 points. While India is at the top of the table with 360 points and Australia are second at 296.

29 players recommended for Arjuna Award

Indian pacer Ishant Sharma is included in the list of 29 players in the list of recommended players by the Sports Ministry for the Arjuna Award. Hockey player Deepika Thakur, archer Atanu Das, tennis player Divij Sharan, cricketer Deepak Hooda and are among other players who have been recommended for the prestigious award.

Sakshi Malik Olympic bronze medalist and Mirabai Chanu who is the former world champion weightlifter have received the support of the committee, but the final decision is all upon Sports Minister Kiran Rijiju.

Sakshi was the winner of Khel Ratna after winning a bronze medal at the Rio Olympics in 2016, while Meerabai also won the award for winning the gold medal at the World Championship in 2018.

Rohit Sharma and Vinesh Phogat, women wrestler Vinesh Phoghat are among the top four athletes recommended for this year’s Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award, which is the country’s highest sporting honor. The other two contenders are the paddler Manika Batra and Rio Paralympic high jump gold-winner Mariappan Thangavelu.

AAP accuses BJP of scripting Shaheen Bagh protests

Delhi’s ruling Aam Aadmi Party(AAP) on Monday accused Bharatiya Janata Party(BJP) of scripting the long-running anti-CAA protests at Shaheen Bagh. It said the protests which led to over three-month-long road blockade was strategised by the BJP to polarise the February assembly elections.

AAP alleged that the Shaheen Bagh protest was “pre-planned” by the BJP ahead of February elections to win more seats. It also said that the BJP played an important role in inciting communal violence in northeast Delhi that claimed 53 lives.

Addressing a news conference, AAP chief spokesperson Suarabh Bhardwaj said “pro-democracy” citizens must be feeling “cheated and manipulated” as it was BJP who “pulled the strings” of the protests. He then questioned the Central government that how they allowed the protests to run for 101 days when other protests in the city could not even last over three hours.

“It was because the BJP planned and executed the Shaheen Bagh protests that its vote percentage rose from 18% to 38% in the recently concluded Delhi elections. The BJP used the protest to polarise the north-east Delhi region and it won some seats there as well. After that, it engineered a riot there. Today, the people who raised anti-national slogans or pro-Pakistan slogans or talked about dividing India during the protests are part of the BJP,” Bhardwaj alleged.

His comment came a day after the BJP announced that a group of Muslims from Shaheen Bagh have joined the party.

The BJP denied the claim, saying AAP was making baseless stories to attract the support from minority communities ahead of the municipal elections in Delhi.

“The AAP has misled people in Delhi, especially the Muslim community, for its political gains. Their allegations have no meaning as the Muslim community supports the BJP and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Now, with the municipal elections scheduled in 2022, the AAP is nervous about losing its support base in the community,” said Delhi BJP chief, Adesh Gupta.

Japan’s economy records its worst quarterly slump amid coronavirus pandemic

Japan’s economy has dropped off at an annual rate of 27.8 % in April-June amid the covid outbreak. This is by far the worst contraction on record for the Japanese eceonomy as the coronavirus pandemic thrashed consumption and trade, the government data released on Monday stated.

According to the Cabinet office report, the initial seasonlly adjusted real GDP, the total value of goods and services produced in the country, shrank to 7.8 % on a quarter basis, leading negative growth for the third consecutive growth.

When compared, the officials said that the latest figure is considered the largest contraction on record, even dating back to 1955, the earliest point at which the government can track reference values. The comparable data are available since the April-June quarter of 1980.

The world’s third largest economy was already suffering before pandemic due to the U.S.-China trade spat and a 2 percentage point consumption tax hike last year. And amid the pandemic, damage to the economy has widened following the state of emergency declared by the central government in April.

On April 7, the local governments ordered the residents to stay at home and shut the non-essential business under the emergency declaration which was lifted later in May.

Meanwhile, Japan has reported 55,667 confirmed coronavirus cases so far. Out of which, 41,196 people have recovered while 1,099 have lost their lives to the virus.

