K-19 set the blackest record since the beginning of the GRAPHICS pandemic



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The coronavirus has set its blackest record since the start of the pandemic, with 880,000 people dying from the infection.

Accurate data from the Worldometers portal shows that the deaths of people with K-19 are 881,156.

Those infected were 26,930,599 and those cured 19,026,027.

BLIC recalls that earlier today, Johns Hopkins University in the United States released alarming data on the K-19 scale around the world.

India reported 86,432 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday, bringing the total to 4,023,179.

The United States and Brazil are the only countries with more cases than India.

The United States leads the world in COVID infections with 6,202,080, while in Brazil there are 4,091,801 infected, according to the same source.

The coronavirus has affected some settlements in Mexico so much that local authorities have run out of death certificate forms, although the government says enough copies are printed regularly.

Mexico has registered more than 66,561 deaths from COVID-19, which places it behind the United States, Brazil and India in the number of deaths worldwide.

Amnesty International said earlier this week that 1,320 health workers in Mexico had died from the novel coronavirus pandemic, the worst number of its kind in the world.

According to a Reuters analysis of data from the Mexican government, healthcare workers in this country are four times more likely to die from COVID-19 than their counterparts in the United States.

New cases continue to appear in South Korea, which at one point appeared to have eliminated the virus. Authorities said 115 of the 168 new cases were in the capital Seoul on Saturday.

New Zealand said on Saturday it had registered its 24th COVID-19 victim. Joseph Williams, a physician and former Prime Minister of the Cook Islands, died of the infection.

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