Oman Daily Observer

Covid-19 ravages rural India

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India’s coronaviru­s death toll crossed a quarter million on Wednesday in the deadliest 24 hours since the pandemic began, as the disease rampaged through the countrysid­e, overloadin­g a fragile rural healthcare system.

Boosted by highly infectious variants, the second wave erupted in February to inundate hospitals and medical staff, as well as crematoriu­ms and mortuaries. Experts are still unable to say with certainty when the figures will peak.

Deaths swelled by a record 4,205 while infections rose 348,421 in the 24 hours to Wednesday, carrying the tally past 23 million, health ministry data showed. Experts believe the actual numbers could be five to 10 times higher, however.

Funeral pyres have blazed in city parking lots, and scores of bodies have washed up on the banks of the holy river Ganges, having been immersed by relatives whose villages were stripped bare of the wood needed for cremations.

Lacking beds, drugs and medical oxygen, many hospitals in the world’s second-most populous nation have been forced to turn away droves of sufferers, while tales of desperate relatives searching for someone to treat dying loved ones have become sickeningl­y commonplac­e.

Many victims die without a doctor on hand to issue a death certificat­e, and even when a doctor is available, Covid-19 is not specified as the cause of death unless the deceased was tested for the disease, which few have been. Although the infection curve may be showing early signs of flattening, new cases are likely to fall off slowly, according to virologist Shahid Jameel.

“We seem to be plateauing around 400,000 cases a day,” the Indian Express newspaper quoted him as saying. “It is still too early to say whether we have reached the peak.”

India, with a population of 1.4 billion, accounts for half of Covid-19 cases and 30pc of deaths worldwide, the World Health Organizati­on said in its latest weekly report.

The full impact of the B.1.617 variant found in India, which the WHO has designated as being of global concern, is not yet clear, it added.

 ?? — AFP ?? Employees refill cylinders with medical oxygen at a private refill centre in New Delhi on Wednesday.
— AFP Employees refill cylinders with medical oxygen at a private refill centre in New Delhi on Wednesday.

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