The official death toll from Covid-19 in Italy has surpassed 60,000.
The grim milestone came as restrictive measures aimed at stemming the spread of the virus were nonetheless eased in several regions, as the rate of infections stabilised and pressure eased on hospitals.
Italy, which was the first European country to be hit by the global pandemic, has recorded 60,078 deaths from 1,728,878 infections, the county's health ministry reported.
Despite steps the government has taken to curb the latest outbreak and care for the sick, hundreds of people are still dying daily.
Italy saw a record 993 deaths last Thursday, the highest toll since the outbreak began in the first months of the year.
It is among the countries with the highest numbers of deaths compared to its population with 98 fatalities per 100,000 inhabitants.
Its mortality rate, or the ratio of deaths to infections, stands at 3.47%. Only the UK has a higher rate in Europe with 3.55%.
By comparison, Spain's rate is 2.75% and France is at 2.35%.

Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza warned that "if we drop our guard, we run the risk of finding ourselves in January and February facing a new (infection) surge.
"And that we cannot allow," he told SkyTG24 television.
But the government's colour-coded system of risk rating showed that several regions were deemed to be facing a lower risk, allowing inhabitants to move about more freely.
The risk was downgraded from red, the highest level, to orange in Tuscany, Campania and the Aosta Valley, and from orange to yellow in five other regions.
On Monday, Abruzzo, the last red region, is also set to turn orange, according to regional premier Marco Marilio.
On Thursday, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte outlined a set of restrictive measures to be put in place around Christmas.
He announced a ban on movements between regions from 21 December until 6 January, including for Italians who wanted to spend time in second homes.
There is also a ban on moving from one town to another for 25-26 December as well as on 1 January.
A curfew from 10pm until 5am remains in place, lasting until 7am on New Year's Day.
Ski slopes and mechanical lifts are to remain closed until 7 January.