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Coronavirus in India

Indian man dies after five hospitals refuse treatment

After being turned away from five hospitals in India's capital, Delhi, a Covid-19 positive man travelled 800km (497 miles) via train to Bhopal city for treatment over the weekend.

But he died hours after being admitted to a hospital in Bhopal on Sunday, reports the Times of India newspaper.

Authorities are trying to trace passengers who were on the train with the man. Officials are also concerned about how the man, who reportedly had a high fever, was able to board the train in Delhi - as authorities are meant to screen all passengers for temperature.

His 18-year-old son said his mother had a "severe asthmatic attack" on Sunday when she found out that her husband had died.

“I sent tweets and e-mails to the Delhi chief minister and health minister and even to the prime minister's office but in the end, we lost," his son said.

Other residents in the city have complained about being turned away from hospitals. And the Delhi government's smartphone app to track available hospital beds has added to the confusion.

The app showed vacancies at several city hospitals - which then told news channel NDTV they actually did not have any space for new patients.
 
Dharavi, India's biggest slum, has seen a decline in Covid-19 cases this week.

The slum is home to more than half-a-million people, who are spread over 2.5 sq km - which is less than a square mile.

Due to its cramped geography and large population, Dharavi - which has more nearly 2,000 cases - was seen as a hotspot within Mumbai.

On Monday, just 12 new infections were reported and local authorities say they've seen a drop in cases. According to some reports, the slum was seeing around 50 cases every other day in the last two weeks of May.

There have also been no deaths in the past week, officials told the Hindustan Times newspaper.

The slum was the inspiration for the Oscar-winning Slumdog Millionaire film and city planners from all over the world have studied its throbbing economy and society.

Mumbai continues to be the worst-affected city in India, with cases breaching the 50,000 mark in the past 24 hours.
 
Shooting for films and TV will be allowed in the southern state of Telangana, as India begins to exit its lockdown this week.

The state's chief minister said on Monday that shoots can resume as long as guidelines on limited staff and other social distancing measures are followed. Cinemas will remain closed, K Chandrashekhar Rao added.

Several prominent actors from the state met Rao recently and requested him to resume shooting for films and television, local media reported.

The state is home to Tollywood, one of India's biggest regional film industries, which routinely produces blockbuster hits that rival Bollywood's most popular films.

Experts say that India's thriving film industry could take at least two years to financially recover from the pandemic, having lost more than $100m in box office revenues due to the lockdown, according to some estimates.
 
Marriage ceremonies across India have been put on hold due to the coronavirus lockdown. But some couples chose to swap their big fat weddings for small intimate affairs. So, could that be the new normal? The BBC's Geeta Pandey in Delhi reports.

Nitin Arora and Chaitali Puri met in college six years ago and began dating a year later.

When they set a date for their wedding in early May, it was meant to be a lavish affair.

The celebrations began with an engagement party in March. Attended by 170 people, it was held on the lawns of a posh club in the city of Chandigarh. The venue was decorated with white and green flowers, and golden fairy lights twinkled everywhere.

"It was a typical Punjabi function," says Chaitali, "there was lots of booze, lots of food, crazy loud music. And we danced the whole night. We stopped only when it was time for the DJ to go."

For their wedding scheduled for 2 May, a sprawling resort was booked on the outskirts of the city for the three-day celebrations - there was meant to be a pre-wedding cocktail party, a music and dance event, and several other rituals.

The actual wedding, which involves the bride and the groom walking around a sacred fire seven times, was due to take place on top of a hill within the resort with the setting sun providing the perfect backdrop for photos.

The guest list had 450 names, the 10-page food menu had four different styles of cuisines, and a DJ had been booked for the after party.

The bride's baby pink silk skirt, blouse and scarf and the groom's outfit were being custom made while orders for jewellery had been placed.

And then came the lockdown - on 24 March, India announced a complete shutdown of the country to halt the spread of the coronavirus.

The couple waited, hoping that the restrictions would be eased and they would be able to have their perfect wedding.

But with no sign of the lockdown being lifted, on 15 April, they decided to postpone the wedding to November.

But, as they say, destiny has its own plans.

"At noon on 1 May, my dad got a call from a friend who said he could help arrange a curfew pass for us to travel from Chandigarh to Delhi if I still wanted to marry Chaitali on 2 May," Nitin told me on the phone from Chandigarh.

It was a nail-biting few hours - after their initial request was turned down, the pass finally came through at 5:30pm.

"They said the wedding is on," says Chaitali. "We had to then find a priest to conduct the ceremony. Our local priest first said yes, then he said no because his children were worried about him catching the virus. We finally found another priest at 7:30pm."

At 9:30am the next day, Nitin reached Delhi with his parents and his brother. The priest arrived at 10:30 and the wedding began at 11.

"My living room became the wedding venue, I wore my mum's magenta sari and my grandmother's jewellery, the photographs were taken by Nitin's brother, and we had a potluck lunch," laughs Chaitali.

The ceremony was attended by 16 people, including the priest. A Zoom link was created to let friends and relatives watch from across India.

Although Nitin is not happy that his extended family of cousins, aunts and uncles missed his wedding and is planning a "grand reception" later in the year if the Covid-19 threat abates, Chaitali says "we thank our stars that it happened".

Three weeks later, similar sentiments were being expressed by newly-weds Sukanya Venkataraman and Shanthu Jacob Paul as they exchanged wedding rings in a dusty parking lot in the southern city of Bangalore.

Minutes earlier, they had been married at the Marriage Registrar's office with the bride's mother and the groom's uncle and aunt as witnesses.

The paperwork was always a part of the plan - Sukanya is a Hindu and Shanthu a Christian and inter-religious marriages have to be registered - but it was not meant to be the only event.

"Shanthu wanted a beach wedding in Chennai where his parents live. There were plans for lavish receptions in Chennai (formerly Madras) and Bangalore. In our heads, we were expecting 200 guests," Sukanya told me over the phone from Bangalore.

"I had always wanted to dress up as a bride, I wanted to wear a crimson silk sari, do up my hair and have elaborate henna designs on my hands."

In the end, she did her own henna patterns and wore a white and gold sari Shanthu had gifted her two years back.

The groom's uncle took the photographs, his aunt set up a Zoom link and did a running commentary as friends and relatives tuned in from Scotland, Norway, UAE and the US.

"I am pretty content. I like the idea of a much more personal, intimate wedding, but my husband has plenty of regrets, he's got a laundry list," says Sukanya, laughing.

Adds Shanthu, "It was an important day of our life. I had an idea what I wanted it to be. I wanted a month of music and dance rehearsals, a gala celebration, I wanted my family and friends to be there to witness our big day."

He hasn't given up on a big celebration though.

"Once it's safe and the threat of coronavirus has receded, we will do receptions in Chennai and Bangalore. We'll go to Paris for our honeymoon. Since we missed out on the beach wedding, we'll go for a holiday to Mauritius or Maldives," he says.

The May weddings have been exceptions, says Vandana Mohan, one of India's best-known wedding planners who organised Bollywood superstars Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh's wedding at Lake Como in Italy.

"I have advised all my clients to move their weddings scheduled for April and May to next year and they have all agreed to wait it out.

Ms Mohan says she's been getting a lot of inquiries for later in the year, but she's not encouraging couples to plan anything before mid-October because most people want to invite 250 to 300 people, but current rules allow only 50 people to attend a wedding.

