* India reports 44,658 new infections, 496 deaths
* Kerala, Maharashtra account for most active infections
(Adds vaccine details, Kerala lockdown)
By Krishna N. Das
NEW DELHI, Aug 27 (Reuters) - India administered more than
10 million COVID-19 vaccine doses on Friday, a national record
that Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailed as a "momentous feat"
for the country ahead of fears of another surge in infections.
India has now administered about 628 million vaccine doses
in total, giving at least one dose to more than half of its 944
million adults and the required two doses to 15%. The government
wants the entire adult population covered by December.
"Record vaccination numbers today!" Modi said on Twitter.
"Crossing 1 crore (10 million) is a momentous feat."
The previous daily record was 9.2 million.
India's vaccine production has jumped this month, thanks
mainly to the Serum Institute of India that is now making about
150 million doses a month of its version of the AstraZeneca
vaccine.
The sharp rise in vaccinations came as India reported more
than 40,000 new infections for a second consecutive day on
Friday.
Cases had fallen to a five-month-low of 25,166 in the middle
of the month but have risen sharply in the last three days,
mainly in the southern state of Kerala which recently held a
large festival during which families typically come together.
India reported 44,658 new COVID-19 infections on Friday,
taking the total to 32.6 million, the most in the world after
the United States. The death toll rose by 496 to 436,861.
Kerala has accounted for nearly 60% of the new coronavirus
cases in the past week and more than half of the total active
cases, followed by 16% in the western state of Maharashtra.
"Any laxity in ensuring a strict adherence to the five-fold
strategy of test-track-treat-vaccinate and ensuring COVID
appropriate behaviour, may result in a further surge in COVID-19
transmission in Kerala and its neighbouring states," the health
ministry told the Kerala state government in a letter shared
with journalists.
Kerala said it would impose a lockdown on Sundays until
further orders.
(Reporting by Neha Arora, Chris Thomas and Krishna N. Das;
Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Michael Perry, Mike Harrison and
Susan Fenton)