India gives out 25 million COVID-19 vaccine doses on prime minister's birthday

India gives out 25 million COVID-19 vaccine doses on prime minister's birthday

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India gave out 25 million doses during a special COVID-19 vaccination drive organized on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's birthday.

The campaign took place Friday as Modi turned 71. The country's health ministry said Saturday the special drive had raised India's overall vaccinations to more than 790 million.

Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya called the feat "a golden chapter ... written in the history of the country and the world."

Only China has administered more. China's government said this week it had given more than 2.16 billion shots and that one billion people were fully vaccinated.

India, a country of nearly 1.4 billion people, has given at least one dose to more than 62 per cent of eligible adults and two doses to about 21 per cent. Health ministry officials say they plan to administer over a billion shots by mid-October.

India has reported more than 33 million coronavirus cases and 444,529 deaths. The country is recording over 30,000 new COVID-19 cases a day.

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What's happening around the world

As of Saturday morning, more than 227.7 million cases of COVID-19 had been reported worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University's coronavirus tracker. The reported global death toll stood at more than 4.6 million.

In the Asia-Pacific region, police in Australia used pepper spray to subdue protesters Saturday at an anti-lockdown rally in Melbourne, the country's second-largest city.

About 1,000 demonstrators gathered in the suburb of Richmond after the location of the protest was changed at the last minute to evade authorities.

Police clash with protesters during a 'The Worldwide Rally for Freedom' demonstration in Melbourne, Australia, on Saturday. (James Ross/AAP/Reuters)

There were minor scuffles as well as a violent confrontation involving a handful of protesters. Several protesters were arrested.

Most of the demonstrators defied regulations by failing to wear masks.

Some 2,000 police officers were deployed at road checkpoints and barricades, and on roving patrols, to try to stop the rally going ahead in breach of public health orders.

Melbourne's sixth lockdown began on Aug. 5. Melbourne is the capital of Victoria state, which on Saturday reported 535 new infections and one COVID-19 death in the latest 24-hour period.

In the Americas, an exhibition of more than 600,000 white flags representing Americans who have died of COVID-19 opened on Friday, covering more than 20 acres of the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

People walk through an exhibition of white flags representing Americans who have died of COVID-19 on the lawn of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on Friday. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)

In the Middle East, the capital of the United Arab Emirates has ended a policy requiring those coming in from other emirates to have a recent negative coronavirus test. Abu Dhabi made the announcement Saturday, saying that people from the UAE's six other emirates could enter the capital from Sunday without getting a test.

In Asia, Vietnam has approved Cuba's Abdala vaccine for use, the government said on Saturday, as the Southeast Asian country battles its worst outbreak of COVID-19. Abdala becomes the eighth COVID-19 vaccine approved for use in Vietnam, which has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the region, with only 6.3 per cent of its 98 million people having received at least two shots.