India is hiding its Covid crisis – and the whole world will suffer for it.

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan
This is very concerning. What India does within it's borders is clearly non of the worlds business but the problem is such a huge pool of infection in India is the perfect storm to brew a super-coronavirus that jumps the vaccine shield being built up across the world.

@Mods This is a issue of global import with the potential risk it poses for a new super variant to emerge in India. I expect there will be sustained attempt to censor the contents of this article by Indian members who will try to have it removed on pretext of "not being appropriate". However as I said this issue has global ramifications and thus should be left and addressed. Many thanks in advance.


Modi’s government had a choice between saving lives and saving face. It has chosen the latter

Workers cremate people who have died of Covid-19 at a crematorium outside Siliguri on Tuesday. Epidemiologists believe the country’s reported death toll is only a fraction of the true figure.

Workers cremate people who have died of Covid-19 at a crematorium outside Siliguri on Tuesday. Epidemiologists believe the country’s reported death toll is only a fraction of the true figure. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Thu 6 May 2021 11.17 BST
Last modified on Thu 6 May 2021 21.02 BST


A few years ago, as Narendra Modi came into power, I worked on an investigative report about India hiding its malaria deaths. In traveling from tribal Odisha to the Indian national health ministry in New Delhi, my colleague and I watched thousands of cases disappear: some malaria deaths, first noted in handwritten local health ledgers, never appeared in central government reports; other malaria deaths were magically transformed into deaths of heart attack or fever. The discrepancy was massive: India reported 561 malaria deaths that year. Experts predicted the actual number was as high as 200,000.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...e-borders-as-covid-wave-spreads-across-region

Now, with Covid ravaging the country, desperate Indians have taken to Twitter to ask for oxygen cylinders or beg hospitals for an open bed.

The crisis has been exacerbated by the government’s concealment of critical information. Between India’s long history of hiding and undercounting illness deaths and its much more recent history of restraining and suppressing the press, Modi’s administration has made it impossible to find accurate information about the virus’s hold in the country. Blocking that information will only hurt millions within the country. It will also stymie global efforts to stop the Covid-19 pandemic, and new variants of the virus, at India’s border.

Advertisement

Epidemiologists in India and abroad estimate that the country’s official reported Covid-19 death toll – around 222,000 at time of publication – accounts for only a fraction of the real number. The director of the US-based Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation has estimated that India is only detecting 3-4% of actual cases. Other experts point to total excess deaths in cities such as Mumbai as proof that there could be 60% to 70% more deaths from Covid-19 than the government is admitting to.

There are various reasons India could be cooking the books on Covid deaths. For one, the utter failure of the public health system makes it difficult to account for the millions of bodies passing through hospitals, clinics and those dying in their own home. Despite having become one of the largest economies in the world, Indian state and federal governments spend a dismal amount on healthcare, with an investment of less than 1% of its GDP, one of the lowest rates in the world.

But systemic failure is only one part of the puzzle. The reigning party of the Indian government touted its success in curbing the virus very early in the pandemic, and has never let go of that narrative. As bodies burned in funeral pyres across Uttar Pradesh in April, Yogi Adityanath – the state’s chief minister and a key Modi lackey – claimed that everything was under control and repeatedly refused to announce new lockdown measures, even as he himself contracted Covid-19.

This denialist rhetoric is occurring at almost every level. Like India’s see-no-evil approach to malaria or tuberculosis, its Covid obfuscation suppresses “bad news” in order to buoy the country’s international image and the government party’s domestic standing. Not all countries with struggling health systems do this. Some actually at times overcount deaths from other viruses in order to get more humanitarian aid. But undercounting disease is, in many ways, far more sinister. Modi’s government had a choice between saving face and saving lives, and has chosen mass death.


India's Covid obfuscation suppresses 'bad news' to buoy its image and the government party’s domestic standing

While undercounting disease is a longstanding problem in India, the assault on press freedom is far more recent. Since Modi came into power in 2015, the freedom of India’s expansive media culture has dramatically shrunk, according to sources including Reporters Without Borders. In the last few years, the government has sued or prosecuted several news organizations and journalists, citing defamation or other even more dubious rationales. Controversial laws such as the 2000 Information Technology Act allow for what seem like increasingly frequent, and grossly arbitrary and politically motivated, crackdowns on freedom of speech and press.

Indian journalists tell me they are often asked to self-censor their reporting on the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as what they say on social media, for fear of inciting the ire of the government. Many were understandably incensed last week when the Indian central government reportedly made Twitter and Facebook remove posts critical of the government’s Covid measures. Meanwhile, India continues to be one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists to work, and more than 165 journalists have allegedly died of Covid-19 while covering the crisis itself. (Last month Kakoli Bhattacharya, an Indian journalist who worked as a news assistant for the Guardian, died of Covid.) In the absence of trustworthy Covid information from their own government, Indians are mostly reliant on social media and foreign reporting for the story of what’s actually happening.