"A wedding is a time of great celebration, a time of great joy, it's the coming together not just of two people but also of families and communities," she says, adding that she can't "imagine a time in India when you'll have a wedding and you won't involve the community".

Nupur Mehta, former editor of a bridal magazine, says "everyone is waiting for the Covid-19 vaccine".

The wedding industry, she says, is one of the biggest in the country - more than 10 million marriages take place every year. Accounting and research firm KPMG estimates the wedding market to be more than $50bn.

The lockdown has hit the clothing industry and jewellery makers hard but, Ms Mehta says it will recover quickly because weddings are an integral part of Indian culture where - unlike in the West - living together and civil partnerships are rare.

"It's one of the biggest events in most people's lives. We wait all our lifetime for the wedding," Ms Mehta says. "For some time people will have smaller weddings with fewer guests, but in the long run, the big fat wedding will be back in vogue."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52892967
 
Infections rise rapidly in India's capital

Delhi added around 1,000 new infections on Monday, taking the total in the Indian capital to nearly 30,000.

Its highest daily spike - more than 1,500 - was recorded earlier this month, but its upward trajectory has experts worried as the city eases out of lockdown this week. Delhi has also reported more than 800 deaths.

A five-member expert committee of top doctors told reporters that Delhi could be looking at 100,000 Covid-19 cases by the end of June if current trends continue. Reports suggesting that patients are already being turned away from hospitals in the city have only added to concerns about how hospitals will cope.

The western city of Mumbai, India's financial capital, is still the worst-hit in the country with more than 50,000 cases. After a strict lockdown was imposed in the early stages of the pandemic, the virus is now on the rise in India as restrictions ease. There are more than 250,000 total cases and 7,466 deaths.
 
There could soon be half a million cases of coronavirus in Delhi, the city’s authorities have warned, saying they expect transmission to increase almost 20-fold in the coming weeks.

Even as India eases its coronavirus lockdown, which has dealt a devastating economic blow, the virus is still spreading fast across the world’s second-most populous nation, with nearly 270,000 reported infections - the fifth-highest caseload in the world.

It has reported almost 10,000 new infections in the past 24 hours with crowded megacities like Mumbai and Delhi, the capital, the worst hit.

Manish Sisodia, Delhi’s deputy chief minister, said after a crisis meeting that authorities expected infections to soar to 550,000 by the end of July, up from almost 30,000 at present.

“There will be 44,000 cases by June 15, 100,000 by June 30, 225,000 by July 15, and we’ll need to prepare necessary infrastructure accordingly,” Sisodia was quoted as saying by the French news agency AFP.

He said the city of around 20 million people, where hospitals are already stretched and anecdotal evidence suggests crematoriums are struggling, needed 80,000 hospital beds.

Delhi’s health minister last week said that it had around 9,000 beds available for coronavirus patients.
 
Thankfully, Kejriwal was detected Covid negative.

However it was cringe worthy to see him being hailed as Covid frontline warrior by AAP Netas.

Almost as bad as sanghis in creating personality cult around their leader.
 
India's financial capital, Mumbai, has recorded 51,000 cases of Covid-19 since the outbreak began - taking it past the total in Wuhan, where the virus emerged.

The news comes amid a surge of infections in India, which has 266,598 confirmed cases.

Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, has 90,000 of them.

Infections are also spiking in the capital Delhi, where authorities have said they expect to see more than half a million cases by the end of July.

The surge coincides with India's decision to relax restrictions after three months of a stringent lockdown that was intended to curb the spread of the virus.

Experts say that there was no other option but to lift the lockdown, which exacted a massive economic cost on the country.
 
India court orders states to send back stranded workers

India's Supreme Court has ordered all states to send back migrant workers stranded in cities due to the coronavirus lockdown within the next 15 days.

Hundreds of thousands of migrant workers have been seen walking long distances on roads to return home to their villages, after industries were shut and jobs cut.

With little access to food and water - and under the scorching heat - some died along the way. The scenes caused outrage in India and spurred fears of a large-scale humanitarian crisis.

The government started running special trains for migrants in May and at the last hearing in the court, it said more than 4,000 trains had transported around 570,000 people home so far.
 
Our home turned into a hospital overnight'

Mukul Garg wasn’t too worried when his 57-year-old uncle developed a fever on 24 April. Then, within 48 hours, two others in his family of 17 also became ill.

The symptoms trickled in as expected - temperatures spiked and voices grew hoarse with coughing.

Garg initially chalked it up to seasonal flu, unwilling to admit it could be coronavirus.

“Five or six people often fall sick together in this house, let’s not panic,” he told himself.

Over the next few days, five more people in the house showed Covid-19 symptoms. And the pit in his stomach grew.

Soon, the Garg family would become its own coronavirus cluster as 11 of its 17 members tested positive.

“We met nobody from the outside and no-one entered our house. But even then the coronavirus entered our home, and infected one member after the other."
 
Delhi virus cases could reach 500,000

The number of cases in India's capital of Delhi could climb to more than half a million by the end of July, the city's deputy chief minister has warned.

If this happens, Delhi will need at least 80,000 hospital beds, said Manish Sisodia - a huge leap from its current capacity of nearly 9,000 beds.

It comes amid reports of residents complaining about being turned away at hospitals and tales emerged of people struggling to get a hospital bed.

On Tuesday, the government announced that it would double the number of beds in 22 private hospitals.

Delhi currently has more than 30,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19.

The warning comes as India has taken steps to further relax its stringent lockdown - malls, restaurants, temples and offices opened earlier this week. The country has reported more than 250,000 infections and 7,471 deaths.
 
India reports another 10,000 new infections

India has reported a record of nearly 10,000 new coronavirus cases with health services in the worst-hit cities of Mumbai, New Delhi and Chennai swamped by the rising infections.

According to AP, India’s tally has reached 286,579 confirmed cases, the fifth highest in the world, with 8,102 deaths, including 357 in the last 24 hours.

The spike comes as the government moved ahead with the reopening of restaurants, shopping malls and places of worship in most of India after a lockdown of more than two months. Subways, hotels and schools remain closed.

The actual infection numbers are thought to be higher because of limited testing.
 
India sees biggest one-day jump in cases

India reported a record of 9,996 new coronavirus cases over the past 24 hours with health services in the worst-hit cities of Mumbai, New Delhi and Chennai getting swamped by the rising infections.

The Health Ministry reported an increase of 357 deaths. India’s tally of positive cases has reached 286,579 so far, the fifth highest in the world, and 8,102 deaths.

Most Indian states have lifted lockdown restrictions, with train services partially restored and shops and manufacturing reopened. Subways, hotels and schools remain shuttered nationwide.
 
India reported nearly 10,000 new coronavirus cases on Thursday, with health services in the worst-hit cities of Mumbai, New Delhi and Chennai swamped by the rising infections, according to the Associated Press.

India’s tally has reached 286,579 confirmed cases, the fifth highest in the world, with 8,102 deaths, including 357 in the last 24 hours.

The spike comes as the government moved ahead with the reopening of restaurants, shopping malls and places of worship in most of India after lockdown of more than two months. Subways, hotels and schools remain closed.

The actual infection numbers are thought to be higher because of limited testing.

French news agency AFP visited the Max Smart Super Speciality hospital in New Delhi, one of India’s top private hospitals, where every bed was reportedly occupied by coronavirus patients, and fear was building that worse is to come.

“We don’t know when this is going to peak,” Dr Deven Juneja told AFP during a pause from his rounds. “All of us are hoping for the best, but we are mentally and physically prepared for the worst.”

