Bangladesh on Thursday recorded 12,236 cases till 8:00am in the last 24 hours according to Directorate General of Health Services press release.
With the new cases, the total caseload in the country now stands at 10,71,774.
Bangladesh also saw 226 deaths during the period from the disease pushing the total fatalities to 17,278.
The daily infection rate slightly fell to 27.23 per cent from Tuesday's 29.14 per cent after testing 44,941 samples in 627 laboratories across the country.
Meanwhile, 8,395 patients have recovered from the deadly infection in last 24-hours.
The overall infection rate is gradually increasing and currently stands at 15 per cent.
Among the latest fatalities, Dhaka division saw the highest 74 deaths, followed by 52 in Khulna, 42 in Chattogram, 24 in Rajshahi, 13 in Rangpur and 10 in Mymensingh.
Besides, six died in Barishal and five in Sylhet divisions.
Bangladesh reported its first cases on March 8 last year and the first coronavirus-related death on March 18 the same year.
Strict movement restrictions
In light of the deteriorating situation, a government-announced nationwide weeklong strict restrictions came into effect on July 1. Later, the lockdown was extended until July 14.
On July 13, the government decided to relax the lockdown restrictions for eight days from July 15 due to Eid-ul-Azha, which will be celebrated on July 21.
During the period, public transportation and long-haul buses are allowed to resume and shopping malls to reopen on a limited scale.
However, strict lockdown restrictions will resume for another two weeks from July 23.
Earlier on June 25, in light of the worsening condition, the government announced that a strict weeklong countrywide lockdown would be enforced from June 28 to curb the virus’ spread. The decision was revised later on.
The government had earlier imposed restrictions on movement on April 5 this year. They were extended until July 15 in phases.
Although the number of cases and deaths declined to some extent, the situation went downhill in recent weeks as people are still reluctant to follow basic health rules and continue to flout government-issued guidelines.
The Covid-19 situation in the bordering districts has deteriorated in recent days, prompting the local administration to enforce full-scale lockdown in some areas.
Bangladesh shut its border with India on April 26 as the neighbouring country’s coronavirus situation worsened. The closure was extended in phases until July 14.
Amid the spike in Covid cases triggered by local transmission of the Indian variant (Delta), experts predicted that Bangladesh might see the peak of the current wave of the deadly virus in the third week of July.