The previous record of global daily deaths was 10,733, registered on
Nov. 4, according to the Reuters tally.
The United States, the worst-affected country worldwide, has
reported about 11.38 million infections and 248,574 deaths since the
pandemic started, the tally showed.
The United States leads the world in the daily average number of new
deaths reported, accounting for one in every 12 deaths reported
worldwide each day, according to a Reuters analysis.
Brazil, with 166,699 coronavirus deaths, followed by India with
130,993 are the only two other countries who have reported more than
100,000 deaths since the first coronavirus-related death was
reported in Wuhan, China this January.
In Europe, which accounts for almost a quarter of the 1.3 million
deaths, Britain has reported the highest number of deaths in the
region.
Britain is also the only European nation to report more than 50,000
fatalities, followed by Italy with 46,464 fatalities and France with
46,273, according to the Reuters tally.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who was asked to self-isolate
himself on Sunday after he came in contact with someone who tested
positive for COVID-19, tested negative on Tuesday.
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France, which became the first European county to cross 2 million coronavirus
cases on Tuesday, has got some respite from the virus in the past few days as it
reported its one-month low daily cases numbers on Monday.
Already facing the prospect of a wave of job losses and business failures,
governments across the region have been forced to order control measures
including local curfews, closing non-essential shops and restricting movement.
In United States, many state governors in the past week have put back
restrictions to control the spread of the virus.
Several state officials also have urged citizens to exercise caution around the
Thanksgiving holiday and not travel or socialize with extended family for the
traditional indoor feast.
(Reporting by Kavya B and Anurag Maan in Bengaluru; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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