Juneja said the surge had started to be felt over the past few days, with an increase in the number of people seeking medical help.

“That has definitely increased the load on us. We want to get our patients well as soon as possible and try to create more beds for our patients,” he said.
 
Post-lockdown party infects 180 in India
By Pravin Mudholkar, for BBC Marathi, from Nagpur

Some 180 people have been infected with the virus after a gathering celebrating the end of lockdown measures in the central Indian city of Nagpur.

Municipal Commissioner Tukaram Mundhe told BBC Marathi that the person who had organised the party infected 180 people, including 16 from a single family. He says 700 others who had come in contact with those infected have now been quarantined.

A young person organised the gathering for five friends and bought meat from a nearby district where there has been a high level of infections. Afterwards, the host's health deteriorated and he was admitted to hospital.

He initially said he had contracted the virus while out for a walk in a park but later admitted visiting the virus-hit neighbourhood to buy meat.

Officials told the BBC that people routinely conceal activities that could lead to the virus spreading and this represented the biggest risk to the community.
 
Indian man dies after five hospitals refuse treatment

After being turned away from five hospitals in India's capital, Delhi, a Covid-19 positive man travelled 800km (497 miles) via train to Bhopal city for treatment over the weekend.

But he died hours after being admitted to a hospital in Bhopal on Sunday, reports the Times of India newspaper.

Authorities are trying to trace passengers who were on the train with the man. Officials are also concerned about how the man, who reportedly had a high fever, was able to board the train in Delhi - as authorities are meant to screen all passengers for temperature.

His 18-year-old son said his mother had a "severe asthmatic attack" on Sunday when she found out that her husband had died.

“I sent tweets and e-mails to the Delhi chief minister and health minister and even to the prime minister's office but in the end, we lost," his son said.

Other residents in the city have complained about being turned away from hospitals. And the Delhi government's smartphone app to track available hospital beds has added to the confusion.

The app showed vacancies at several city hospitals - which then told news channel NDTV they actually did not have any space for new patients.
Signs are not good for India. This morning there was a report on BBC radio about an 8 month pregnant lady that contracted the virus being turned away by 9 hospitals before she succumbed to the virus.
Many hospitals turned her away in fear of spreading the virus.
Not being reported by the Indian media but I found this which mentions the same name of the deceased as the aforementioned radio report:

https://www.expressandstar.com/news...cking-time-bomb-in-fight-against-coronavirus/
 
This thing is completely screwing us over.

Worse case it will bankrupt us completely.
 
11K cases yesterday. Who cares though? Powers that be are busy in toppling governments and buying out MLAs.
 
Had he accorded even a tiny bit of priority to handle this menace in February itself instead of doing Namastey to Trump or buying out Congress MLAs in MP, things might not have been as horrible as they are right now.

Lockdown period has been a complete waste, replete with jumlas, lies and sheer incompetence to handle something of this magnitude. The way he wasted people's sacrifices during multiple lockdowns is simply unpardonable.

Should we bang more thalis and light more diyas to get rid of it?
 
India has more confirmed cases than UK

New figures from India show the country now has the fourth most cases in the world, behind only Russia, Brazil, and the US.

According to the Ministry of Health, there have been 297,535 cases in India since the outbreak began. Of those:

141,842 are active
147,194 have been cured or discharged
8,498 have died
1 has left the country

==

India’s capital Delhi could have more than half a million coronavirus cases by the end of July, according to officials.

Meanwhile, the number of Covid-19 cases in the country’s worst-affected city, Mumbai, has surpassed Wuhan in China, where the virus first appeared.

Hospitals in the country are struggling to cope with the number of patients they’re getting. Many are dying without getting the treatment they need.
 
India has more confirmed cases than UK

New figures from India show the country now has the fourth most cases in the world, behind only Russia, Brazil, and the US.

According to the Ministry of Health, there have been 297,535 cases in India since the outbreak began. Of those:

141,842 are active
147,194 have been cured or discharged
8,498 have died
1 has left the country

==

India’s capital Delhi could have more than half a million coronavirus cases by the end of July, according to officials.

Meanwhile, the number of Covid-19 cases in the country’s worst-affected city, Mumbai, has surpassed Wuhan in China, where the virus first appeared.

Hospitals in the country are struggling to cope with the number of patients they’re getting. Many are dying without getting the treatment they need.

I don't believe these figures for India are correct, I believe the real numbers are wayyy wayyy wayyy more than this.
 
India fourth worst-hit nation

India has reported a total of 297,535 coronavirus infections, surpassing the United Kingdom to become the fourth worst-affected country in the world, behind only the United States, Brazil and Russia.

The number of infections increased by 10,956 on Friday from the previous day, and the death toll reached 8,498, India's ministry of health and family welfare said.

Source Al Jazaeera
 
For doctors and healthcare workers in India’s financial capital Mumbai who are grappling with surging coronavirus infections, the onset of the annual monsoon poses a serious threat - a new wave of patients with vector-borne diseases.

Already stretched by a shortage of medics and critical care beds, the situation in Mumbai might turn uglier, health experts warn, as cases of malaria, dengue, leptospirosis and encephalitis are expected to soar in coming months.

“Mumbai will be dealing with a crisis in the monsoon,” said Kamakshi Bhate, professor emeritus of community medicine at the state-run King Edward Memorial (KEM).

Hospital in Mumbai, noting there is typically a surge in hospital bed occupancy due to such diseases during India’s annual June-September monsoon season.

Mourners in personal protective gear offer prayers before the burial of their relative who died of Covid-19 at a cemetery in New Delhi, India

Waterlogged streets are a common sight every monsoon across India. But in Mumbai, its most populous city, monsoons can often bring life to a standstill with flooding and water-logging, and result in a surge of diseases.

In a report, local NGO Praja Foundation said official data from only government-run hospitals showed Mumbai recorded about 32,000 malaria and dengue cases in 2018, but the NGO said its own household survey indicated more than 200,000 cases of just those two diseases in the city that year.

This year, the city’s hospitals are already overrun. Mumbai has been hit the hardest by Covid-19. About 25% of India’s 297,535 coronavirus cases and roughly 29% of the 8,498 deaths recorded have come from the city and its surrounding suburbs.

Suresh Kakani, an additional commissioner at Mumbai’s civic authority, said it was asking clinics and dispensaries, some of which had shut during a two-month long nationwide lockdown, to reopen.

Drains are being cleaned and stored water in houses were being inspected for larvae, Kakani said, adding that while major hospitals were on treating covid patients, smaller nursing homes would be available to handle other cases.

But, with local hospitals already strained by significant staff shortages, heath experts fear the spread of diseases in Mumbai’s slums could compound issues for a healthcare network already reeling from Covid-19 cases.
 
The Supreme Court on Friday took a strong view of the treatment meted out to Covid-19 patients and dead bodies in government hospitals across the country, describing the situation as deplorable and worse than what animals would have to suffer.

Taking cognisance of media reports, a three-judge bench sought detailed status reports from four states - Delhi, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal - regarding the conditions in hospitals.

“Covid-19 patients are treated worse than animals. In one case, a dead body was found in garbage,” the bench headed by justice Ashok Bhushan remarked.

The state of Delhi came in for heavy criticism from the bench, with the court pointing out the conditions in hospitals as well the reduced testing for Covid-19. The top court also noted that patients are running from pillar to post to get themselves admitted even though a large number of beds in government hospitals are lying vacant.

