HANOI, Aug 13 (Reuters) - Vietnam's business hub Ho Chi Minh City will extend its COVID-19 restrictions to the end of August, state media reported on Friday (Aug 13), as new infections and deaths rise further in the epicentre of the country's worst outbreak yet.

"We have to prepare for a prolonged battle," Phan Van Mai, the deputy secretary of the city's Communist Party committee, was quoted as saying by the Tuoi Tre newspaper.

After successfully containing the virus up until late April, Vietnam has seen infections rise rapidly and has introduced movement restrictions across about a third of the country to try to curtail the spread.

It comes at a time when vaccines are in short supply and only about 1 per cent of the population has been fully inoculated, including 130,000 people in Ho Chi Minh City, which accounts for half of Vietnam's cases and by far the majority of its more than 4,800 deaths.

Of most concern is the high mortality rate, which city authorities said was an average of 241 deaths per day.

By comparison, Vietnam's overall COVID-19 fatalities one month ago were 138.

Authorities have called for faster vaccinations, with about 1 million doses now being administered nationwide each day.

A fifth of those are in Ho Chi Minh City, where about two-thirds of its 9 million residents have received a first dose.