Italy has recorded 1071 new coronavirus infections in 24 hours, exceeding 1000 cases in a day for the first time since May when the government eased rigid lockdown measures.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
One of Europe's worst-hit countries with more than 35,000 deaths has managed to contain the outbreak after a peak in deaths and cases between March and April.
However it has seen a steady increase in infections over the past month, with experts blaming holidays and night life for causing people to gather in numbers.
The country last recorded a higher figure on May 12, when 1402 cases were reported, six days before restaurants, bars and shops were allowed to re-open after a 10-week lockdown.
Despite the rise in infections, daily death tallies remain low and are often in single figures.
Saturday saw just three fatalities, compared to nine on Friday and six on Thursday, health ministry data showed.
The number of new infections remains considerably lower than those registered in Spain and France.
On Saturday, Lazio, around Rome, was the Italian region to see the largest number of new cases, with 215.
Of these, around 60 per cent were people returning from holidays in other parts of Italy and abroad, the region's health chief said.
The northern regions of Lombardy and Veneto, where Italy's epidemic first came to light on February 21, saw 185 and 160 new cases respectively.
Italy has taken countermeasures to try to stem the recent uptrend, shutting down clubs and discos and making it compulsory to wear a mask at night in outdoor public spaces.
Travellers from several non-EU countries have been banned from entering Italy, with restrictions and testing obligations imposed on people returning from hard-hit European countries.
Australian Associated Press