Taking note of a media report, the court highlighted how dead bodies of Covid-19 patients were lying unattended in the lobby and waiting area of Delhi’s Lok Nayak Jai Prakash hospital.

Reminding states, the top court said that governments are duty bound to ensure adequate infrastructure in hospitals and also that Covid-19 patients are attended to by health workers.

Former union law minister and senior counsel Ashwini Kumar had written to the CJI on June 8 highlighting the undesirable manner in which Covid-19 patients and dead bodies of Covid victims were being handled in various parts of the country.

Kumar pointed out a news report of a Covid-19 patient being chained to a bed in a hospital in Madhya Pradesh. He also drew the attention of the CJI to an incident from Puducherry where a dead body was thrown into a pit for burial.

Right to die with dignity is a fundamental right and it includes the right to a decent burial/ cremation, Kumar had said in his letter.

This would be the third case which the top court would be hearing suo motu in relation to issues stemming out of Covid-19 and the lockdown.

The same three-judge bench, headed by justice Ashok Bhushan, is hearing the case regarding the plight of migrant workers due to the Covid-19 lockdown and had passed orders to facilitate their return to their home states after thousands of them went out of work due to the lockdown imposed by the central and state governments.

The bench on June 9 ordered that the central and state governments should ensure the return of all migrant workers to their home states within 15 days and also asked the governments to come up with welfare schemes and job opportunities to alleviate their sufferings.


https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...preme-court/story-hQFignge7R9PKvpoRjW3kM.html
 
OTOH, a UP cadre retired IAS officer gets booked just because he dared to point out the low testing rate in UP. Less than 1% of UP population has been tested so far which is really shocking.

This is why these bigots were chosen by gullible UP wallas.
 
The death count maintained by the Delhi government has nearly doubled between June 1 and June 11— increasing from 523 to 1,085. But the municipal bodies, which are governed by the BJP, claim 2,098 funerals of Covid-19 positive patients have taken place in the city so far. While the MCDs on Thursday presented their claims in a joint press conference by mayors and standing committee heads of the North, South and East Delhi Municipal Corporations, the mismatch had first emerged in May itself. Meanwhile, the Union Health Ministry said that doubling time of coronavirus cases in India has improved to 17.4 days currently from 15.4 days a couple of weeks ago, even as the country for the first time recorded over 10,000 new instances of the infection in a day.
 
New Delhi: India has reported over three lakh cases of the highly infectious COVID-19 disease, caused by the coronavirus. The cases rose 2,903 today to reach 3,00,438. Maharashtra has the highest cases in India with 1,01,141, followed by Tamil Nadu with 40,698 and Delhi with 34,687.
India has the fourth-highest number of coronavirus cases among 10 nations worst-hit by coronavirus, for which no vaccine has been developed yet.

The death count rose to 8,498 with a record single-day spike of 396 fatalities.

Coronavirus cases continue to rise across the country, days after the centre announced a new period of the lockdown under its "Unlock1" plan, which has eased restrictions in phases by allowing flights to resume, shops to reopen and offices to function, among other measures, with following strict safety rules and social distancing practices.

India's country's recovery rate - the number of patients who have successfully fought the viral illness - stood at 49.47 per cent this morning. 1,47,195 people have recovered, the Health Ministry has said. The number of recoveries is more than the active cases for the second consecutive day.
 
This thing is completely screwing us over.

Worse case it will bankrupt us completely.

The Forex jumped 8 Billion dollars, it won't bankrupt the govn just the citizens and starve poor people, has become govn of the Banks, atleast the Cong would share some of it, these guys are just keeping the money I don't know for what... they should atleast say how they are helping the poor, or show cash transfers happening to them.

https://www.bloombergquint.com/economy-finance/indias-forex-reserves-surge-past-500-billion
 
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The Forex jumped 8 Billion dollars, it won't bankrupt the govn just the citizens and starve poor people, has become govn of the Banks, atleast the Cong would share some of it, these guys are just keeping the money I don't know for what... they should atleast say how they are helping the poor, or show cash transfers happening to them.

https://www.bloombergquint.com/economy-finance/indias-forex-reserves-surge-past-500-billion

current situation kya hay? [MENTION=132715]Varun[/MENTION]

whats happening in the country? i havent really followed much news about India other than the ladakh military stuff. how are the common people coping? Im sponsoring a young lad in bangalore at the moment so would like to know how the poor are coping??
 
current situation kya hay? [MENTION=132715]Varun[/MENTION]

whats happening in the country? i havent really followed much news about India other than the ladakh military stuff. how are the common people coping? Im sponsoring a young lad in bangalore at the moment so would like to know how the poor are coping??

Situation is not that good here. Markets are open but there are no customers. They have asked Banquet Halls and Hotels to be ready because of lack of beds.

And good to know that you are sponsoring a young lad in Bangalore. We need more people like you. Thanks. :inti
 
current situation kya hay? [MENTION=132715]Varun[/MENTION]

whats happening in the country? i havent really followed much news about India other than the ladakh military stuff. how are the common people coping? Im sponsoring a young lad in bangalore at the moment so would like to know how the poor are coping??

Five digits (ie: 10,000+ cases daily) have become the new normal. And even that is only the reported number of cases, so many are being turned away and cities like Delhi and Mumbai are buckling at the seams.

The economy ground to a halt, then with the recent unlocking and a smattering of a few flights is back to ~15% of capacity. This cannot carry on for much longer, but the virus obviously has other ideas.
 
Situation is not that good here. Markets are open but there are no customers. They have asked Banquet Halls and Hotels to be ready because of lack of beds.

And good to know that you are sponsoring a young lad in Bangalore. We need more people like you. Thanks. :inti

thanks..bit worried about whats happening out there..keep us posted on things..
 
Five digits (ie: 10,000+ cases daily) have become the new normal. And even that is only the reported number of cases, so many are being turned away and cities like Delhi and Mumbai are buckling at the seams.

The economy ground to a halt, then with the recent unlocking and a smattering of a few flights is back to ~15% of capacity. This cannot carry on for much longer, but the virus obviously has other ideas.

Has the govt not used its welfare programs to help where it can? or is it hamstrung by the states?
The economy here in the uk has practically ground to a halt but is ready to bounce back as soon as lockdown is eased..massive falls in growth and other indicators..
 
India, the fourth worst-hit country in the world, recorded more than 11,000 cases of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) and 386 deaths in the last 24 hours, according to the Union health ministry on Sunday.
 
Has the govt not used its welfare programs to help where it can? or is it hamstrung by the states?

The government is a 2-man show who have waved the white flag and left it to the states. They are sounding the poll bugle in Bihar and likely can't wait to get back to munching Dhoklas and Theplas rather than dealing with a pandemic like they are elected to do.

Of course, they tried to play hero by announcing a 20-Lakh crore package, followed by the dulcet Nirmala Sitharaman coming forward over the course of 5 days for more PR and Marketing, but nobody except the most ardent fanchildren have fallen for any of that.

Covid-19 is the end of the contemporary Indian growth story which was slowing down since 2007-8 in any case.
 
The clowns which are there in our health ministry are happy with the fact that rate of doubling of cases has got better from 15.34 to 17.43 days. So as per them everything is under control.

Bunch of incompetent fools.
 
India has reported its biggest single-day jump in coronavirus cases, adding 11,458 confirmed infections and taking its total count to more than 300,000, according to official data.