Manduadih becomes ‘Banaras’: MHA gives nod for name change of major railway station in UP

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has agreed the Uttar Pradesh government’s request to change the name of Manduadih Railway Station to “Banaras”, according to a senior government official.

A ‘no objection certificate’ has been issued for changing the name of the Manduadih railway station to ‘Banaras’, a Home Ministry official said.

The home ministry considers proposals for name change according to the existing guidelines in consultations with agencies concerned.

It gives its approval to any proposal for change of name of any place after taking no-objections from the Ministry of Railways, Department of Posts and Survey of India, another official said.

For changing the name of a village or town or a city, an executive order is needed. The renaming of a state requires amendment of the Constitution with a simple majority in Parliament, the official said.

India’s GDP to contract 16.5% in April-June quarter: SBI report

India’s GDP may contract by 16.5 per cent in the April-June quarter of the current financial year as against an earlier contraction of 20 per cent, according to State Bank of India’s research report Ecowrap.

This was associated with lower-than-expected degrowth in corporate GVA (gross value added) which has been considerably better than revenue degrowth in Q1 FY21 as far as the results of the listed companies are concerned. 

So far, around 1,000 listed entities have declared their results for the first quarter. The results show more than 25 per cent dip in topline and more than 55 per cent drop in bottom-line. 

“In principle, the revenue decline of listed companies has been far outstripped by cost rationalisation thereby not impacting margins,” the report highlighted.

It further said over the months of July and August, coronavirus has now quite penetrated the rural areas. The percentage of cases in rural districts to total new cases has risen to 54 per cent in August.

Also, the number of rural districts with less than 10 cases have reduced significantly. Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra have been impacted more severely with increasing coronavirus penetration in rural areas.

China reacts to PM Modi’s Independence Day speech, says it is ready to enhance mutual trust

Reacting to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Independence Day speech, the Chinese foreign ministry on Monday said that it is ready to enhance mutual trust between India and China, adding that the two sides will have to respect each other.

PM Modi in speech had said “India’s sovregnity is supreme” and also mentioned of strengthening the Indian armed forces. He had also talked about the immense potential that Indian Army showed in the recent Galwan valley clash.

“Whoever tried to threaten the sovereignty of our country right from the LOC {Line of Control with Pakistan} to the LAC, the army [and] our brave soldiers have given a befitting reply. The world has seen what our brave soldiers can do in Ladakh, what the country can do to defend its resolve,” Modi had said.

On June 15, twenty Indian soldiers were killed in a clash with Chinese Troops along the Line of Actual Control(LAC) while China suffered 43 casualties.

Commenting on PM Modi’s I-Day speech, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said: “We have noted Prime Minister Modi’s speech. We are close neighbours, we are all emerging countries with over one billion people.”

“So the sound development of bilateral ties not only serves the interest of the two peoples but also stability, peace, prosperity of the region and the whole world. The right path for the two sides is to respect and support each other as this serves our long-term interests,” Zhao was quoted as saying at a news briefing.

“So, China stands ready to work with India to enhance our political mutual trust, properly manage our differences, step-up practical cooperation and safeguard the long-term development of bilateral ties,” he said.

Zhao concluded two perspectives from Modi’s speech: “One is that Modi has become tougher and put on a combative look,” Zhao said. “The other explanation is that the Indian government thought it had done enough by demonstrating its attitude toward China. Therefore, what Modi said in his Independence Day speech is not very important – but what he will do next is.”

Drone nearly hit Air Force One plane with President Donald Trump on board

US President Donald Trump’s jet was hit by a small drone on Sunday night as it approached an airbase near Washington, Bloomberg reported quoting several people aboard Air Force One.

As per the report, the device was yellow and black and was shaped like a cross. It was seen by several passengers on the board on the right side of the plane before it touched down at 5:54 pm at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

The White House Military Office and the Air Force’s 89th Airlift Wing has said that the matter is under review as they were already aware of the report.

The process of investigating such a fleeting event can be hard for the carrier as it appears to be one of the thousands incident that involved unmanned device in the US.

Most of the civilian drones weigh only a few pounds and are not capable of taking down a jetliner. However, as per the reports, they can damage the plane to a great extent.

