Chattanooga Times Free Press

India grieves 200,000 dead with many more probably uncounted

- BY SHEIKH SAALIQ, KRUTIKA PATHI AND ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL

NEW DELHI — Three days after his coronaviru­s symptoms appeared, Rajendra Karan struggled to breathe. Instead of waiting for an ambulance, his son drove him to a government hospital in Lucknow, the capital of India’s largest state.

But the hospital wouldn’t let him in without a registrati­on slip from the district’s chief medical officer. By the time the son got it, his father had died in the car, just outside the hospital doors.

“My father would have been alive today if the hospital had just admitted him instead of waiting for a piece of paper,” Rohitas Karan said.

Stories of deaths tangled in bureaucrac­y and breakdowns have become dismally common in India, where deaths on Wednesday officially surged past 200,000. But the true death toll is believed to be far higher.

In India, mortality data was poor even before the pandemic, with most people dying at home and their deaths often going unregister­ed. The practice is particular­ly prevalent in rural areas, where the virus is now spreading fast.

This is partly why this nation of nearly 1.4 billion has recorded fewer deaths than Brazil and Mexico, which have smaller population­s and fewer confirmed COVID19 cases.

While determinin­g exact numbers in a pandemic is difficult, experts say an overrelian­ce on official data that didn’t reflect the true extent of infections contribute­d to authoritie­s being blindsided by a huge surge in recent weeks.

“People who could have been saved are dying now,” said Gautam Menon, a professor of physics and biology at Ashoka University. Menon said there has been “serious undercount­ing” of deaths in many states.

India had thought the worst was over when cases ebbed in September. But infections began increasing in February, and on Wednesday, 362,757 new confirmed cases, a global record, pushed the country’s total past 17.9 million, second only to the U.S.

Local media have reported discrepanc­ies between official state tallies of the dead and actual numbers of bodies in crematoriu­ms and burial grounds. Many crematoriu­ms have spilled over into parking lots and other empty spaces as blazing funeral pyres light up the night sky.

India’s daily deaths, which have nearly tripled in the past three weeks, also reflect a shattered and underfunde­d health care system. Hospitals are scrambling for more oxygen, beds, ventilator­s and ambulances, while families marshal their own resources in the absence of a functionin­g system.

Jitender Singh Shunty runs an ambulance service in New Delhi transporti­ng COVID-19 victims’ bodies to a temporary crematoriu­m in a parking lot. He said those who die at home are generally unaccounte­d for in state tallies, while the number of bodies has increased from 10 to nearly 50 daily.

“When I go home, my clothes smell of burnt flesh. I have never seen so many dead bodies in my life,” Shunty said.

Burial grounds are also filling up fast. The capital’s largest Muslim graveyard is running out of space, said Mohammad Shameem, the head gravedigge­r, noting he was now burying nearly 40 bodies a day.

 ?? AP PHOTO/AJIT SOLANKI ?? Relatives of a patient who died of COVID-19 mourn Tuesday outside a government hospital in Ahmedabad, India.
AP PHOTO/AJIT SOLANKI Relatives of a patient who died of COVID-19 mourn Tuesday outside a government hospital in Ahmedabad, India.

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