Cases in India, which has the fourth-most confirmed cases in the world, are steadily increasing despite a nationwide lockdown that began in late March and has since been loosened.

Confirmed cases in the worst-hit western state of Maharashtra moved past the 100,000 mark, while 2,000 new cases were confirmed in New Delhi, where the health system has been under particular strain.

Despite the rising case load, the recovery rate of patients was improving, with more than 147,000 people having recovered, the federal government said on Friday. India has 145,779 active cases, and has recorded 8,884 deaths.
 
For the past five days, Bijendra Singh has been haunted by the voice of his dead wife, Neelam. “Why could you not get me the treatment that I needed?” she asks. “Why could you not save me, save our baby?”

It was around 6am on 5 June when Neelam, more than eight months pregnant, began complaining of lower back pain and breathlessness. Presuming it was early contractions, Singh and his wife set off in his brother’s auto-rickshaw to a government hospital in the Uttar Pradesh city of Noida. Before leaving, they kissed their five year-old son goodbye and promised they would be returning with the birthday present he had requested: a baby sister.

However, because of her suspected Covid-19 symptoms, they were refused entry at eight hospitals. It was to be a 15-hour ordeal that would expose how the coronavirus pandemic has pushed India’s healthcare system to the brink of collapse, and would result in the needless death of 30-year-old Neelam.

“From the beginning of this pandemic, the government completely underestimated the virus,” said Dr Harjit Singh Bhatti, who works on the Covid-19 ward of Delhi’s Manipal hospital. “We had over two months of lockdown, but all that time was wasted. We have not seen any investment in healthcare, which will be the only way to get this under control.”

He added: “Every day I see the number of patients are rising, while hospital admission is becoming impossible and many are dying outside hospitals. Healthcare workers are all getting infected in droves and our healthcare system in Delhi is already exhausted. If strong steps are not taken now, I expect the healthcare system to collapse in a few weeks.”

On Monday, India began easing its coronavirus lockdown, one of the largest and strictest in the world, with shopping malls and places of worship opening their doors for the first time in more than two months. It joined countries such as neighbouring Pakistan as well as Mexico, Russia and Iran, who, despite escalating infection rates, have decided to ease restrictions.

Cases in India, currently at 298,000, are increasing by 10,000 a day and the country has overtaken the UK to become the fourth worst hit in the world. India’s biggest cities of Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai are running out of not only beds but also doctors and nurses to treat the unprecedented numbers of patients, and university medical professors have been seconded to work on Covid wards. Private hospitals have been charging upwards of 80,000 rupees (£840) per night for those who are admitted with Covid symptoms – unaffordable prices for even middle-class let alone poorer Indians.

Singh, a factory worker from Khora Colony in Ghaziabad, took his wife first to a government hospitalin the neighbouring city of Noida. But the doctor insisted they could not admit her. It was to become a familiar refrain. At another hospital nearby, an ambulance driver refused to go near Neelam because he suspected she had Covid-19, and she was refused admission. They then went to the private Shivalik hospital. “But again the doctor said there, sorry, this looks like a Covid case, we don’t have ventilators or beds,” said Singh.

They tried eight hospitals, each time being denied entry because medics suspected from Neelam’s breathing troubles that she had Covid-19, although she was never tested.

“At the fourth hospital, I broke down, pleading with them, telling them I had been going around hospitals all morning. They told me ‘we cannot treat her, she will die here’,” said Singh. “My wife was shouting out: ‘I need oxygen, I need painkillers, please help me,’ but no one listened to her.”

By the time the couple reached their next hope, Sharda hospital, they were so desperate that they paid for Neelam to be transferred to an ambulance so she could have access to an oxygen tank.

At the seventh hospital, Gims hospital in Noida, when it too refused to admit her, Singh called the police. “I could not bring myself to go back into the ambulance and face her. She kept telling me: ‘I won’t survive much longer, please get me help, you are not doing anything for me.’ At this point I lost all my strength.”

But even the two officers could not get her a bed. Singh and Neelam drove 30 miles to the Max hospital in Ghaziabad, where again doctors walked him into the ward to show him it was full, so they drove back to Gims. “But when we got there, I pulled the oxygen mask off my wife’s face and she was dead,” said Singh.

“Please know I did everything to save her and my baby. It is not my fault, the system is broken.”

The consequences of a pandemic in India, a poverty-stricken and densely populated country that spends just 1% of GDP on healthcare, are becoming more apparent by the day.

Hospital morgues are overflowing with bodies: Delhi’s LNJP hospital morgue, which has capacity for 45 bodies, last week had 108 piled up. Nigambodh Ghat, New Delhi’s biggest and oldest crematorium, has begun building traditional funeral pyres because their furnaces cannot keep up with the number of bodies, around 30 a day more than usual. They have performed more than 500 coronavirus-related funerals in the past two months.

Delhi’s deputy chief minister, Manish Sisodia, has said the capital will have more than 500,000 Covid-19 cases by July and will need to increase the number of beds from 9,000 to 80,000 to meet demand. “For Delhi, this is a big problem if cases continue to rise,” Sisodia said.

Balram Bhargava, the director general of the Indian Council of Medical Research, insisted India was still “definitely not” in a community transmission stage of the outbreak, even though officials in Delhi admitted they knew the source of only around 50% of infections. But this was rejected by Bhatti, the Covid-19 doctor. “The claims of no community transmission is rubbish, it is only to save the government from criticism and so they can avoid spending more money on hospitals and manpower,” he said.

Only 5m tests have been done in a country of 1.3 billion people. And while India’s official death toll of 8,102 is comparatively low, some analysts believe this may be due to rampant under-reporting and also the fact that 65% of India’s population is below the age of 35, compared with nations with more vulnerable, ageing populations.

Even the home minister, Amit Shah, admitted in a speech on Monday that the government, which last month announced a stimulus package billed as being worth $266bn, “may have made a mistake, we may have fallen short” in the fight against the virus.

The situation has become so bad that not even money and influence can pull the usual strings. Resident associations for affluent neighbourhoods have begun buying their own oxygen supplies. In Delhi’s Greater Kailash I (GK1), an upmarket area in south Delhi, the residents’ association has purchased two oxygen concentrator machines, while in the housing complex of Eldeco Utopia in Noida, residents have bought 20 oximeters and sequestered five rooms, equipping them with oxygen cylinders, a stretcher, a wheelchair and PPE kit.

“The bubble we lived in has burst,” said Rajiv Kakria, an adviser to the GK1 residents’ association. “You can have money. You can have connections and know influential people, but it doesn’t mean anything. You can still die waiting for a bed or oxygen.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ony-i-did-everything-to-save-my-wife-and-baby
 
For the past five days, Bijendra Singh has been haunted by the voice of his dead wife, Neelam. “Why could you not get me the treatment that I needed?” she asks. “Why could you not save me, save our baby?”

It was around 6am on 5 June when Neelam, more than eight months pregnant, began complaining of lower back pain and breathlessness. Presuming it was early contractions, Singh and his wife set off in his brother’s auto-rickshaw to a government hospital in the Uttar Pradesh city of Noida. Before leaving, they kissed their five year-old son goodbye and promised they would be returning with the birthday present he had requested: a baby sister.

However, because of her suspected Covid-19 symptoms, they were refused entry at eight hospitals. It was to be a 15-hour ordeal that would expose how the coronavirus pandemic has pushed India’s healthcare system to the brink of collapse, and would result in the needless death of 30-year-old Neelam.

