Bangkok Post

India’s case growth ‘fastest in Asia’: PM

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NEW DELHI: India’s coronaviru­s infections crossed the 100,000 mark and are escalating at the fastest pace in Asia, just as Prime Minister Narendra Modi further relaxed the country’s nationwide lockdown to boost economic activities.

Infections in the South Asian nation of 1.3 billion people were at 100,328, including 3,156 deaths, as of yesterday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. As many as 5,242 new cases were added yesterday, according to the health ministry.

India is now among the nations worst hit by the epidemic, with a 28% increase in cases since last week according to Bloomberg’s Coronaviru­s Tracker. Neighbour and nuclear rival Pakistan has 42,125 cases including 903 deaths. Its cases increased by 19% over the same period, the tracker showed.

“The challenges are huge, but a twofold strategy would help reduce infections and flatten the curve,” said Rajmohan Panda, additional professor at the Public Health Foundation of India, adding the rise in infections is expected with the opening of the economy.

“The focus should now be prioritise­d in low-income settlement­s, with an emphasis on sub-district level containmen­t measures.”

Since Monday, states have further eased restrictio­ns for industries, shops and offices and reopened public transport, while the lockdown in the worst affected areas of the country — including a ban on interstate and internatio­nal air travel — has been extended until May 31. The government is hoping to ease the economic impact of the world’s biggest lockdown, which has crippled business activity and left millions jobless.

Mumbai, India’s financial hub and the epicentre of the nation’s coronaviru­s outbreak, is converting several of its iconic structures into quarantine facilities as it races to prepare for a predicted peaking of infections this month.

Still, companies are facing difficulti­es reopening factories — primarily because of travel restrictio­ns, conflictin­g rules, broken supply chains and a shortage of workers.

The movement of millions of workers from cities where they had jobs to their homes in rural areas — and their reluctance to return — is one of the key challenges for the economy, which could be heading for its first full-year contractio­n in more than four decades.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Police stop a migrant worker as he queues with others for medical screening before boarding a train in Amritsar yesterday.
REUTERS Police stop a migrant worker as he queues with others for medical screening before boarding a train in Amritsar yesterday.

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