Burton Mail

India vaccine efforts step up amid surge

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INDIA set another global record in new virus cases, with another 375,000 people infected, as the country gears up to open its vaccinatio­n rollout to all adults.

It now has reported more than 18.3 million cases, behind only the United States. The health ministry also reported 3,645 deaths in the last 24-hour period, bringing India’s total to 204,832, according to the health ministry.

Experts believe both figures are an undercount, but it is unclear by how much.

India has set a global record for daily new cases for seven of the past eight days.

Starting on Wednesday, all Indians 18 and older were allowed to register on a government app for vaccinatio­ns, but social media were flooded with complaints the app had crashed due to high use, and once it was working again, no appointmen­ts were available.

The mass vaccinatio­n drive for the nation of nearly 1.4 billion people began in January and has crawled along since. Nearly 10% of people have received one jab, but only around 1.5% have received both required doses.

The latest effort to vaccinate those between ages 18 and 44 is expected to face problems, including whether states even have enough supplies.

On Wednesday, the health minister in hard-hit Maharashtr­a state promised free vaccines for that age group but clarified the state didn’t have enough stock to start giving the vaccines on Saturday.

The recent surge has been partly fed by new variants of the coronaviru­s, mass public gatherings such as political rallies and religious events that were allowed to continue, and relaxed attitudes on the risks fed by leaders touting victory over the virus.

India’s foreign secretary, Harsh Vardhan Shringla, said the country is facing an “unpreceden­ted” second surge with more than three million active cases that have pushed the health system close to collapse, causing the acute shortages of oxygen and other hospital supplies. Help is coming from overseas.

“There’s been an outpouring of, let’s say, assistance from various countries,” Mr Shringla said, adding that more than 40 nations have committed to send assistance.

On Wednesday, the United States sent the first of several Covid-19 medical shipments to India.

The UK sent a shipment earlier this week while others like France, Germany, Ireland and Australia have also promised help.

Amid the crisis, voting for the eighth and final phase of the West Bengal state elections began yesterday. More than eight million people are eligible to vote across the state.

The Election Commission has said social distancing measures were in place.

 ??  ?? People arrive to receive their Covid-19 vaccine in Mumbai, India yesterday
People arrive to receive their Covid-19 vaccine in Mumbai, India yesterday

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