“From the beginning of this pandemic, the government completely underestimated the virus,” said Dr Harjit Singh Bhatti, who works on the Covid-19 ward of Delhi’s Manipal hospital. “We had over two months of lockdown, but all that time was wasted. We have not seen any investment in healthcare, which will be the only way to get this under control.”

He added: “Every day I see the number of patients are rising, while hospital admission is becoming impossible and many are dying outside hospitals. Healthcare workers are all getting infected in droves and our healthcare system in Delhi is already exhausted. If strong steps are not taken now, I expect the healthcare system to collapse in a few weeks.”

On Monday, India began easing its coronavirus lockdown, one of the largest and strictest in the world, with shopping malls and places of worship opening their doors for the first time in more than two months. It joined countries such as neighbouring Pakistan as well as Mexico, Russia and Iran, who, despite escalating infection rates, have decided to ease restrictions.

Cases in India, currently at 298,000, are increasing by 10,000 a day and the country has overtaken the UK to become the fourth worst hit in the world. India’s biggest cities of Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai are running out of not only beds but also doctors and nurses to treat the unprecedented numbers of patients, and university medical professors have been seconded to work on Covid wards. Private hospitals have been charging upwards of 80,000 rupees (£840) per night for those who are admitted with Covid symptoms – unaffordable prices for even middle-class let alone poorer Indians.

Singh, a factory worker from Khora Colony in Ghaziabad, took his wife first to a government hospitalin the neighbouring city of Noida. But the doctor insisted they could not admit her. It was to become a familiar refrain. At another hospital nearby, an ambulance driver refused to go near Neelam because he suspected she had Covid-19, and she was refused admission. They then went to the private Shivalik hospital. “But again the doctor said there, sorry, this looks like a Covid case, we don’t have ventilators or beds,” said Singh.

They tried eight hospitals, each time being denied entry because medics suspected from Neelam’s breathing troubles that she had Covid-19, although she was never tested.

“At the fourth hospital, I broke down, pleading with them, telling them I had been going around hospitals all morning. They told me ‘we cannot treat her, she will die here’,” said Singh. “My wife was shouting out: ‘I need oxygen, I need painkillers, please help me,’ but no one listened to her.”

By the time the couple reached their next hope, Sharda hospital, they were so desperate that they paid for Neelam to be transferred to an ambulance so she could have access to an oxygen tank.

At the seventh hospital, Gims hospital in Noida, when it too refused to admit her, Singh called the police. “I could not bring myself to go back into the ambulance and face her. She kept telling me: ‘I won’t survive much longer, please get me help, you are not doing anything for me.’ At this point I lost all my strength.”

But even the two officers could not get her a bed. Singh and Neelam drove 30 miles to the Max hospital in Ghaziabad, where again doctors walked him into the ward to show him it was full, so they drove back to Gims. “But when we got there, I pulled the oxygen mask off my wife’s face and she was dead,” said Singh.

“Please know I did everything to save her and my baby. It is not my fault, the system is broken.”

The consequences of a pandemic in India, a poverty-stricken and densely populated country that spends just 1% of GDP on healthcare, are becoming more apparent by the day.

Hospital morgues are overflowing with bodies: Delhi’s LNJP hospital morgue, which has capacity for 45 bodies, last week had 108 piled up. Nigambodh Ghat, New Delhi’s biggest and oldest crematorium, has begun building traditional funeral pyres because their furnaces cannot keep up with the number of bodies, around 30 a day more than usual. They have performed more than 500 coronavirus-related funerals in the past two months.

Delhi’s deputy chief minister, Manish Sisodia, has said the capital will have more than 500,000 Covid-19 cases by July and will need to increase the number of beds from 9,000 to 80,000 to meet demand. “For Delhi, this is a big problem if cases continue to rise,” Sisodia said.

Balram Bhargava, the director general of the Indian Council of Medical Research, insisted India was still “definitely not” in a community transmission stage of the outbreak, even though officials in Delhi admitted they knew the source of only around 50% of infections. But this was rejected by Bhatti, the Covid-19 doctor. “The claims of no community transmission is rubbish, it is only to save the government from criticism and so they can avoid spending more money on hospitals and manpower,” he said.

Only 5m tests have been done in a country of 1.3 billion people. And while India’s official death toll of 8,102 is comparatively low, some analysts believe this may be due to rampant under-reporting and also the fact that 65% of India’s population is below the age of 35, compared with nations with more vulnerable, ageing populations.

Even the home minister, Amit Shah, admitted in a speech on Monday that the government, which last month announced a stimulus package billed as being worth $266bn, “may have made a mistake, we may have fallen short” in the fight against the virus.

The situation has become so bad that not even money and influence can pull the usual strings. Resident associations for affluent neighbourhoods have begun buying their own oxygen supplies. In Delhi’s Greater Kailash I (GK1), an upmarket area in south Delhi, the residents’ association has purchased two oxygen concentrator machines, while in the housing complex of Eldeco Utopia in Noida, residents have bought 20 oximeters and sequestered five rooms, equipping them with oxygen cylinders, a stretcher, a wheelchair and PPE kit.

“The bubble we lived in has burst,” said Rajiv Kakria, an adviser to the GK1 residents’ association. “You can have money. You can have connections and know influential people, but it doesn’t mean anything. You can still die waiting for a bed or oxygen.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ony-i-did-everything-to-save-my-wife-and-baby

There’s been many sad stories due to this pandemic but this is really heartbreaking
 
Close to 12K cases today, highest ever. Really frightening situation.
 
From the beginning of this pandemic, the government completely underestimated the virus,” said Dr Harjit Singh Bhatti, who works on the Covid-19 ward of Delhi’s Manipal hospital. “We had over two months of lockdown, but all that time was wasted. We have not seen any investment in healthcare, which will be the only way to get this under control.”

This piece, coming from horse's mouth says what every sane Indian has been saying since the beginning of this pandemic.
 
If lockdown wasn't announced for ramping up our pathetic health facilities, what else was it for?
 
And worst part is that all the major states have started doing lesser no. of tests during last fortnight or so and we are still making daily new records.
 
Absolutely brain dead governance in TN.All they care is to change English names to Tamil ones in a pandemic.

Tamilnadu needs to get its act together and try to curtail the spread of virus. there are over 50 deaths of its own over few days and rapidly rising cases.

they should collaborate effectively with a neighbouring state like karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, in handling the crisis which is reporting deaths in only single digits.

Anyway it was pretty revealing when TN residents were without a care of world going about their lives in groups during lockdowns .. I think they had the worst response to lockdowns.

The only trustable force in TN is the police who have done a good job in crisis. Hopefully the dumb residents heed to authorities atleast now.
 
this is a joke - Indian Health ministry: Loss of smell or taste added to list of COVID-19 symptoms

so how many people have you lot turned away?

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/0tmWIGePMLo" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
BJP fans vanished from here lol.

Even they might not be able to put a positive spin to the fiasco.

But one can never underestimate them.

Experts Say Community Transmission Present in 'Many Parts of India', Slam Govt's Denial

https://www.news18.com/news/india/a...parts-of-india-slam-govts-denial-2667807.html

I have never ever seen a govt get OWNED so badly in every metric possible.
Don’t worry, everything is under control, since the doubling rate has got better.
 
this is a joke - Indian Health ministry: Loss of smell or taste added to list of COVID-19 symptoms

so how many people have you lot turned away?

