Miami Herald

Bodies pile up as virus surge overwhelms India

- BY DHWANI PANDYA, UPMANYU TRIVEDI AND SUDHI RANJAN SEN

India’s crematoriu­ms and burial grounds are working overtime to cope with the surging number of deaths from the country’s escalating coronaviru­s outbreak.

India is now the world’s second worst-hit nation, having overtaken Brazil once again Monday with a sharp jump up in daily new infections over the last 10 days for a grand total of nearly 13.7 million cases. On Tuesday the country reported 161,736 new cases and 879 deaths — more than four times the daily average in January.

Local news outlets have been filled with grim reports of melting furnaces at crematoriu­ms running nonstop, bodies piling up and smoke from continuous­ly burning flesh creating another health risk for locals. Workers at six crematoriu­ms across the country confirmed the scenes in phone interviews, saying they’ve seen COVID-19 deaths climbing.

“Earlier 15 to 20 bodies were coming in a day and now around 80 to 100 dead bodies are coming daily,” said Kamlesh Sailor, the president of a trust operating a crematoriu­m in Surat, a city in the industry-heavy western state of Gujarat. Even after the crematoriu­m doubled capacity when India’s first virus wave struck last year and started operating 24 hours a day, families still need to wait at least two to three hours to cremate the bodies of their relatives, he added.

“We can’t afford to have long queues of people at the crematoriu­m, as that again increases the risk of spreading infection,” Sailor said. “The situation is likely to worsen going ahead as hospitals across the city are filled to capacity.”

The deluge of infections and deaths highlight just how unprepared Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion has been to deal with the latest wave of the epidemic. In the past weeks large crowds have gathered for elections rallies in five states, festivals, and religious pilgrimage­s — indicating things could get even worse for the country and its crematoriu­ms.

Even with the rise in deaths, experts say India is still underrepor­ting fatalities. Death registrati­on

data was patchy even before the virus struck, with the vast majority — especially in rural villages — taking place at home and going undocument­ed. For others that get reported the cause of death listed is often anodyne — old age or heart attack. Experts believe that only between 20%-30% of all deaths in India are properly medically certified.

Media footage of queues at hospitals, critical medicine shortages, and an exodus of migrant workers heading to rural villages in fear of another lockdown has been reminiscen­t of the strict shutdown roughly a year ago that gave rise to one of the worst humanitari­an crises the region has seen in decades.

“There was a lull period in January and February with a much lower number of COVID deaths, but now in the last three weeks it is overflowin­g,” said Namrata Singh, chief executive officer at Antim Yatra, a private funeral service provider in Delhi and Mumbai.

 ?? RAJANISH KAKADE AP ?? The body of a person who died of COVID-19 is brought for cremation in Palghar, near Mumbai, India, on Tuesday.
RAJANISH KAKADE AP The body of a person who died of COVID-19 is brought for cremation in Palghar, near Mumbai, India, on Tuesday.

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