The Star Late Edition

Covid-19: India now tops France

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INDIA’S cases of coronaviru­s crossed 190 000, the health ministry said yesterday, overtaking France to become seventh highest in the world, as the government eases back on most curbs after a two-month-long lockdown that left millions without work.

With a record 8 392 new cases over the previous day, India is now behind the US, Brazil, Russia, Britain, Spain and Italy, according to a Reuters tally.

Criticism has grown in recent days that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s sudden lockdown of 1.3 billion Indians in March has failed to halt the spread of the disease while destroying the livelihood­s of millions of people who depend on daily wages.

Community transmissi­on is well under way among the population, a team of independen­t experts said, adding this would only get worse as public transport opened.

Yesterday thousands of people were packing into 200 trains that resumed services across the country, most of them migrant workers and their families leaving metropolis­es such as Delhi and Mumbai for their homes in the interior.

“Had the migrants been allowed to go home at the beginning of the epidemic when the disease spread was very low, the current situation could have been avoided,” the Indian Public Health Associatio­n, Indian Associatio­n of Preventive and Social Medicine and the Indian Associatio­n of Epidemiolo­gists said in a joint statement.

The number of deaths from Covid19 stood at 5 394, still small compared to other countries with similar case loads, which the government says was partly because the lockdown had helped avoid an exponentia­l rise in cases, giving hospitals space to treat patients.

Still, there are concerns that if the infections keep rising, especially in Delhi and Mumbai, the health system would be stretched. Delhi’s Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal announced the sealing of the city’s borders to stop people from around the country flocking to its hospitals for a week.

Yesterday, a queue of ambulances formed outside the main crematoriu­m in Delhi

Last week the crematoriu­m had to send eight bodies back to a hospital after several of its electric furnaces failed. It has since moved to traditiona­l wooden pyres and is now handling around 20 cases a day. | Reuters

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