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Thursday, April 29, 2021

Millions vote in local polls as India COVID cases soar: Live news - Al Jazeera English

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As India grapples with the world’s worst coronavirus crisis, fires in crematoriums continue to burn around the clock with capital New Delhi reporting one death every four minutes.

Thursday marked another grim record high with 379,257 new infections and 3,645 deaths in the previous 24 hours.

Meanwhile, a mass vaccination drive due to begin on the weekend is also facing a setback as Indians are struggling to register online.

To help cope with the country’s shortages of hospital beds and medical oxygen, allies overseas are sending equipment.

Here are the latest updates:

Sold his SUV to buy oxygen for people: India’s good Samaritans

On Sunday, Maria Mehra, a 56-year-old COVID-19 patient, was gasping for breath at her home in Mumbai.

Her oxygen level had dropped to 76 and she needed immediate hospitalisation. But there were no beds available, given the record number of infections across the metropolis over the past several weeks.

Her desperate family tried frantically to arrange a hospital bed or an oxygen cylinder for her but couldn’t find one until Maria’s brother-in-law Jackson Quadras, 47, reached out to Shahnawaz Shahalam Sheikh.

Read the full story here.

Patients breathe with the help of oxygen provided by a Gurdwara, a place of worship for Sikhs, under a tent installed along the roadside amid the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic in Ghaziabad [Prakash Singh/AFP]

A Delhi family’s desperation: ‘We’re rationing dad’s oxygen’

For the past two weeks, the Yeshudas family has been living in the throes of despair. Residents of Dilshad Colony, a lower-middle-class settlement in the northeast of the capital, New Delhi, all three family members are suffering severe COVID-19 symptoms – fever, nausea, breathlessness and vomiting.

But they have not have been able to see a doctor as all of the nearby government hospitals “are choked with patients and have intimidatingly long queues outside,” explains 27-year-old Ajin Yeshudas. Private doctors are expensive and “well beyond our means”, he adds.

Read the full story here.


Millions vote in final phase of regional polls

Millions have voted in the final phase of a marathon election in India’s West Bengal despite a record-breaking spike in COVID-19 infections and deaths.

Long queues of voters appeared outside polling booths as many in rural parts of the state failed to observe social distancing rules, with some wearing masks but others hanging them loosely on their chins or from their ears.

Packed election rallies attended by mostly maskless crowds including in the restive eastern state, along with huge religious festivals, have been blamed for India’s surge in cases over the past few weeks.

Voters queue up to cast their ballot during the final phase of West Bengal’s state legislative assembly elections in Kolkata [AFP]

Germany to fly medical supplies to India

Germany’s Air Force is preparing to fly medical and oxygen supplies to India, where medicines and equipment are running short.

The Luftwaffe is to fly medical supplies on Saturday, the German defence ministry said.

Two A400M cargo aircraft will also transport an oxygen production plant in the coming week. There are also plans for 16 paramedics to set up the plant and provide instructions about its use.

Some 120 ventilators are to be flown to India in a first flight on Saturday, as announced earlier by the health ministry.


Australian cricketers beat flight ban to flee India

Two Australian cricketers arrived back home after withdrawing from the Indian Premier League and fleeing the Covid-stricken country, circumventing a ban on flights by travelling via the Middle East.

Kane Richardson and Adam Zampa flew into Melbourne from Doha and are currently undergoing quarantine, according to Cricket.com.au.

Earlier this week Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced a temporary ban on arrivals from India due to the worsening coronavirus outbreak, leaving thousands of Australian stranded.

Fourteen of their compatriots remain in India with the league’s eight teams, including David Warner, Steve Smith, Pat Cummins and Glenn Maxwell.

Australia’s Adam Zampa (L) and teammate Kane Richardson (R) wait for the team photo during aTwenty20 cricket match [File: Marty Melville/AFP]

Bangladesh offers medical aid

Bangladesh has offered emergency medicines and medical supplies to its close neighbour India.

“In view of the rapidly deteriorating Corona situation in India, the Government of Bangladesh has offered to dispatch on emergency basis medicines and medical equipment for the people of India who are fighting the pandemic across the country,” said a Bangladesh Foreign Ministry statement.