The result is a public health nightmare for India – and also, I fear, for the global community, which, just as many countries are breathing a sigh of relief, could face another Covid wave that includes new variants. We can learn from other epidemics what that might look like: India was one of the last countries to eradicate polio, and is one of 15 countries that still have a significant number of people with leprosy. India also has the third largest HIV/Aids epidemic in the world. India’s struggles with diseases that have been eradicated or largely ameliorated elsewhere leaves a backdoor for global public health threats and costs billions of dollars in disease burden. These health crises also harm international travel, trade and other economic indicators, creating new challenges not only for India but for its allies, as well.

India likes to tout itself as the world’s largest democracy – and use that moral authority to protect its standing in the global economy and the international diplomatic community. But with a dark curtain separating the reality of the country’s Covid-19 crisis from the rest of the world, India’s standing and authority are at risk. If the country continues to choose political expediency over transparency in the days to come, the people of India, scrambling to protect their families, are the first victims, but far from the last.

  • Ankita Rao is a news editor at the Guardian US
  • This article was amended on 6 May 2021 to clarify that government spending on healthcare in India is less than 1% of GDP.

 

Jackdaws

Experienced member
Messages
2,759
Reactions
1 1,583
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
Modi just lost a major election in Bengal and lost Municipal elections across multiple counties in its stronghold and biggest Indian state - Uttar Pradesh. It is highly unlikely he will get a second term. Even a 5% swing away from his total votes in 2019 will result in his party being reduced to a minority. I expect it to be a total rout.
 

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan
Modi just lost a major election in Bengal
I am not sure, In South Asia the masses are ignorant and often just vote banks. I don't think Bengal was BJP stronghold anyway. I stand to be corrected.

Meantime the true scale of deaths in India is manifesting itself in how poor are noe dumping covid bodies into the River Ganga as prices of wood for the funeral pyhres have shot up and even the Brahmin priests are charging extorinate rates - taking advantage of supply/demand economics/

Covid Panic In Bihar Town As Over 40 Bodies Wash Up On Banks Of Ganga​

The local administration believes the bodies floated down from Uttar Pradesh and belong to Covid patients whose relatives may have been unable to find space to cremate or bury them.



Warning: Content could be disturbing although the images have been blurred by Indian TV.

 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Moderator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
9,764
Reactions
119 19,784
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
Meanwhile we have region outside of India with 10X less testing per capita and 10X more repressed media.

Who knows what the situation actually is over there (the discussions/leaks in social media sure aren't good to look at), I guess it will all show up in the census in the end....if they even do those fairly.
 

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan
Meanwhile we have region outside of India with 10X less testing per capita and 10X more repressed media.
Nigiri, that effort won't cut ice. You know I am not some dumb fanboy. You already know how harsh I can be on Pakistan. This is not question of tests. I can also question the numbers of tests being done in India given the population. You can treat both stats for both countries as suspect. But you can't cover or hide hospitals being swamped. Dead everywhere. You have that in India. The situation is grim in Pakistan but in no place has the levels yet reached where hospitals have been overwhelmed or media would report it. You see when infection and deaths reach catastrophic levels you don't need tests to tell you when your drowning literally in dead bodies.

You can try as much to deflect by using this stupid excuse or pointing fingers to Pakistan.
 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Moderator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
9,764
Reactions
119 19,784
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
I can also question the numbers of tests being done in India given the population.

Its literally why I mentioned per capita. Not total tests (which is like 50 - 100 times more).

So you would have to question Pakistans 10X more on same logic simply....and probably more than that given relative state of its own media.

We hold our institutions to a far higher standard, far different to one having half the savings per capita of Chad now...

So we set up the whole thing for far more criticism in the first place.....both in realised numbers (during a crisis) and media coverage of it.

Really don't know what the state/access of hospitals are like in Pakistan and Bangladesh (relative to India) to begin with to be "swamped". Not so great from accounts we have heard from the one-way stream of medical visa folks over last few decades.

So where the criticism's crediblity is from matters quite a lot.

It is simply more credible coming from those ahead of us, rather than those well behind with entrenched (above criticism) cabals having gotten them there and stuck there.....
 

crixus

Contributor
Messages
1,021
Reactions
1,160
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
I am not sure, In South Asia the masses are ignorant and often just vote banks. I don't think Bengal was BJP stronghold anyway. I stand to be corrected.

Meantime the true scale of deaths in India is manifesting itself in how poor are noe dumping covid bodies into the River Ganga as prices of wood for the funeral pyhres have shot up and even the Brahmin priests are charging extorinate rates - taking advantage of supply/demand economics/

Covid Panic In Bihar Town As Over 40 Bodies Wash Up On Banks Of Ganga​

The local administration believes the bodies floated down from Uttar Pradesh and belong to Covid patients whose relatives may have been unable to find space to cremate or bury them.



