Bangkok Post

Lockdown empties Delhi’s streets

-

>>NEW DELHI: New Delhi led major cities across India into a weekend lockdown yesterday as the country confronts a fierce new coronaviru­s wave, with more than 230,000 fresh daily cases and families clamouring for drugs and hospital beds.

And hopes that South Asia might have beaten the pandemic have been dashed with India seeing over two million new cases this month alone and Bangladesh and Pakistan also imposing shutdowns.

India added another record 234,000 cases yesterday to pass 14.5 million overall and 1,341 deaths took its pandemic total to 175,649 deaths.

The per-capita rates remain low by internatio­nal comparison, but the speed at which cases are rising led the internatio­nal Red Cross to call the South Asian surge “truly frightenin­g”.

India now has three times the daily cases of the United States, the world’s worst-hit country.

After a national lockdown a year ago led to an economic slump, the Indian government is desperate to avoid a second stoppage. But Delhi joined Mumbai in ordering all but essential services to close.

Landmarks such as the historic Red Fort where tens of thousands of people would normally gather were deserted. “Not one person has turned up,” said security guard Anil Dayan. Police checked many of the cars that strayed onto the streets.

The city of more than 20 million people now has the most daily cases in India and restaurant­s, malls and gyms were all closed. Weddings can go ahead with guests limited to 50 people, while only 20 can attend funerals.

“Don’t panic. All essential services will be available through the weekend,” Delhi’s chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said.

Maharashtr­a, which includes Mumbai, Gujarat and IT hub Bangalore’s home state Karnataka have also imposed restrictio­ns on movement.

Uttar Pradesh state, home to some 240 million people, has ordered a oneday lockdown today.

Similarly, the northern state of Uttarakhan­d has restricted gatherings to 200 people — but exempted the huge Hindu Kumbh Mela festival. After hundreds of thousands of ascetics and devout Hindus gathered for several days along the banks of the Ganges for a religious festival Kumbh Mela,

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi yesterday called for restraint, saying on Twitter the festival should now be kept “symbolic”.

Hospitals are running short of oxygen and widely prescribed medicines such as Remdesivir and Fabiflu, prompting desperate people to pay exorbitant black market rates. Social media is full of horror stories of desperate calls to help a loved one needing hospital treatment

for Covid-19 or other complaints.

“I lost a cousin on Saturday. He was not admitted after a stroke. Tried 4 hospitals,” read one message on a Delhi neighbourh­ood WhatsApp group this week.

India’s drive to vaccinate its 1.3 billion people has also hit obstacles, with just 117 million shots administer­ed so far and stocks running low, according to some local authoritie­s.

“This is a wake-up call to the world. Vaccines must be available to everyone, everywhere, rich and poor to overcome this terrible pandemic,” said Udaya Regmi from the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), describing conditions in South Asia as “truly frightenin­g”.

“We must redouble our efforts to contain this disease as too many lives are at stake,” Mr Regmi added.

 ??  ?? LACKING IN LIFE: A man sits besides shops with the shutters closed as a lockdown is in effect to curb the spread of Covid-19 in New Delhi yesterday.
LACKING IN LIFE: A man sits besides shops with the shutters closed as a lockdown is in effect to curb the spread of Covid-19 in New Delhi yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand