Eastern Eye (UK)

Top court orders £490 as Covid compensati­on

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INDIA’S top court has ordered state authoritie­s to pay `50,000 (£494) as compensati­on for each death caused by Covid-19, as a way to help families cope with the loss, according to its order reviewed on Tuesday (5).

India has recorded 449,260 deaths overall, a tally experts say is a massive undercount, as millions more may have died in the vast hinterland­s. In major cities, including capital New Delhi, experts said a large number of deaths were unreported as hospitals ran out of beds and oxygen supplies.

Petitioner­s had appealed to the Supreme Court to provide at least eight times the compensati­on, or `400,000 (£3,950), under the National Disaster Management Authority, through which the government provides some financial help in natural disasters such as earthquake­s.

The government, in its affidavit, which was approved by the top court, agreed to the minimum payable amount to be disbursed by local authoritie­s under the State Disaster Response Fund. These funds would be over and above those paid by federal and state authoritie­s under various other schemes, it said.

“All concerned authority shall act as a helping hand, so as to wipe off the tears of those who have suffered due to loss of a family member,” the Supreme

Court said in its order.

India’s Supreme Court ordered state administra­tive bodies to brush past long bureaucrat­ic procedures and settle all claims within 30 days of submission.

The country’s healthcare system buckled under a devastatin­g rise in infections in April and May, driven largely by the more

infectious and dangerous delta variant, which killed at least 170,000 people in May alone, official data showed.

Deaths have since come down sharply, and daily cases have settled around 34,000 since August. The health ministry did not respond to a request for comment on determinin­g the allocation amount.

 ?? ?? FATAL: A devastatin­g second wave killed at least 170,000 Indians in May
FATAL: A devastatin­g second wave killed at least 170,000 Indians in May

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