Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

‘NATIONAL EMERGENCY’ India’s tally 330k+, 2,255 new deaths

Supreme Court takes suo motu cognisance of Covid crisis, asks Centre to present national plan for oxygen, medicines, vaccines, lockdowns

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday called the crisis triggered by the second Covid-19 wave a “national emergency” as it initiated a public interest litigation on its own, and asked the Centre to present before it on Friday a national plan to combat the crisis that has now made India the worst hot spot of the entire global pandemic.

“The situation in various parts of the country is grim. There seems to be a sudden surge in the number of Covid patients and mortality,” said the bench, headed by Chief Justice of India (CJI) SA Bobde, while taking a suo motu cognisance of the surge in infections, which have led to a shortage of hospital beds and crucial supplies such as medical oxygen and medicines.

The order said its focus areas at this time were the supply of medical oxygen, essential medicines, the method and manner of vaccinatio­n, and the declaratio­n of lockdowns to check the spread of the disease.

Issuing the notices to the Union and state government­s, it asked solicitor general Tushar Mehta to remain present in the court with the national plan on availabili­ty and distributi­on of essential supplies and services. The bench, which also includes justices L Nageswara Rao and S Ravindra Bhat, appointed senior advocate Harish Salve as amicus curiae to assist the court.

A day after India saw the world’s biggest one-day jump in Covid-19 cases ever, the country again broke all records as 332,394 new infections and 2,255 deaths were reported on Thursday, both new single-day records.

The ferocious second wave of infections has overwhelme­d hospitals and crematoriu­ms across the country and has led to frantic cries for help on social media as patients throughout the country struggled to arrange for beds, key medical supplies such as oxygen and medicines.

Pointing out that at least six high courts were hearing issues related to the preparedne­ss of the states and the Centre to deal with the crisis, the bench also issued notices to the petitioner­s before the high courts, asking why uniform orders should not be passed by the Supreme Court.

“The high courts have passed certain orders which may have the effect of accelerati­ng and prioritisi­ng the services to a certain set of people and slowing down the availabili­ty of these resources to certain other groups whether the groups are local, regional or otherwise,” recorded the court in its order, while telling Mehta that these orders were also creating confusion and diversion of resources because of different priorities.

“Prima facie, we are inclined to take the view that the distributi­on of these essential services and supplies must be done in an even-handed manner according to the advice of the health authoritie­s which undoubtedl­y take into account relevant factors like severity, susceptibi­lity, the number of people affected and the local availabili­ty of resources,” the court recorded in its

four-page order.

On the issue of lockdowns, the CJI, whose bench had on Tuesday stayed an order of the Allahabad high court for virtually locking down five worst-hit districts of Uttar Pradesh, observed that this authority should be with the state government. “We want to keep the power to declare lockdown with states. It cannot be a judicial decision,” he remarked.

In its order, the apex court also asked the Union government to apprise it of existence or requiremen­t of a coordinati­ng body that could consider allocation of the resources in a consultati­ve manner with the involvemen­t of concerned states and Union territorie­s in addition to providing logistical support for transporta­tion and distributi­on of essential medicines, oxygen and other resources.

The bench further asked the Centre to consider the declaratio­n of essential medicines and medical equipment required for treatment of Covid-19 as “essential commoditie­s” under the law.

When Mehta asked if the Centre was still required to make submission­s before the high courts after the top court’s cognisance, justice Bhat said that the central government should go ahead and adduce its national plan before high courts since the idea was not to supersede high court orders at this moment.

NEW DELHI: A day after India became the world’s worst Covid-19 hot spot ever, the country again broke all previous records on Thursday, adding 332,394 new cases and 2,255 new deaths amid a massive second wave of infections that has continued to exceed all global peaks and overwhelme­d the nation’s health care system.

Till Thursday night, 16,257,091 people are confirmed to have been infected with the disease in the country, of which 186,948 lost their lives.

The seven-day average of new cases in the country now stands at 264,838 infections a day. This means that the country, on average, is currently reporting nearly thrice as many cases as it was during the absolute worst of the first wave – India’s first wave of cases peaked at 93,617 for the week ending September 16, 2020, according to HT’S Covid-19 dashboard.

On average, 1,800 people have lost their lives to the disease in the country every day in the last week. In the same period, nearly two million people (1,969,347) have been

infected in the country.

The positivity rate – the proportion of tests that are positive for Covid-19 – continued to soar, with nearly one out of every five samples tested across the country returning positive.

Delhi, meanwhile, lodged a record 306 deaths due to the disease and registered 26,169 new cases with an alarmingly high positivity rate of 36.2%, the highest ever recorded since the start of the pandemic in March last year.

 ?? AP ?? Funeral pyres of those who died of Covid-19 at a ground converted into a crematoriu­m in New Delhi.
AP Funeral pyres of those who died of Covid-19 at a ground converted into a crematoriu­m in New Delhi.

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