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/0tmWIGePMLo" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Our health minister refused to acknowledge severity of this disease till 13 March. Even now he is taking refuge under the doubling rate. What else did you expect?
 
On 20 May, Parveen Bano started to feel slightly breathless. When she told her son, Amir Pathan, he rushed her to the nearest hospital.

He says he was worried because his 54-year-old mother had diabetes and a history of cardiac ailments. And worse, their neighbourhood - Gomtipur in the Indian city of Ahmedabad - had recorded a slew of Covid-19 infections recently.

The next 30 hours were harrowing for the family. Mr Pathan says they went to three hospitals - two private and one government-run - but none of them had a bed available.

So Mr Pathan decided to bring his mother back home. But he says her "discomfort" worsened through the day and the night, so early the next morning, the family took her to Ahmedabad Civil Hospital, one of India's biggest government facilities.

She was swabbed for a Covid-19 test, and put on oxygen support because doctors found that her blood oxygen levels were low. Mr Pathan says the levels were erratic through the day, so doctors connected her to a ventilator that night.

Hours later - at 1:29 AM on 22 May - she died. Her coronavirus test result came the next morning - it was positive.

The hospital did not respond to the BBC's queries, but Mr Pathan says he believes his mother may have lived if she had been admitted to a hospital a day earlier.

The Ahmedabad Civil Hospital has made headlines time and again as it struggles to cope. The high court has referred to it as a "dungeon" and cited the number of Covid-19 deaths - 490 - it has recorded so far. And the court has also rebuked the state government for its handling of the pandemic.

But the government has denied any laxity on its part.

What is driving Gujarat's high mortality rate?
Ahmedabad, home to more than seven million, is the largest city in the western state of Gujarat.

It's also the worst-affected by the pandemic, accounting for more than 75% of the state's caseload, and nearly all of its deaths.

With more than 21,500 confirmed cases, Gujarat has India's fourth highest caseload. But the state's fatality rate - the proportion of Covid-19 patients who have died - is the highest at 6.2%. This is more than double the national average of 2.8%.

When Gujarat's high court expressed "concern at the alarming number of deaths in Ahmedabad hospitals", the state government said that more than 80% of those who had died suffered from comorbidities, or other ailments, which made them more vulnerable.

But public health experts say it's hard to pin down a single reason for the mortality rate.

While some point to the state's high disease burden, others say that it's not unique to Gujarat - in fact Tamil Nadu has more diabetics than any other state, but its mortality rate is far lower.

Questions have been raised over whether India is under counting Covid-19 deaths but, if that were the case, there is no evidence to suggest that Gujarat is an exception.

Vijay Rupani, the state's chief minister, has repeatedly blamed international travellers and those who attended a religious congregation in Delhi, which later turned into one of India's biggest clusters so far.

But neither of these factors are unique to Gujarat - Kerala saw a greater influx of foreign returnees, and Tamil Nadu traced back far more people to the congregation. And while this may explain the surge in cases, it doesn't explain the disproportionate number of deaths.

Low testing, a lack of faith and stigma

"People reporting late to hospitals can be one of the major reasons," says Bharat Gadhvi, head of Ahmedabad Hospitals and Nursing Homes Association.

With private hospitals either refusing or unable to admit Covid-19 patients, many have been reluctant to seek treatment in government hospitals, doctors say. The reasons include poor facilities as well as a lack of trust in the quality of care.

Doctors have said stigma could be a reason too. Dr Randeep Guleria, head of India's biggest public hospital, referred to this after meeting doctors at the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital staff in May.

"One important issue that was discussed is the stigma attached to Covid-19. People still fear coming to hospitals to get tested."

May saw a jump in hospital admissions, possibly because of increased screening and testing, which led doctors and officials to identify potential "super spreaders" - such as fruit and vegetable vendors, and shopkeepers.

But public health experts say testing was still low in parts of the city, especially in what they call the "old city", parts of which are walled off.

"The government showed a lack of focus in dealing with the situation, especially in containment zones," says Kartikeya Bhatt, an economics professor.

He says 10 of 11 zones in Ahmedabad's old city were containment zones, and they all are densely populated.

He adds that while these areas were cut off from other parts of the city, officials didn't do enough to check the spread within the zones themselves.

"Physical or social distancing is next to impossible as people even wash clothes and utensils outside their homes," says sociologist Gaurang Jani.

Experts suspect that the infection spread rapidly in these parts, and due to stigma or poor awareness many people may not have sought hospital admission soon enough, according to an analysis by the Observer Research Foundation.

An overwhelmed city
But even those who survived the virus say the city's hospitals are not equipped to handle the crisis.

"Only after hours of waiting could I get a hospital bed," says Laxmi Parmar, 67, who was treated at Ahmedabad Civil Hospital's Covid-19 ward for 10 days.

"There was no breakfast in the beginning and I had to complain to a local politician to intervene. We had two toilets to share between 40-50 patients in the ward."

Experts say the pandemic has exposed the state's poor health infrastructure.

"Otherwise, no-one would have bothered to know the state of hospitals in Gujarat. Now that shortage of doctors and paramedics is out in the open, we saw quick hiring happening even during the lockdown," Professor Bhatt says.

Gujarat only has 0.3 beds for every 1,000 people, below the national average of 0.55, according to a recent Brookings study.

And the surge in cases has led to a shortage of hospital beds, PPE kits and quarantine facilities. In recent weeks, Gujarat has been overtaken by Tamil Nadu in total number of infections but the situation still appears dire given the steep mortality rate.

"I disagree that we have failed in our duties," the state's health minister, Nitinbhai Patel, told the BBC.

"We currently have 23,000 hospital beds ready in the state and our medical staff are working around-the-clock in each hospital. We are also providing them with the best medical equipment to handle the situation which is slowly coming under control."

But his government has been criticised for what many see as a squandered opportunity because Gujarat recorded its first case as late as 19 March, just days before the country went into lockdown.

"Government policies could have been much better. Testing and isolation facilities appeared robust initially but have weakened with time as the administration appears tired," Mr Gadvi says.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-53009560
 
If lockdown wasn't announced for ramping up our pathetic health facilities, what else was it for?

Our government spends money on useless statues rather than spending it on health facilities. I am also pretty sure they are going to use PM Cares Fund money for their upcoming election campaigns. :inti
 
India's home minister, Amit Shah, and Delhi's chief minister, Arvind Kejriwal, are holding an emergency meeting in the capital to address the continuing rise in coronavirus cases there.

It's their second meeting in less than a week, and comes amid concerns about the city's ability to manage the crisis.

For weeks, the number of new daily cases in Delhi has been steadily rising - and anecdotal evidence suggests the healthcare system is overwhelmed.

Now the chief minister has confirmed plans to requisition nursing homes for coronavirus use. That will make about 5,000 more beds available.

In the future, hotel rooms and banquet halls may be converted too.

On Sunday, the daily total across India rose again with nearly 12 thousand new cases. Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Delhi are some of the worst affected states.
 
BJP fans vanished from here lol.

Even they might not be able to put a positive spin to the fiasco.

But one can never underestimate them.

Experts Say Community Transmission Present in 'Many Parts of India', Slam Govt's Denial

https://www.news18.com/news/india/a...parts-of-india-slam-govts-denial-2667807.html

I have never ever seen a govt get OWNED so badly in every metric possible.

Modi's popularity is growing, they will release some random survey and spammit across media/social media to convert Modi's response to COVID-19 as a huge victory which is lauded by the entire world.

