Indian PM under pressure to enact strict anti-COVID lockdown measures - Action News
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Indian PM under pressure to enact strict anti-COVID lockdown measures

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi faced growing pressure Friday to impose a strict nationwide lockdown, as a startling surge in coronavirus cases that has pummelled the country's health system shows no signs of abating.

Friday marks another record-breaking daily COVID-19 case count for India

Surging coronavirus increases pressure for nationwide lockdown in India

3 years ago
Duration 1:00
Medical experts and political leaders are stressing the need for more restrictions across India, as COVID-19 case numbers keep increasing. Even merchants support such restrictions.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi faced growing pressure Friday to impose a strict nationwide lockdowndespite the economic pain it will exactas a startling surge in coronavirus casesshows no signs of abating.

Many medical experts, opposition leaders and even Supreme Court judges are calling for national restrictions, arguing that a patchwork of state rules is insufficient to quell the rise in infections.

Indian television stations broadcast images of patients lying on stretchers outside hospitals waiting to be admitted, with hospital beds and critical oxygen in short supply.

People infected with COVID-19 in villages are being treated in makeshift outdoor clinics, with IV drips hanging from trees.

As deaths soar, crematoriums and burial grounds have been swamped with bodies, and relatives often wait hours to perform the last rites for their loved ones.

Merchants support tougher measures

The situation is so dramatic that among those calling for a strict lockdown are merchants who know their businesses will be affected but see no other way out.

People wear masks as they shop at a vegetable and fruit market in Kochi, India, on Friday. (Arunchandra Bose/AFP/Getty Images)

"Only if our health is good, will we be able to earn," said Aruna Ramjee, a florist in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru. "The lockdown will help everyone, and coronavirus spread will also come down."

The alarming picture has gripped the world's attention, just as many developed countries are seeing vaccinations drive down infections and are beginning to open up.

India's surge has served as a warning to other countries with fragile health systems and also has weighed heavily on global efforts to end the pandemic since the country is a major vaccine producer but has been forced to delay exports of shots.

Infections have swelled in India since February in a disastrous turn blamed on more contagious variants as well as government decisions to allow massive crowds to gather for religious festivals and political rallies.

10 days of 3,000-plus deaths

On Friday, India reported a new daily record of 414,188 confirmed cases and 3,915 additional deaths. The official daily death count has stayed over 3,000 for the past 10 days.

That brings the total to more than 21.4 million COVID-19 infections and over 234,000 deaths. Experts say even those dramatic tolls are undercounts.

Health-care workers attend to COVID-19 patients in New Delhi on Friday. (Prakash Singh/AFP via Getty Images)

Over the past month, nearly a dozen of India's 28 federal states have announced some restrictions, but they fall short of a nationwide lockdown imposed last year that experts credit with helping to contain the virus for a time.

Those measures, which lasted two months, included stay-at-home orders, a ban on international and domestic flights and a suspension of passenger service on the nation's extensive rail system.

The government provided free wheat, rice and lentils to the poorest for nearly a year and also small cash payments, while Modi also vowed an economic relief package of more than $260 billion.

But the lockdown, imposed on four hours' notice, also stranded tens of millions of migrant workers who were left jobless and fled to villages, with many dying along the way.

A major economic contraction

The national restrictions caused the economy to contract by a staggering 23 per centin the second quarter last year, though a strong recovery was under way before infections skyrocketed recently.

Some who remember last year's ordeal remain against a full lockdown.

Employees of a charitable society check an oxygen concentrator machine placed near beds for coronavirus patients at a care centre in Amritsar, India, on Friday (Narinder Nanu/AFP/Getty Images)

"If I had to choose between dying of the virus and dying of hunger, I would choose the virus," said Shyam Mishra, a construction worker who was already forced to change jobs and start selling vegetables when a lockdown was imposed on the capital, New Delhi.

Modi has so far left the responsibility for fighting the virus in this current surge to poorly equipped state governments and faced accusations of doing too little.

His government has countered that it is doing everything it can.

Amid a shortage of oxygen, the Supreme Court has stepped in. It ordered the federal government to increase the supply of medical oxygen to New Delhi after 12 COVID-19 patients died last week after a hospital ran out of supplies for 80 minutes.

Three justices called on the government this week to impose a lockdown, including a ban on mass gatherings.

A man walks past closed shops in a market during a lockdown imposed to curb the spread of the coronavirus in Jammu, India, on Friday. (Channi Anand/The Associated Press)

Dr. Randeep Guleria, a government health expert, said he believes that a total lockdown is needed like last year, especially in areas where more than 10 per centof those tested have contracted COVID-19.

Rahul Gandhi, an opposition Congress party leader, in a letter to Modi on Friday, also demanded a total lockdown and government support to feed the poor, warning "the human cost will result in many more tragic consequences for our people."

Still, Modi's policy of selected lockdowns is supported by some experts, including Vineeta Bal, a scientist at the National Institute of Immunology.

Balsaid different states have different needs, and local particularities need to be taken into account for any policy to work.

Passengers arrive at a railway station to board their trains during a state imposed lockdown amid the coronavirus pandemic in Amritsar, India, on Friday. (Narinder Nanu/AFP/Getty Images)

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