The Pacific nation has recorded just 25 deaths in a population of five million and has been widely praised for its virus response.
In India, however, infections are surging with tens of thousands of new infections being reported every day.
But with the economy reeling, the government has gradually eased what was once among the world's strictest lockdowns — despite warnings from some experts about the virus spreading across the vast nation of 1.3 billion people.
"So many people lost their job during the lockdown. People have suffered a lot and it is time the country opens up fully," said bank official Ayub Sheikh, 35, who was visiting the Taj Mahal with his wife and baby daughter.
"We are not afraid of the virus. If it has to infect us, it will... I don't think it is going to go away soon. We have to get used to it now."
In poorer, crisis-hit parts of the world, the pandemic has piled on even more suffering.
Read also: WFP Urges the Rich to Help Prevent a ‘Hunger Pandemic’
In Iraq, tens of thousands of Shiite Muslims participated in the annual mourning ceremonies of Ashura despite the government urging citizens to not attend large gatherings.
"Iraq has been through so much misery — from war to torture to imprisonment to forced emigration and now the coronavirus pandemic," said Sheikh Hassan Dhakeri, a cleric in the shrine city of Karbala.
'The Pand-Emmys'
The United States remains the hardest-hit nation in the world, with more than 6.8 million cases and deaths approaching 200,000.
The pandemic has unleashed vast destruction on the world's biggest economy, with millions left jobless, and President Donald Trump facing intense criticism of his handling of the virus.
Trump has expressed confidence that a vaccine would be ready by October — a claim contradicted by his administration's top health expert.
In the absence of a prophylactic, all public gatherings carry a serious transmission risk.
That worry impacted the biggest TV awards show in America on Sunday, as the Emmys ceremony was held in a mostly empty venue in Los Angeles — with host Jimmy Kimmel dubbing them "the pand-Emmys".