Daily Dispatch

India's Covid-19 cases dip from peak as calls for shutdown mount

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Calls grew for India to impose a nationwide lockdown as new coronaviru­s cases and deaths held close to record highs on Monday, increasing pressure on the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The 366,161 new infections and 3,754 deaths reported by the health ministry were off a little from recent peaks, taking India’s tally to 22.66 million with 246,116 deaths.

As many hospitals grapple with an acute shortage of oxygen and beds while morgues and crematoriu­ms overflow, experts have said India’s actual figures could be far higher than reported.

Sunday’s 1.47 million tests for Covid-19 were this month’s lowest yet, data from the staterun Indian Council of Medical Research showed.

The figure compared with a daily average of 1.7 million for the first eight days of May.

The number of positive results from the tests was not immediatel­y clear, however.

Many states over the last month have imposed strict lockdowns while others have placed curbs on movement and shut cinemas, restaurant­s, pubs and shopping malls.

But pressure is mounting on Modi to announce a nationwide lockdown as he did during the first wave of infections last year.

He is battling criticism for allowing huge gatherings at a religious festival and holding large election rallies during the past two months even as cases surged.

“A failure of governance of epic and historic proportion­s,” tweeted Vipin Narang, a political science professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in the US.

On Sunday, top White House coronaviru­s adviser Dr Anthony Fauci said he had advised Indian authoritie­s that they needed to shut down.

“You’ve got to shut down,” Fauci said.

“I believe several of the Indian states have already done that, but you need to break the chain of transmissi­on.

“And one of the ways to do that is to shut down.”

The Indian Medical Associatio­n has also called for a “complete, well-planned, pre-announced” lockdown.

New Delhi, the capital, entered a fourth week of lockdown, with tougher curbs such as shutdown of the suburban rail network, even as residents scramble for scarce hospital beds and oxygen supplies.

“This is not the time to be lenient,” Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said.

“This phase is so tough, this wave is so dangerous, so many people are dying ... the priority at this hour is to save lives,” he said in a televised address.

Late on Sunday, the northern state of Uttarakhan­d said it would impose a curfew from Tuesday until May 18, just days after mass religious gatherings held in the state became virus supersprea­ding events.

Shops selling fruits, vegetables and dairy items will stay open for some hours in the morning but malls, gyms, theatres, bars and liquor shops are among the enterprise­s that will be shut, the government said.

Organisers of the popular and lucrative Indian Premier League cricket tournament conceded the remaining games would have to be played overseas after they suspended the contest over the virus this month.

Global support, in the form of oxygen cylinders and concentrat­ors, ventilator­s and other medical gear, has poured in.

On Monday, US company Eli Lilly & Co said it had signed licensing deals with Indian drugmakers to make and sell its arthritis drug baricitini­b for the treatment of Covid-19 patients.

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