The Niagara Falls Review

India’s biggest cities ordered to shut down

New virus cases hit the 200,000 mark resulting in stay-at-home orders in New Delhi, Mumbai

- ASHOK SHARMA

NEW DELHI — India’s two largest cities imposed stringent restrictio­ns on movement and one planned to use hotels and banquet halls to treat coronaviru­s patients as new infections in the country shot past 200,000 Thursday amid a devastatin­g surge that is straining a fragile health system.

The soaring cases and deaths come just months after India thought it had seen the worst of the pandemic — and have forced the country to delay exports of vaccines abroad. India is a major producer of COVID-19 shots, and its pivot to focus on domestic demand has weighed heavily on global efforts to end the pandemic.

New Delhi announced stay-athome orders for the weekend, though essential workers will be able to move about if they have a pass from local authoritie­s. Restaurant­s, malls, gyms and spas will be shut down. Movie theatres will close on weekends, but can operate on weekdays at a third of their capacity.

Arvind Kejriwal, Delhi’s top elected official, said that despite rise in infections, 5,000 hospital beds are still available in the capital and more capacity is being added. But still, more than a dozen hotels and wedding banquet halls were ordered to be converted into COVID-19 centres where doctors from nearby hospitals will treat the moderately ill.

“The surge is alarming,” said S.K. Sarin, a government health expert in New Delhi.

The moves in the capital came after similar measures were imposed in the worst-hit state of Maharashtr­a, home to financial capital, Mumbai. The bustle of India’s biggest city ebbed after authoritie­s closed most industries, businesses and public places Wednesday night and put limits on the movement of people for 15 days. Train and plane travel was still allowed, however.

In recent days, the city has seen an exodus of panic-stricken day labourers, hauling backpacks and flocking to overcrowde­d trains.

Dozens of other towns and cities have also imposed nighttime curfews.

The surge in cases was weighing on hospitals in Maharashtr­a, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and several other states, where many reported a shortage of oxygen tanks. Imran Sheikh, a resident of the city of Pune in Maharashtr­a, said he was asked to supply his own oxygen tank for a relative undergoing COVID-19 treatment.

Cremation and burial grounds in the worst-hit areas were finding it difficult to cope with the increasing number of bodies arriving for last rites, according to Indian media reports.

Shahid Jamil, a virologist, said the recent local and state elections with massive political rallies and a major Hindu festival during which hundreds of thousands of devotees bathed in the Ganges River were supersprea­der events.

 ?? RAJESH KUMAR SINGH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? India reported more than 200,000 new coronaviru­s cases, skyrocketi­ng past 14 million overall as an intensifyi­ng outbreak puts a grim weight on its fragile health-care system.
RAJESH KUMAR SINGH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS India reported more than 200,000 new coronaviru­s cases, skyrocketi­ng past 14 million overall as an intensifyi­ng outbreak puts a grim weight on its fragile health-care system.

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