India city Delhi covid-19 death vaccine India city Delhi

Delhi records 373 new Covid-19 cases in past 24 hours, positivity rate at 4.95%

Reading now: 280
www.livemint.com

Delhi on Thursday registered 373 new Covid-19 cases, two deaths, and 448 recoveries in a span of 24 hours. Active coronavirus cases in the national capital were at 1490, the Delhi health department said Delhi on Thursday registered 373 new Covid-19 cases, two deaths, and 448 recoveries in a span of 24 hours.

Active coronavirus cases in the national capital were at 1490, the Delhi health department said. With these new cases, the national capital's overall Covid-19 tally has increased to 1907637, while the death toll stands at 26,212 with the case fatality rate at 1.37%.

The cumulative Covid-19 vaccine doses administered in the national capital crossed 3,42,70,560 whereas the country's vaccination coverage exceeded 193.70 crore (1,93,70,51,104) as per provisional reports till 7 am today.

This has been achieved through 2,46,20,654 sessions. India’s active caseload currently stands at 19,509. Active cases now constitute 0.05% of the country's total positive cases.

Read more on livemint.com
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Vladimir Putin - Russian accused of killing Alexander Litvinenko reportedly dies from Covid-19 - dailystar.co.uk - Britain - Russia - city Moscow
dailystar.co.uk
66%
207
Russian accused of killing Alexander Litvinenko reportedly dies from Covid-19
London has died of Covid-19 in Moscow, according to reports.Dmitri Kovtun was one of two men who a UK inquiry ruled had poisoned Litvinenko’s tea with a rare radioactive substance back in 2006.Reports from state-owned Russian news agency Tass said Kovtun contracted coronavirus before dying in a Moscow hospital.Kovtun, along with Andrei Lugovoi, was accused of being behind Litvinenko’s assassination 16 years ago at the Millennium Hotel in Mayfair.Reports said Tass cited Lugovoi, now a member of Russia’s parliament, as saying that he was mourning the death of a “close and faithful friend”.A British public inquiry concluded in 2016 that the killing of the outspoken critic of Vladimir Putin, who died after drinking tea laced with radioactive polonium-210, had “probably” been carried out with the approval of the Russian president.The inquiry found the two Russian men had deliberately poisoned Litvinenko by putting the radioactive substance into his drink at the central London hotel, leading to an agonising death.The European Court of Human Rights also ruled last year, following a case brought by the deceased’s widow, Marina Litvinenko, that Russia was responsible for his killing.Russia has always denied any involvement in the death and had refused to comply with international arrest warrants issued for Kovtun and Lugovoi.
Christopher Wray - Buffalo mass shooting: 911 dispatcher fired for allegedly hanging up on store worker - fox29.com - state New York - county Buffalo - county Erie
fox29.com
59%
709
Buffalo mass shooting: 911 dispatcher fired for allegedly hanging up on store worker
BUFFALO, N.Y. - A 911 dispatcher has been fired for reportedly hanging up on a Tops supermarket employee, calling for help during a mass shooting where 10 Black people were killed last month in Buffalo, New York."The individual, who was the subject of a disciplinary hearing…is no longer employed as a police complaint writer for Erie County," spokesperson Peter Anderson with The Office of the Erie County Executive confirmed to FOX Television Stations.The dispatcher had been placed on administrative leave "pending a disciplinary hearing."An internal investigation into the incident began the day after the shooting on May 15, and the individual was placed on administrative leave on May 16, Anderson told FOX News. RELATED: Buffalo mass shooting: Payton Gendron targeted Black neighborhood, officials say"Of note, the employee[']s action had no bearing on the dispatching of the call. The first call was dispatched for an immediate police response in approximately 30 seconds," Anderson told the outlet. According to FOX News, A Tops employee named Latisha told WGRZ that when an 18-year-old shooting suspect arrived at the supermarket on the afternoon of May 14 and began his rampage that eventually killed 10 Black individuals in what FBI Director Christopher Wray is calling "a hate crime and an act of racially motivated violent extremism," she tried to call 911 for help."I tried to call 911, and I was whispering because I could hear him close by," Latisha told the outlet.
Mariah Carey - Merry Christmas - Mariah Carey sued for $20M over ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ - fox29.com - state Tennessee - state Louisiana - city New Orleans - city Nashville, state Tennessee - county Stone
fox29.com
60%
999
Mariah Carey sued for $20M over ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’
NEW ORLEANS - It seems that one of America’s favorite Christmas songs has now landed singer Mariah Carey in a legal battle with a man claiming to be the writer of the lyrics.Carey is being sued by Andy Stone, who claimed to have co-written Carey’s hit "All I Want for Christmas is You" in 1989  and recorded it at the Masterphonics Studio 6 in Nashville, Tennessee.Stone, whose stage name is "Vince Vance," filed a complaint against Carey, Walter Afanasieff and Sony Music Entertainment in the U.S. District Court of Eastern District of Louisiana Friday.According to court documents obtained by FOX Television Stations, Stone said Carey and her team never sought permission to use the song "in creating, reproducing, recording, distributing, selling, or publicly performing."RELATED: 1-on-1 with Mariah Carey on her holiday classic, new Christmas special and more!Stone is suing for copyright infringement, unjust enrichment and misappropriation and violation of the Lanham Act, which governs trademarks.Stone is seeking at least $20 million in damages.Neither representatives for Carey nor Sony responded to a request for comment by FOX Television Stations.Carey first released the song in 1994 as part of her holiday album, but the record didn’t become a number-one hit in the U.S.
DMCA