Hindustan Times (Noida)

Covid spike continues

- Anonna Dutt letters@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: India’s new Covid-19 curve continued to gradually inch upwards, driven largely by a resurgence of daily infections in Maharashtr­a, which for the second day in a row reported most infections in the country ahead of even Kerala where the first wave continues unabated.

MAHARASHTR­A, KERALA WERE RESPONSIBL­E FOR 75% OF 13,632 NEW CASES RECORDED ON FRIDAY

NEW DELHI: India’s new Covid-19 curve continued to gradually inch upwards, driven largely by a resurgence of daily infections in Maharashtr­a, which for the second day in a row reported most infections in the country ahead of even Kerala where the first wave continues unabated.

The seven-day average of new cases across the country has now gone up seven of the last eight days, highlighti­ng the potential risk of a surge in cases amid fears of mutant strains gaining ground. HT reported on Friday that the Covid trajectory was rising again in four regions in the country – Maharashtr­a, Punjab, Haryana and Jammu & Kashmir – after the end of the first wave of the pandemic, an analysis by HT shows. Maharashtr­a and Kerala, meanwhile, were responsibl­e for 75% of the 13,632 new cases recorded across the country on Friday.

The increase in cases is being reported even as restrictio­ns on several economic and social activities have eased across the country, and people and government­s appear to be getting complacent, with almost no mask discipline, experts warned.

This week, Maharashtr­a, India’s worst-hit state, has seen an increase of 73% in the number infections compared to the week before – the seven-day average of cases in the state currently stands at 4,437, against 2,564, last week. Kerala, meanwhile, continues to see an average of over 4,500 cases each day this week. It is the increase in the number of cases in Maharashtr­a has the experts worried.

“There is a need to study the new infections that are being reported from Maharashtr­a, where a high proportion of people are likely to have been exposed already. We need to see whether the infections are happening in people who haven’t had it earlier or are these re-infections,” said Dr T Jacob John, former head of the department of virology at Christian Medical College-vellore.

He said there was a need for increased surveillan­ce to see whether the new variants of the virus have taken root. “If the new variant of the virus is infecting the people but the antibodies from a previous infection still protects a significan­t number of people, then the increase would just be a blip... If not, then we are in for trouble,” he said.

GUWAHATI: The banned United Liberation Front of Asom-independen­t (ULFA-I) on Friday threatened action against two oil company executives who were abducted from Arunachal Pradesh in December.

In a statement released on Friday, the outfit said that since the deadline for release of the employees had ended and talks with the company have failed, ‘final action’ on the two executives will be taken in a phased manner next week.

Pranab Kumar Gogoi, a drilling superinten­dent from Assam, and Ram Kumar, a radio operator from Bihar, employed with Quippo Oil and Gas Infrastruc­ture Limited, a Delhi-based company, were abducted from the company’s drilling location in Arunachal Pradesh’s Changlang district on December 21.

“As per our earlier decision, final action would be taken against the two Quippo officials in a phased manner next week,” the statement in Assamese signed by K Rumel Asom, member of the outfit’s publicity wing, read.

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