Gulf Today

Indonesia reports record 728 virus deaths

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JAKARTA: Indonesia on Tuesday reported a daily record of 728 coronaviru­s deaths while fresh infections topped 31,000 as the Southeast Asian nation grapples with its deadliest COVID-19 wave since the pandemic began.

The official death toll spiked from 558 virus fatalities on Monday, while new cases shot up to 31,189 from 29,745 cases a day earlier, the health ministry said.

Indonesia is sourcing emergency oxygen for virus patients from neighbouri­ng Singapore and calling for help from other countries including China with the archipelag­o slammed by its deadliest Covid-19 wave, the government said on Tuesday.

Around 10,000 concentrat­ors — devices that generate oxygen — were to be shipped from the city-state with some arriving by a Hercules cargo plane earlier on Tuesday, officials said.

“We have communicat­ed with Singapore, China, and other sources” for help, senior minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan said.

“We will also order (oxygen) from other countries if we still feel that the supplies are insufficie­nt.” Pandjaitan ordered all the nation’s oxygen supplies sent to hospitals overflowin­g with coronaviru­s patients on Monday, warning Indonesia could face a “worst-case scenario” where infections skyrocket to 50,000 a day, a crisis driven by the highly infectious Delta variant.

The country reported 29,745 new infections and 558 deaths on Monday, both daily records, ater the government last week ordered fresh virus curbs in the hard-hit capital Jakarta, across Java, and on holiday island Bali.

Indonesia’s overwhelme­d healthcare system is reeling as jammed hospitals turn away patients, forcing desperate families to hunt for oxygen tanks to treat the sick and dying at home.

More than a dozen hospitals in Indonesia’s second-biggest city Surabaya are now full and not taking any more patients, authoritie­s said.

“The health system is on the verge of collapse; hospitals are already being overwhelme­d, oxygen supplies are running out and health services in Java and Bali are woefully ill-equipped to handle this surge in critically ill patients,” NGO Save the Children said in a statement.

The world’s fourth most populous nation has seen its daily caseload more than quadruple in less than a month and its tally stands at 2.3 million cases and 61,140 deaths.

That figure is widely believed to be a severe undercount due to low testing and poor tracing measures.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? People receive coronaviru­s vaccine at a clinic on a football field in Surabaya on Tuesday.
Agence France-presse People receive coronaviru­s vaccine at a clinic on a football field in Surabaya on Tuesday.

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