The Zimbabwe Independent

India’s fury at ‘ grotesque’ IPL millionair­e cricketers amid Covid-19 pandemic

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INDIA has reacted with fury at the IPL’s “grotesque” decision to continue playing in Delhi, despite the city being ravaged by a horrific new wave of Covid-19, with deaths mounting and their healthcare system on the brink of collapse.

As hundreds scramble around the city desperatel­y searching for hospital beds and many turn to witch doctors in a bid to survive the pandemic, the likes of Jos Buttler and Indian stars Rohit Sharma and Jasprit Bumrah took to the field on ™ursday.

Rajasthan Royals against the Mumbai Indians is the latest IPL clash to take place at the Arun Jaitley Stadium in the middle of Delhi, with “tone-deaf” officials continuing to plough on with the season despite the pandemic.

Incredibly, the cricket venue being used is directly opposite Delhi’s largest Covid hospital — LNJP — which just days ago was reported to have just 2 hours of oxygen supply left and is forcing patients to share beds.

India’s Covid crisis shows no sign of slowing with 379,257 new cases and 3,645 new deaths in the last 24 hours, both record tolls, and Delhi is the epicentre of the virus in the country.

One editor, writing for Indian digital news service Scroll.in, labelled the IPL a “grotesque spectacle” this week, with cricketers continuing to live and work in their biosecure bubble away from the reality of Covid in the city.

Pressure is continuing to mount on the cricket authoritie­s to suspend the season, with many fans arguing that the stadium should be used in the Covid relief efforts rather than for sport.

™ursday’s match saw both Chris Morris and Sharma in action, two of the IPL’s biggest earners with the former on £1.6million a year and the latter earning £1.5m.

A senior official for ™e Board of Control for Cricket in India, though, has insisted that the IPL is providing much-needed relief during the country’s toughest times.

“It’s probably more important now to hold IPL, when there is so much negativity around,” the official said, as reported by e Guardian.

“We should not underestim­ate the power of sport to spread positivity. At least fans are absorbed in it at home. Otherwise many of them will step out without masks.

“™e league generates considerab­le money for the economy. It has to be seen from that context, too. How does stopping IPL help?”

Outside Delhi, meanwhile, Indians are turning to witch doctors who are branding them with hot irons in a vain attempt to cure Covid as the infection spreads from urban centres to rural villages where healthcare is often non-existent.

Dr Ashita Singh, head of medicine at Chinchpada Christian Hospital in a remote part of Maharashtr­a state which houses the infection epicenter of Mumbai, said she is seeing increasing numbers of patients arriving with branding marks given to them by witch doctors to drive out 'spirits' they believe cause the infection.

Others rely on herbal cures while some have fled their villages out of fear of demons which they believe are spreading the disease, which is helping the infection to spread further and faster.

India’s overall Covid death toll is now officially well over 200,000 — the world’s fourth highest after the US, Brazil and Mexico — but investigat­ions suggest the true death toll could be double that.

™is is due to the official figure only including those who die in hospitals — which are currently overwhelme­d, leaving patients to die at home or in the streets.

Cricket fans, meanwhile, have been left furious at the news that IPL players arriving into Delhi have separate check-in counters, and are being rushed through the airport to their bio-secure bubble.

On top of that, Scroll.in report that an ambulance is being held back from Covid-19 relief efforts to be on standby for IPL cricketers in case they suffer an injury and need treatment during a match.

In Delhi currently, it has been reported that one in three people being tested for coronaviru­s in the city are returning positive results, with hospitals overwhelme­d and patients left to die in the streets. — Daily Mail

 ??  ?? A number of top players, including Kane Richardson have quit the Indian Premier League.
A number of top players, including Kane Richardson have quit the Indian Premier League.

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