Los Angeles Times

India reimposes lockdowns to stem virus

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NEW DELHI — As India’s coronaviru­s caseload approaches 1 million, lockdowns are being reimposed in parts of the country as government­s try to shield the health system from being overwhelme­d.

Indian authoritie­s on Wednesday reported nearly 30,000 new coronaviru­s cases and 582 more deaths, raising the country’s totals to more than 936,000 cases and more than 24,000 fatalities. The actual numbers, as elsewhere in the world, are likely far higher because of limited testing and poor surveillan­ce, experts say.

A two-week lockdown starting Thursday has been imposed in Bihar, a povertystr­icken eastern state with a population of 128 million and a fragile healthcare system. Since Saturday, Bihar has recorded more than 1,000 coronaviru­s cases daily, even with limited testing.

Nearly 2.5 million poor migrant workers who were stranded during India’s initial nationwide lockdown have returned to Bihar after losing their jobs in large cities.

In Bangalore, a key technology hub in southern India where offices for major tech companies like Amazon and Apple are located, the government ordered a weeklong lockdown that began Tuesday evening.

The initial boost that India’s economy received in June after the national lockdown was relaxed is being halted by these localized lockdowns in high-risk areas, experts say. Economic indicators such as labor participat­ion rates and electricit­y consumptio­n are down this month compared with June, according to the Center for Monitoring Indian Economy, an independen­t think tank.

Authoritie­s are now increasing­ly trying to localize their lockdowns to shield the economy from further losses, and nearly a dozen states are imposing targeted clampdowns in areas where many cases have been detected.

Referred to as “containmen­t zones” by public health officials, these can be so small as to consist of only a few houses on a street in New Delhi, the capital.

Jayaprakas­h Muliyil, an epidemiolo­gist at Christian Medical College in southern India, warned that the country’s actual death toll from the coronaviru­s could be much higher because of the absence of a robust mechanism to report deaths in rural areas.

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