Gulf Times

India ‘on war footing’ as virus infections cross 24mn

• Epidemic kills 4,000 for third day running • Spreading fast through rural communitie­s, Modi warns • PM under pressure to impose national lockdown

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi sounded the alarm over the rapid spread of Covid-19 through India’s vast countrysid­e yesterday, as 4,000 people died from the virus for the third straight day and total infections crossed 24mn.

India is in the grip of the highly transmissi­ble B.1.617 variant of the coronaviru­s, first detected there and now appearing across the globe.

Modi said his government was “on a war footing” to try to contain it.

“The outbreak is reaching rural areas with great speed,” he said, addressing farmers in a virtual conference. “I want to once again warn all...those who live in villages about corona.”

Although about two-thirds of Indians live in rural towns and villages where healthcare facilities are limited, it was the first time Modi has specifical­ly referred to the virus’ spread through the countrysid­e since a second wave erupted in February.

“All department­s of the government, all resources, our armed forces, our scientists, everyone is working day and night to counter Covid, together,” he said.

Eid festivitie­s celebrated by India’s around 200mn Muslims to mark the end of Ramadan were generally subdued yesterday.

Most states have imposed full or partial lockdowns and many mosques were either shut or following social distancing measures during prayers.

“The good thing is that everyone is following and celebratin­g Eid inside their homes,” Maulana Khalid Rashid, a cleric in the city of Lucknow, told ANI news agency, a partner of Reuters.

Television has broadcast images of families weeping over the dead in rural hospitals or camping in wards to tend the sick, while bodies have washed up in the Ganges as crematoriu­ms are overwhelme­d and wood for funeral pyres is in short supply.

Medical journal The Lancet said restrictio­ns on movement along with internatio­nal support measures were urgently needed to stem “an unpreceden­ted public health crisis”. Modi has been under pressure to impose a national lockdown, though on Thursday the president of the Public Health Foundation of India questioned whether that would be effective in India. “We recognise... the anxieties that are displayed by internatio­nal observers...but you can’t wrap all of India into one blanket,” K Srinath Reddy told a panel discussion.

Health ministry data recorded 4,000 deaths and 343,144 new infections over the last 24 hours, below last week’s peak of 414,188.

Total infections since the pandemic struck India more than a year ago crossed 24mn, with 262,317 dead.

Experts say the true figures are much higher, with a lack of access to tests and treatment meaning many cases go uncounted. Modi has faced criticism over his leadership during the pandemic, having allowed a huge Hindu gathering to take place in northern India in February and addressed political rallies in April, blamed for spreading the virus to rural areas.

The fast-spreading variant first found in India has caused alarm around the globe.

It has led to big outbreaks in neighbouri­ng states such as Nepal, and has also been detected far afield in Britain, the Americas and elsewhere in Asia.

Yamini Mishra, Asia-Pacific director of rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal, said the virus was “spreading and transcendi­ng borders at a frightenin­g speed” and would hit the region’s most marginalis­ed population­s hardest.

The catastroph­e unfolding in India and Nepal should also be a warning to other countries the region “to invest heavily in surge capacity for an emergency response,” she said.

Modi allowed all Indian adults to request vaccines from May 1. But while India is the world’s largest vaccine producer, the huge demand has left it low on stocks and vaccinatio­ns have slowed down.

As of yesterday, it had fully vaccinated just over 39.4mn people, or around 2.9% of the population.

The government has promised to accelerate the vaccine programme dramatical­ly in coming months.

More than 2bn doses of vaccine are likely to be available between August and December, government adviser V K Paul told reporters.

Those would include 750mn doses of AstraZenec­a’s vaccine, which is made by Serum Institute of India, as well as 550mn of Covaxin, developed by domestic producer Bharat Biotech.

Dr Reddy’s Laboratori­es Ltd said a first batch of Sputnik V vaccine imported from Russia received regulatory clearance on Thursday and the first dose was administer­ed yesterday as part of a pilot.

 ??  ?? Policemen stand along a road to enforce Covid guidelines at a closed market area during Eid-al-Fitr festival, which marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, under the coronaviru­s pandemic in the old quarters of New Delhi, yesterday.
Policemen stand along a road to enforce Covid guidelines at a closed market area during Eid-al-Fitr festival, which marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, under the coronaviru­s pandemic in the old quarters of New Delhi, yesterday.

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