President Trump was flying in the modified Boeing Co. 757 that is among the fleet of jets known as Air Force One when he is aboard.

Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation Administration has said that it receives thousands of reports where drones at times fly too close to the aircraft.

The FAA has hoped to unveil new regulations which will require civilian drones to transmit their location and identity by the end of this year.

Plea seeks contempt action against Swara Bhasker for her ‘scandalised’ remark over Ayodhya verdict

Bollywood actor Swara Bhasker who keeps attracting spotlight for her criticism against the BJP-led Central government has now found herself in the middle of a possible contempt of court.

A petition was filed before the Supreme Court on Monday seeking criminal initiation of contempt of court against the actor for her remark criticising the top court over its historic Ram Mandir verdict.

The plea has been filed by Usha Shetty from Karanataka before Attorney General of India, KK Venugopal for his permission to begin the proceedings case in court.

The petition has been filed by advocates Anuj Saxena, Prakash Sharma and Mehak Maheswari. Notably, one of the lawyers is Maheswari – the complainant in the Prashant Bhushan case.

Their plea invokes Section 15 of the Contempts of Courts Act, 1971 read with Rule 3 of Contempt proceedings of the Supreme Court, 1975 to seek the sanction from the AGI before the apex court can hear the petition.

The petitioners have alleged that Swara disrespected the court by saying that “courts are not sure if they believe in the constitution”. On February 1, the actor had attended a panel discussion organised by NGO Mumbai Collective during the peak of anti-Citizenship Amendment Act protests on the topic ‘Artists against Communalism’. During the discussion, Bhasker, as alleged by the petitioner, said: “We are now in a situation where our courts are not sure whether they believe in the Constitution or not…We are living in a country where the Supreme Court of our country states in a judgment that the demolition of Babri Masjid was unlawful and in the same judgment rewards the same people who brought down the mosque.”

“…We are now in a situation where our courts are not sure whether they believe in the constitution or not,” she had said.

In this backdrop, the petition has stated: “The alleged contemnor (Bhaskar) statements intends to incite feeling of no-confidence amongst the public with respect to the proceedings of the Hon’ble Court and integrity of the Hon’ble Judges of the Apex Court of India.”

Swara has not commented on the matter yet.

Notably, on August 14, Supreme Court had initiated contempt of court proceedings against advocate Prashant Bhushan for his tweets posted in June. Bhushan, in his tweets, had commented on an undeclared emergency and the Chief Justice of India, SA Bobde. The court will hear a separate hearing on August 20 to decide his punishment for the same.

COVID-19 updates|August 18, 2020, India has been reporting a higher daily surge in caseload for the past 12 days

India today reported a spike of 55,079 cases and 876 deaths in the last 24 hours. With this, the Covid-19 tally in the country rises to 27,02,743, including 6,73,166 active cases, 19,77,780 discharged or migrated and 51,797 deaths, Ministry of Health and Family
Welfare said.

The country- third worst-affected by the pandemic after the United States and Brazil – has been reporting a higher daily surge in caseload for the past 12 days, according to the World Health Organization data. 

In the wake of alarming rise in Covid-19 cases, Punjab government has imposed additional restrictions in Jalandhar, Ludhiana and Patiala from August 18 till further orders.

Drop in active cases in India for the second day in a row. -3,734 compared to the previous day. India’s recovery rate is 73.2%. Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Bihar report biggest drop in active cases.

With the addition of 8,493 new COVID-19 cases, Maharashtra has crossed the six lakh mark. 228 more patients also succumbed to the virus, taking the total tally to 20,265. However, on a positive note, 11,391 patients were discharged from hospitals. Active cases stand at 1.55 lakh while 4.28 lakhs have beaten the virus. 

Some hospitals in Delhi have said they are seeing recovered coronavirus patients returning to them with recurrence of the infection. Earlier this month, the Delhi government-run Rajiv Gandhi Super Speciality Hospital saw two instances of patients with relapse of coronavirus, almost one-and-a-half months after they were cured of the infection. In both the instances of relapse, the patients had moderate symptoms.