Mark this word, that's what is going to happen.
 
Delhi coronavirus fears mount as hospital beds run out

Ashwani Jain succumbed to the coronavirus in an ambulance as his family pleaded with several hospitals to take him in, the latest victim of the pandemic sweeping through the Indian capital and exposing a deadly shortage of hospital beds.

"They don't care whether we live or die," said his 20-year-old daughter Kashish, whose uncle, Abhishek, sat with Ashwani in the back of the vehicle on its desperate journey across Delhi.

"It won't matter to them but I have lost my father, he was the world to me," she said, tears welling up as she showed a photo of him.

All of the hospitals the 45-year-old businessman's family tried refused to admit Ashwani, even though an app set up by the city government indicated Covid-19 beds were free, Abhishek told AFP news agency.

With surging infections highlighting the precarious state of the Indian healthcare system, the death of Jain and others like him have heightened anxiety in Delhi over the growing threat.
 
India to use 500 train carriages as wards in Delhi

India is to convert another 500 railway carriages to create 8,000 more beds for coronavirus patients in Delhi, amid a surge in infections.

Home Minister Amit Shah announced a package of new emergency measures for the capital, including a rapid increase in testing for Covid-19. Nursing homes will also be requisitioned.

He met Delhi's Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal to address the crisis.

India's daily number of confirmed new cases has reached almost 12,000.

The total number of 320,922 officially confirmed cases puts India fourth in the world - after the US, Brazil and Russia - in the pandemic.

The death toll in India stands at 9,195, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University from official sources.

The Hindustan Times reports that Delhi is the third worst-hit state in India after Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu.

It reports that Delhi's bed capacity across private and government hospitals for Covid-19 patients stands at 9,698, of which 4,248 beds are vacant.

Mr Kejriwal's government plans to use 40 hotels and 77 banquet halls as makeshift hospitals.

India began converting railway carriages into quarantine or isolation wards in April, when large parts of the railway network were suspended owing to the pandemic.

Last month the national government announced plans to end a national lockdown that began on 25 March.

Road and plane traffic increased as restrictions started to ease, and many businesses and workplaces reopened. Markets are crowded again.

The lockdown has imposed huge economic costs on India, throwing millions of people out of work, especially migrant workers in precarious, meagrely-paid jobs. Food supply chains were also put at risk.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-53039868
 
Ahmedabad, home to more than seven million, is the largest city in the western Indian state Gujarat. It's also the worst-affected by the pandemic, accounting for more than 75% of the state's caseload, and nearly all of its deaths.

With more than 21,500 confirmed cases, Gujarat has India's fourth highest number of cases. But the state's mortality rate for Covid-19 patients is the highest, with 6.2% dying. This is more than double the national average of 2.8%.

When Gujarat's high court expressed "concern at the alarming number of deaths in Ahmedabad hospitals", the state government said that more than 80% of those who had died suffered from comorbidities, or other ailments, which made them more vulnerable.

But public health experts say it's hard to pin down a single reason for the higher rate.
 
Our health minister refused to acknowledge severity of this disease till 13 March. Even now he is taking refuge under the doubling rate. What else did you expect?

Thoughts on Kejriwal reducing tests to 5k a day with infection rate at 40 percent?
 
If lockdown wasn't announced for ramping up our pathetic health facilities, what else was it for?

Tell us how Kejriwal, CM of the richest Indian state, ramped up the health infra in Delhi since the lockdown was announced in March.
 
BJP fans vanished from here lol.

Even they might not be able to put a positive spin to the fiasco.

But one can never underestimate them.

Experts Say Community Transmission Present in 'Many Parts of India', Slam Govt's Denial

https://www.news18.com/news/india/a...parts-of-india-slam-govts-denial-2667807.html

I have never ever seen a govt get OWNED so badly in every metric possible.

What has BJP to do with the fact that TN, MH, Delhi - three of the richest state collectively wet their beds? The mind boggles.
 
Tell us how Kejriwal, CM of the richest Indian state, ramped up the health infra in Delhi since the lockdown was announced in March.
Unlike some, I'm not a bhakt of any neta/party. So won't defend any Kejriwal, Uddhav or Mamata for that matter for mismanaging grandly this pandemic.

So take these barbs to someone who has some vested interests in defending these bloody Netas.
 
However if someone is the premier and has taken unilateral decisions on behalf of all the states, then the buck stops entirely at his door, however hard someone tries to defend him.
 
However if someone is the premier and has taken unilateral decisions on behalf of all the states, then the buck stops entirely at his door, however hard someone tries to defend him.

If a CEO of company gives guidelines and vision, it is still the duty of various department heads to implement it.

Obviously we are talking about common sense,logic,rationality here so maybe a little too complex.
 
So another bhakt pops out to defend his god. Lol, this is so bloody predictable.
 
What has BJP to do with the fact that TN, MH, Delhi - three of the richest state collectively wet their beds? The mind boggles.

Nothing mnindboggling.

They didn't do well.

TN started with some ill luck on Markaz which they controlled. At one stage, they had like 100 cases excluding the markaz situation. But they did screw up on Koyambedu BIG TIME which ended up being too costly. The govt IS to be blamed.

Uddhav made his mistakes too. But with that being said, MH is one state which would have had Corona explosion no matter what due to Mumbai being the financial hub.

Delhi - Kejri hasn't handled it well at all.

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The reason why experts blame PM of the nation and not state leaders is because PM has access to all the experts and the power to coordinate the national strategy.

This is true for all countries and not just India.

I could give a breakdown of that step by step right from lockdown to testing strategy to ICMR denials to migrant situation handling (in terms of corona containment) to the Covid task force situation...but it's all well and covered already in this thread.

Except for lockdown 1 (which everyone commended the govt for - leaving aside the bad preparation and it coming actually quite late), the entire covid response has been shambles in every step.

That's the issue here.

As for states, the worst state is Gujarat where deaths are mounting and everyday we see just 490 cases being registered. God knows what's happening in there.
 
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Modi's popularity is growing, they will release some random survey and spammit across media/social media to convert Modi's response to COVID-19 as a huge victory which is lauded by the entire world.

Mark this word, that's what is going to happen.

Doubt its rising.

But their base is strong.

As someone said, Modiji is more of a guruji than a politician in the eyes of Indians and unless a real alternative shows itself, we might keep voting for him.
 
If a CEO of company gives guidelines and vision, it is still the duty of various department heads to implement it.

Obviously we are talking about common sense,logic,rationality here so maybe a little too complex.

Your assumptions are based on CEO having done his job perfectly and others dropping the ball.

That ain't the case actually.

In fact, it's the opposite. CEO has screwed up big time and we are blaming regional managers here.
 
Tell us how Kejriwal, CM of the richest Indian state, ramped up the health infra in Delhi since the lockdown was announced in March.

What logic is this? So to criticize Modi you have to criticize others?
 
Why not do this on twitter and fb you would get the "social dull pointless debates" you are looking for? Right now you are just increasing traffic to "India.com" which is not a news source used by anyone except yourself.

im not on twitter or fb

its not dull / pointless to ask questions - as you know that is hard to find truthful news regarding anything in india:

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xu0Gc_J60sQ" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
im not on twitter or fb

its not dull / pointless to ask questions - as you know that is hard to find truthful news regarding anything in india:

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xu0Gc_J60sQ" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

To debate about some religious figure promising cure is pointless, above was not the news that I quoted you on.
You can use Indian Express, its nearest to actual news or Reuters.
 
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