Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

‘Entire families’ claimed by Covid in rural India’

- Bloomberg letters@hindustant­imes.com

After devastatin­g India’s biggest cities, the latest Covid-19 wave is now ravaging rural areas across the world’s second-most populous country. And most villages have no way to fight the virus.

In Basi, about 1.5 hours from the national capital New Delhi, about three-quarters of the village’s 5,400 people are sick and more than 30 have died in the past three weeks. It has no healthcare facilities, no doctors and no oxygen canisters. And unlike India’s social media literate urban population, residents can’t appeal on Twitter to an army of strangers willing to help.

“Most deaths in the village have been caused because there was no oxygen available,” said Sanjeev Kumar, the newly elected head of the farmer community. “The sick are being rushed to the district headquarte­rs and those extremely sick patients have to travel about four hours,” he said, adding that many don’t make it in time.

It’s a scenario playing out all over India. In interviews with representa­tives from more than 18 towns and villages in different parts of the country, officials outlined the scale of the carnage — from entire families wiped out to bloated bodies floating down the Ganga river to farmland left untended due to a lack of workers.

Many people said the scale of the crisis is much bigger than official numbers reveal, with villagers afraid to leave their homes even if they have fever and local authoritie­s failing to properly record virus fatalities. India reported a record 4,329 deaths in the 24 hours on Tuesday, while its total reported cases topped 25 million, according to figures from the Union health ministry.

Anger is building both at the Prime Minister Narendra Modiled central administra­tion and local authoritie­s for failing to bolster medical infrastruc­ture following a virus wave last year, including securing sufficient supplies of oxygen and vaccines. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) last month lost panchayat elections in Basi and other parts of Uttar Pradesh — India’s most populous state — just as the country started recording almost 400,000 new cases a day.

The sentiment on the ground suggests broader troubles for Modi and fellow BJP leader Yogi Adityanath, the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh. The state holds assembly elections next year.

“We had complete support for Modi and Adityanath, but now whatever happens we will vote the BJP out,” Sahab Singh, 72, said in the centre of Basi, which was virtually empty.

During the recent election to appoint village heads, many poll workers became infected — including Kumarsain Nain, 59, who caught the virus along with his 31-year-old son. Unable to walk and gasping for breath, Nain’s family rushed him last month to a nearby hospital after they were unable to find an ambulance with oxygen support, said another son, Praveen Kumar.

“After we reached the hospital, the doctors said he had died, but instead of recording Covid-19 as the cause of death they put cardiac arrest,” Kumar said.

His brother died soon afterward in another clinic about 30 minutes away, at the same time as six other patients who were also on oxygen support. “My suspicion is that hospital ran out of oxygen, which led to the deaths,” Kumar said. “Holding the elections when the government knew that cases were rising and the infection was spreading is a criminal act.”

Representa­tives from both the Prime Minister’s Office and the health ministry have not responded to request for com

ment.

Baijayant “Jay” Panda, a senior official with BJP, told Bloomberg Television on Monday the latest virus wave has been a “humbling experience:, but pointed to a significan­t vaccinatio­n rollout and the provision of shots to more than 80 countries in a global outreach effort.

He defended Modi’s response, saying election authoritie­s made the decision to proceed with polls and states were responsibl­e for building oxygen plants that received federal funding.

“It’s not just the PM who thought we had overcome the biggest ravages of corona — the consensus in India by early January was that we had done so,” Panda said. “Many of the epidemiolo­gists who are today criticisin­g are on the record back in October saying the worst was over and that we should not have as many restrictio­ns.”

As leaders in Delhi struggle to contain the crisis, horrifying scenes are playing out across India. Last week in Bihar, residents woke up to find as many as 70 bloated bodies floating in the Ganga. With crematoriu­ms overflowin­g as the death toll surges, they feared these bodies were Covid victims whose families could not properly lay them to rest. More corpses have since been reported along the river.

Both the Centre and state government­s “have failed us all,” said Rajesh Sharma, who owns a travel company in Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh. “There are no hospital beds, no medicines. People have been left to die. In Ujjain and around, entire families died in the last two weeks.”

In Punjab, local authoritie­s are asking Asha workers to visit every house to urge people to get vaccinated and see if anyone has a fever. “Many people are so scared they are not even telling anyone about their fever,” said Balbir, an Asha worker. “Despite such a huge surge they have still not given us adequate protection: no masks, no gloves, nothing.”

Uttarakhan­d has also been hit hard. The state saw virus cases jump almost 20 times after it hosted more than 9 million people for the Kumbh Mela between March 31 and April 24.

“There isn’t a house in Rishikesh where people aren’t sick — Haridwar is also in a similar condition,” said Navin Mohan, who helps arrange tours to the holy towns.

“The pandemic is now truly beyond control,” Mohan said.

BAIJAYANT “JAY” PANDA, A SENIOR OFFICIAL WITH BJP, SAID THE LATEST VIRUS WAVE HAS BEEN A “HUMBLING EXPERIENCE

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