Awaiting last rites, bodies piled on each other at mortuaries
› Wearing PPE suits, we stand in the sun outside the crematorium only to be told in the evening that they cannot accept the bodies LOK NAYAK HOSPITAL OFFICIAL
NEW DELHI: Inside the Covid-19 mortuary of the Lok Nayak Hospital in Delhi, there are 108 bodies. All 80 storage racks are full and there are 28 bodies on the floor, piled on top of each other, officials at the mortuary said.
Lok Nayak Hospital is the largest dedicated Covid-19 hospital in the city, and its mortuary is the repository of bodies of those who died of the coronavirus disease or are suspected to have died of it.
On Tuesday, eight bodies were returned from the Nigambodh Ghat CNG crematorium because the facility was in no position to accept more bodies as only two of its six furnaces were working.
As the number of Covid-19 cases and deaths toll mount in the Capital, the hospital’s employees are overwhelmed.
“We are yet to cremate the bodies of those who died five days ago,” a hospital official said, describing the scene in the mortuary. “The backlog of such cases is increasing every day. Wearing PPE suits, we stand in the sun in this heat outside the crematorium only to be told in the evening that they cannot accept the bodies. Today there are 28 bodies on the floor lying next to each other or piled on top of each other. Last week, there were 34 .”
The backlog in disposal of bodies has been caused by non-functioning furnaces at the crematorium, said Dr Suresh Kumar, director of the hospital.
North Delhi Municipal Corporation’s deputy commissioner Ira Singhal said it has now received orders to cremate bodies using wood to tackle the problem.
NEW DELHI: Inside the Covid-19 mortuary of the Lok Nayak Hospital, there are 108 bodies. All 80 storage racks are full and there are 28 bodies on the floor, piled on top of each other, officials at the mortuary said.
On Tuesday, eight bodies were returned from the Nigambodh Ghat CNG crematorium because the facility was in no position to accept more bodies for disposal. Only two of its six furnaces were working.
Lok Nayak Hospital is the largest dedicated Covid-19 hospital in the city, and its mortuary is the repository of bodies of those who died of the coronavirus disease or are suspected to have died of it. The bodies are wrapped in personal protection (PPE) kits and handled by employees wearing PPE suits. As many as 602 of the total 2,242 Covid-19 patients who are in hospital care across 16 hospitals in Delhi are admitted in the facility, which is not admitting any non-covid cases at this time.
As the number of Covid-19 cases and deaths toll mount in the capital, the hospital’s employees are overwhelmed. Delhi reported 792 coronavirus infections on Wednesday, taking the city’s tally to 15,257 since the first Covid-19 case was reported on March 2; 15 more deaths took the toll to 303.
A hospital official described the scene in the mortuary.
“We are yet to cremate the bodies of those who died five days ago,” the official said on condition of anonymity. “The backlog of such cases is increasing every day. Wearing PPE suits, we stand in this heat outside the crematorium only to be told in the evening that they cannot accept the bodies. Today there are 28 bodies on the floor lying next to each other or piled on top of each other. Last week, there were 34 .”
At the Nigambodh Ghat electric crematorium, three of the six CNG furnaces were working until Monday; one of them developed a snag the same night.
“We could not take the load and hence returned the bodies. On Tuesday, even after working extra hours, we only accepted 15 bodies,” an official at the crematorium said.
CAUGHT UNPREPARED
On Tuesday afternoon, when an HT team visited Nigambodh Ghat, workers were rebuilding the three damaged furnaces. Another group of workers was at work on the fourth. The workers said it would take at least two months to rebuild the three damaged chambers. The crematorium has received the bodies of at least 244 Covid-19 or suspected Covid-19 patients till date.
“We have fixed the third furnace and it is working now,” said Suman Gupta of the Nigambodh Ghat Sanchalan Samiti, the trust that manages the crematorium. “Nobody was prepared for the surge of bodies. Until the pandemic, we got only 4-5 cases a day. Last week, we finally managed to convince the government to give us the money to fix the three furnaces. Work is on.”
North Delhi Municipal Corporation has received ₹ 1.3 crore from Indraprastha Gas Limited (IGL) to repair the damaged Cngbased cremation furnaces at Nigambodh Ghat.
One official at the Nigambodh Ghat crematorium said that even an extension of the daily shift hasn’t helped.
“Before the pandemic, the crematorium operated between 9 am and 4 pm. Now it opens at 7 am and shuts at 10 pm. Even this is not helping. We are also helpless,” the official said.