The medical and medicine supplies include approximately 10,000 vials of injectable anti-viral, oral anti-viral, 30,000 personal protective equipment (PPE) kits, and several thousand zinc, calcium, vitamin C, and other necessary tablets, the statement added.

“The Government of Bangladesh expresses deep sorrow and condolences at the loss of lives in India due to the spread of the COVID pandemic. Bangladesh stands in solidarity with close neighbour India at this critical moment and is ready to provide and mobilise support in every possible way to save lives.”

“The thoughts and prayers of the people of Bangladesh are with the people of India for alleviating their sufferings. Bangladesh is interested to provide further support to India, if needed,” it said.


In pictures: India’s deadly COVID surge follows crowded events

Fuelling the current coronavirus crisis in India was a series of crowded events, like mass rallies by politicians such as Prime Minister Narendra Modi, religious holidays and pilgrimages on the Ganges river.

Here is a look at some of those “super-spreader” events.

Indian holy men, or Naga Sadhu, make their way to take a holy dip in the Ganges river during the Kumbh Mela at Haridwar, Uttarakhand, on April 14, 2021 [Idrees Mohammed/EPA]
Female farmers shout slogans as they take part in a Maha Rally (mega rally), organised by a leading farmers’ organisation, at the local grain market in Amritsar, Punjab on April 18, 2021 [Raminder Pal Singh/EPA]

COVID positive groom weds bride in India

As India grapples with the fast spreading coronavirus pandemic, a COVID-19 positive man decided to get married. The wedding ceremony took place in Ratlam, in Madhya Pradesh.

The bride and the groom and rest of the family members wore PPE (personal protective equipment) kits as a priest also in PPE recited sacred verses and performed the wedding rituals on Monday.

The wedding took place after getting permission from the government.

According to Shyam Lal, the father of the groom, his son was infected a few days before the wedding, but was asymptomatic.


40 countries to supply oxygen: India foreign secretary

India has prioritised imports of oxygen, said Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, adding that 40 countries had pledged their support.

“We are talking about close to 550 oxygen generating plants that are going to come in from different sources from all over the world,” Shringla told a news conference.


Mumbai gravediggers work 24/7 shifts

Two or three months into the COVID-19 crisis, Mumbai gravedigger Sayyed Munir Kamruddin stopped wearing personal protective equipment and gloves.

“I’m not scared of COVID, I have worked with courage. It’s all about courage, not about fear,” said the 52-year-old, who has been digging graves in the mega city for 25 years.

Kamruddin says he and his colleagues are working around the clock to bury COVID-19 victims.

Read the full story here.

Relatives lower the body of a person who died from the coronavirus disease into a grave at a graveyard in Mumbai, India [Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters]

India’s Uttarakhand state suspends Hindu pilgrimage

India’s northern Uttarakhand state has announced the suspension of Char Dham Yatra, an ensemble of four Hindu pilgrimage sites which was supposed to start on May 14, due to the coronavirus crisis.

Only priests of the four temples – Badrinath, Kedarnath, Yamunotri and Gangotri – will perform rituals and puja, said Chief Minister Tirath Singh Rawat, according to Indian media reports.

Uttarakhand, which also hosted the Hindu festival of Kumbh Mela (pitcher festival) attended by millions earlier this month, recorded 6,054 new COVID-19 cases and 108 deaths in the past 24 hours.


‘Friend in need’: Russian humanitarian aid lands in India

Two Russian flights have landed in India, bringing 20 tonnes of medical equipment including oxygen concentrators and lung ventilators, said Moscow’s ambassador to India.

“This is the only way we can defeat COVID-19 – by uniting our endeavors and supporting each other in difficult times,” Nikolay Kudashev tweeted.

In a video tweeted by the Russian Embassy in India, Kudashev said, “The Russian Federation decided to send humanitarian assistance to India in the spirit of the special and privileged strategic partnership between our two countries as well as in the context of our anti-COVID-19 cooperation.”


