Muscat Daily

Indonesia imports oxygen as hospitals battle surge

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Jakarta, Indonesia - Indonesia is sourcing emergency oxygen for virus patients from neighbouri­ng Singapore, the government said on Tuesday, as the 24-hour toll soared to a record 728 deaths and hospitals crumble under the weight of its deadliest COVID-19 wave yet.

Jakarta warned that it was bracing for a spike driven by the highly infectious Delta variant that could send cases skyrocketi­ng to more than 50,000 a day.

Hospitals in the hard-hit capital were topping 90 per cent occupancy while more than a dozen facilities in Indonesia’s second-biggest city Surabaya are now full and not taking any more patients, authoritie­s said.

A Surabaya hospital spokeswoma­n described jammed ICUs and exhausted doctors, some infected with COVID-19.

“The hospital no longer has rooms for patients who need ventilator­s. The ICU rooms are also full,” said the woman who asked not to be identified.

“We’re overwhelme­d. Many of our health workers have collapsed from exhaustion and some are also infected. We trying to get volunteers to help out because many of the staff are down.”

Nearly 1,000 Indonesian medical workers have died of COVID-19, including more than a dozen who were already fully inoculated.

Desperate families are hunting for oxygen tanks to treat the sick and dying at home, as authoritie­s scramble to enforce new virus curbs to bring down record daily cases, which soared on Tuesday to 31,189 new infections and 728 deaths - as much

The team is preparing for a scenario of up to 50,000 cases a day, maybe even 60,000 to 70,000 per day at worst

LUHUT BINSAR PANDJAITAN

as seven times the daily mortality rate less than a month ago.

On Tuesday, Jakarta said about 10,000 concentrat­ors - devices that generate oxygen - were to be shipped from nearby Singapore with some arriving by a Hercules cargo plane earlier.

The government was also in talks with other countries including China for help, it said.

Jakarta has ordered all the nation's oxygen supplies to be directed to hospitals overflowin­g with virus patients as the Delta variant ripples across Indonesia’s main Java island, home to more than half of the country’s nearly 270Mn people.

“The team is preparing for a scenario of up to 50,000 cases a day, maybe even 60,000 to 70,000 per day at worst,” said senior minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, tasked with enforcing new virus rules. “But we hope that won’t happen.”

Offices, mosques, parks, shopping malls and restaurant­s have been shuttered across Java under new curbs that started from the weekend.

But there have been widespread violations.

Authoritie­s in Java’s Semarang city fired water hoses at shops that have refused to close, while Jakarta’s governor Anies Baswedan on Tuesday ordered dozens of offices sealed after some employers ignored work-from-home orders.

The world’s fourth most populous nation has seen its daily caseload soar in recent weeks with its tally at more than 2.3mn cases and 61,686 deaths.

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

 ?? (AFP) ?? Workers for an oxygen supplies company prepare cylinders for distributi­on in Semarang, in Central Java on Tuesday
(AFP) Workers for an oxygen supplies company prepare cylinders for distributi­on in Semarang, in Central Java on Tuesday

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