The Manila Times

India air travel resumes May 25

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NEW DELHI: Domestic air travel would resume in India on May 25 after a two-month shutdown imposed to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19), the aviation minister said, in a further easing of national lockdown restrictio­ns.

The government halted all domestic flights — which ferried 144 million passengers, as well as cargo across the vast country last year — on March 25, days after suspending internatio­nal flights.

“All airports and air carriers are being informed to be ready for operations from 25th May,” Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Twitter.

No indication was given when internatio­nal travel would resume. A limited number of interstate Indian trains — on a network which normally carries over 20 million passengers a day — resumed a week ago.

An additional 200 passenger services — 100 pairs of trains operating to and from major and some smaller cities — would resume from June 1, Indian Railways said late Wednesday, adding that online bookings would start from Thursday.

The announceme­nt comes the same day as the country of 1.3 billion people reported its biggest daily jump in coronaviru­s infections, with 5,611 new cases recorded in 24 hours.

It took the total to 106,750, with financial capital Mumbai the worst-hit city, according to government figures.

More than 3,300 people have died — though unofficial estimates are higher — and Mumbai accounts for almost a quarter of fatalities. Other major cities such as New Delhi and Ahmedabad are also badly affected.

Mumbai authoritie­s are looking to requisitio­n thousands of private hospital beds, with state- run care facilities overwhelme­d in the city of 20 million people.

“A plan is under considerat­ion to take over 80 percent of beds in private hospitals for non-Covid cases,” Mumbai city spokesman Vijay Khabale-Patil told Agence France-Presse.

With some virus patients reportedly sleeping on the streets outside hospitals waiting for beds to become free, authoritie­s say they need to boost the 5,000 available for critically ill patients.

Mumbai has already had to build makeshift field hospitals and turned several landmarks into quarantine facilities, including a 19th-century horse-racing venue, a sports stadium that was used to host National Basketball Associatio­n games last year and a planetariu­m.

There are fears the start of the monsoon next month and the spread of diseases like dengue fever will add to the burden. The capital New Delhi, also home to 20 million people, has likewise been badly hit.

It now has more than 10,000 cases and while authoritie­s have confirmed only 160 coronaviru­s deaths, media reports — citing cemetery records — q say there have been almost triple that number at least.

Gujarat state’s largest city, Ahmedabad, has meanwhile recorded 8,945 cases with nearly 600 deaths.

Experts predict the epidemic will worsen in the major cities over the next month and infections are only expected to peak in June or July.

Despite the crisis in cities, the Indian government has insisted it is keeping the spread under control in the world’s second-most populous nation.

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