India’s West Bengal state votes in regional polls

The eighth and final phase of voting is being held in India’s eastern West Bengal state amid record surge in coronavirus infections.

The state recorded logged 17,207 new COVID-19 cases over the last 24 hours, of which 3,821 cases were reported in capital Kolkata, Indian media reports said.

Votes will be counted on May 2. India’s election commission has banned victory processions in the wake of the pandemic.

Catholic nuns from the Missionaries of Charity, the global order of nuns founded by Saint Mother Teresa wait in a line to cast their vote outside a polling station during the eight and final phase of West Bengal state election [Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters]

Suspending IPL not the answer: Australia’s Cummins

Australia speedster Pat Cummins understands how grim India’s coronavirus battle is, but does not think suspending Indian Premier League (IPL) play will help, the Kolkata Knight Riders player said.

The deadly second wave has prompted calls to halt the popular Twenty20 competition, which is being played in a bio-secure bubble and without spectators, but Cummins believes otherwise.

“We are doing everything we can to make sure we don’t take any resources out of the frontline,” the 27-year-old told WION news channel.

“There’s an aspect that us playing every night for three or four hours hopefully contributes to making people stay at home more, or at least… can help them get through each day.

“I don’t think ending the IPL is the answer.”

Meanwhile, the player donated $50,000 to purchase oxygen supplies for India’s hospitals.

“I encourage my fellow IPL players – and anyone around else the world who has been touched by India’s passion and generosity – to contribute,” he said in a statement published on Twitter.


Why is India facing a deadly crunch of oxygen?

A devastating surge in coronavirus infections has exposed India’s dilapidated health infrastructure and a chronic shortage of oxygen – a key treatment for seriously ill COVID-19 patients.

But why is medical oxygen vital? And does India produce enough oxygen?

Find out here.


India’s coronavirus infections cross 18 million

India has reported a record rise in coronavirus cases and deaths over the last 24 hours, pushing its overall caseload above 18 million.

With 379,257 new cases and 3,645 new deaths, India’s total number of cases and deaths are now at 18.38 million and 204,832, respectively, according to health ministry data.

A man waits to cremate his relative, who died due to the coronavirus disease, at a crematorium ground in New Delhi [Danish Siddiqui/Reuters]

US to send more than $100m in COVID-19 supplies to India

The White House said the United States is sending supplies worth more than $100m to India to help it fight the surge of COVID cases.

The supplies, which will begin arriving on Thursday and continue into next week, include 1,000 oxygen cylinders, 15 million N95 masks and one million rapid diagnostic tests, the statement said.

The US also redirected its own order of AstraZeneca vaccine manufacturing supplies to India, which will allow it to make more than 20 million doses, according to the White House.

“Just as India sent assistance to the United States when our hospitals were strained early in the pandemic, the United States is determined to help India in its time of need,” the White House said in a factsheet outlining the aid.


Australia’s Zampa, Richardson exit India after pulling out of IPL

Australian cricketers Adam Zampa and Kane Richardson have flown out of India after withdrawing from the Indian Premier League amid growing concerns over the COVID-19 crisis in the South Asian nation.

Zampa and Richardson, teammates in the Royal Challengers Bangalore, were expected in Australia later on Thursday, the Australian Cricketers’ Association said, easing concerns the pair would be stranded after the Australian government suspended flights from India until May 15.

IPL organisers have faced mounting criticism from pundits and on social media for pushing ahead with the tournament which is being played in a bio-secure bubble amid the health crisis.


Taiwan to send COVID-19 aid to India this weekend

Taiwan has bought 150 oxygen concentrators and plans to send them to India this weekend and is also looking at providing further aid, foreign minister Joseph Wu said.

Wu told reporters that they had been working on an aid package for India and have already purchased 150 oxygen concentrators, which should be sent this weekend.

“We are in the process of buying more oxygen concentrators and buying raw materials from overseas so our companies at home can produce even more,” he said.

The Link Lonk


April 29, 2021 at 06:09PM
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/4/29/india-covid-cases-cross-18m-us-to-send-100m-supplies-live-news

Millions vote in local polls as India COVID cases soar: Live news - Al Jazeera English

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