India has seen more than 4,000 people die of COVID-19 for the second straight day

According to health ministry data, India had 362,727 new COVID-19 infections over the last 24 hours while deaths climbed by 4,120.

Visitors dressed in PPE suits watch as bodies are collectively lit at the converted parking lot of the Gazhipur cremation ground in New Delhi, India on April 28, 2021. A massive spike in Covid-19 cases and consequent deaths have overwhelmed  the cremation

Visitors dressed in PPE suits watch at a cremation site in New Delhi. Source: AAP

India recorded more than 4,000 COVID-19 deaths for a second straight day on Thursday, while infections stayed below 400,000 for a fourth day, though the virus has become rampant in rural areas where cases can go unreported due to a lack of testing.

Experts remain unsure when numbers will peak and concern is growing about the transmissibility of the variant that is driving infections in India and spreading worldwide.

Bhramar Mukherjee, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Michigan, said most models had predicted a peak this week and that the country could be seeing signs of that trend.

Still, the number of new cases each day is large enough to overwhelm hospitals, she said on Twitter. "The key word is cautious optimism."
Covid19 testing is being done everywhere in India to trace the COVID19 Infected patients so as to curb the raising number of COVID19 infection. Photo by Sipa USA Dipayan Bose / SOPA Images/Sipa
People stand in a long queue with no social distance before getting a Covid19 test in a testing kiosk at Madhyamgram rural hospital. Source: AAP
The situation is particularly bad in rural areas of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state with a population of over 230 million. Television pictures have shown families weeping over the dead in rural hospitals or camping in wards to tend the sick.

Bodies have washed up in the Ganges, the river that flows through the state, as crematoriums are overwhelmed and wood for funeral pyres is in short supply.

"Official statistics give you no idea of the devastating pandemic that is raging through rural UP," wrote well-known activist and opposition politician Yogendra Yadav in The Print.

"Widespread ignorance, lack of nearby or adequate testing facilities, official and unofficial cap on testing and inordinate delays in test reports have meant that in village after village, virtually no one has been tested, while scores of people complain of a ‘strange fever’".
According to health ministry data, India had 362,727 new COVID-19 infections over the last 24 hours while deaths climbed by 4,120.

The surge in infections has been accompanied by a slowdown in vaccinations, although Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that vaccinations would be open to all adults from 1 May.

Two states - Karnataka, which includes tech hub Bengaluru, and Maharashtra, which includes Mumbai - have announced they will temporarily suspend vaccination for people aged 18-44 years as they prioritise those over 45 who need their second dose.

India is the world's largest vaccine producer, but has run low on stocks in the face of the huge demand.

As of Thursday, it had fully vaccinated just over 38.2 million people, or about 2.8 per cent of a population of about 1.35 billion, government data shows.


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3 min read
Published 13 May 2021 6:32pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:23pm
Source: Reuters, SBS


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