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India’s COVID-19 Death Toll Passes 200,000

    Advertisement India’s coronavirus death toll passed 200,000 on Wednesday with more than 3,000 fatalities reported in 24 hours for the first time, official … Continue reading India’s COVID-19 Death Toll Passes 200,000


File photo: Members of medical staff wearing protective gear carry the dead body of a Covid-19 coronavirus victim at a hospital in Amritsar on April 24, 2021. (Photo by Narinder NANU / AFP)
File photo: Members of medical staff wearing protective gear carry the dead body of a Covid-19 coronavirus victim at a hospital in Amritsar on April 24, 2021. (Photo by Narinder NANU / AFP)

 

 

India’s coronavirus death toll passed 200,000 on Wednesday with more than 3,000 fatalities reported in 24 hours for the first time, official data showed.

A total of 201,187 people have now died, 3,293 of them in the past day, according to health ministry data, although many experts suspect that the true toll is higher.

India has now reported 18 million infections, an increase of 360,000 in 24 hours, which is a new world record. This month alone the country has added almost six million new cases.

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The explosion in cases, blamed in part on a new virus variant as well as mass political and religious events, has overwhelmed hospitals with dire shortages of beds, drugs and oxygen.

 

File photo: People make their way along a street in the old quarters of New Delhi on April 19, 2021, as India’s capital will impose a week-long lockdown from tonight, officials said, while the megacity struggles to contain a huge surge in Covid-19 cases with hospitals running out of beds and oxygen supplies low. Sajjad HUSSAIN / AFP

 

The crisis is particularly severe in New Delhi, with people dying outside packed hospitals where three people are often forced to share beds. Clinics have been running out of oxygen.

India has so far administered 150 million vaccine shots and from Saturday the programme will be expanded to include all adults, meaning 600 million more people will be eligible.

However, many states are warning that they have insufficient vaccine stocks and experts are calling on the government to prioritise vulnerable groups and badly hit areas.

AFP