Warning: Content could be disturbing although the images have been blurred by Indian TV.

Again enjoying a feast
 

Jackdaws

Experienced member
Messages
2,759
Reactions
1 1,583
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
Nigiri, that effort won't cut ice. You know I am not some dumb fanboy. You already know how harsh I can be on Pakistan. This is not question of tests. I can also question the numbers of tests being done in India given the population. You can treat both stats for both countries as suspect. But you can't cover or hide hospitals being swamped. Dead everywhere. You have that in India. The situation is grim in Pakistan but in no place has the levels yet reached where hospitals have been overwhelmed or media would report it. You see when infection and deaths reach catastrophic levels you don't need tests to tell you when your drowning literally in dead bodies.

You can try as much to deflect by using this stupid excuse or pointing fingers to Pakistan.
I certainly hope things don't get as bad in Pak as they have in India. Ideological and historical divisions aside, it's not something one likes to see.
 

Jackdaws

Experienced member
Messages
2,759
Reactions
1 1,583
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
I am not sure, In South Asia the masses are ignorant and often just vote banks. I don't think Bengal was BJP stronghold anyway. I stand to be corrected.

Meantime the true scale of deaths in India is manifesting itself in how poor are noe dumping covid bodies into the River Ganga as prices of wood for the funeral pyhres have shot up and even the Brahmin priests are charging extorinate rates - taking advantage of supply/demand economics/

Covid Panic In Bihar Town As Over 40 Bodies Wash Up On Banks Of Ganga​

The local administration believes the bodies floated down from Uttar Pradesh and belong to Covid patients whose relatives may have been unable to find space to cremate or bury them.



Warning: Content could be disturbing although the images have been blurred by Indian TV.

I doubt this has to do with priests or lack of firewood. Bodies have probably just been dumped out of fear. Either way, it is disturbing.
 

crixus

Contributor
Messages
1,021
Reactions
1,160
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
I doubt this has to do with priests or lack of firewood. Bodies have probably just been dumped out of fear. Either way, it is disturbing.
No one let their deads mistreated, it's happening for centuries to wash the ashes (some time partially dead ) in Ganga from Banaras.
It's not something that is happening the first time. The thing which is happening for the first time people ( this time a Pakistani ) feasting on the misery of others.
Counting of the dead does not matter to those who have lost their loved ones for them a single death is like losing a whole world.
 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Moderator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
9,764
Reactions
119 19,784
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
I doubt this has to do with priests or lack of firewood. Bodies have probably just been dumped out of fear. Either way, it is disturbing.

There is persistent problem even in regular years of insufficient cremation of corpse and they (isolated or in numbers) end up in the river in this sorry state from time to time.....accounting for say even if 1% of very large population slips through the normal procedures for cremation rites.

I have seen pictures of this across the years from 90s, 2000s, 2010s etc....many from tourists that ventured into these areas.

Covid now would exacerbate that existing situation on top.

There is simply little development in rural areas (esp in North) for lot of basic matters (so crisis makes its lot worse) and will not be for very long time till huge thresholds are met in the raw development+wealth scale to percolate past urban areas. This is why its lot more important to focus on cities and towns (and designing them to bring in and have more urbanisation of country like say South has done)....but that is longer larger topic to get into.

Few days back I listen to my friend very harrowing detail of what has gone on in his home-village of UP. Simply the facility does not exist there yet to cope with such a thing of this scale.....even though vast majority do convalesce and survive (by simple age factor)...but it burns through lot of old people and various younger ones with underlying conditions.
 

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan
^I am not going to enter into discussion with members who are so clouded by nationalism that despite bodies piling all over, dead floating in rivers, global media reporting on the hell that has been unleashed in India with Indian government actively censoring, hiding the true scale of the disaster including even forcing twitter and facebook to take own pages people still insist on saying "everything is cool". And things are worse in Pakistan because they don't do tests. Apparently the scale of the disaster is measured in the tests and not the mountain of dead bodies. There is no point is discussing with people who hide behind convoluted figures and ignore the reality. The whole world knows the truth though.

More crude attempts at cover up by Indian state.

 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Moderator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
9,764
Reactions
119 19,784
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
Modi just lost a major election in Bengal and lost Municipal elections across multiple counties in its stronghold and biggest Indian state - Uttar Pradesh. It is highly unlikely he will get a second term. Even a 5% swing away from his total votes in 2019 will result in his party being reduced to a minority. I expect it to be a total rout.

The buck stops at Modi govt in many ways (along with a number of state govts that have handled this extra bad).

That cannot be denied. They have messed up on huge number of fronts (where govt is concerned and has responsibility) that have been discussed in some depth in the India corona thread.

Indian media is daily doing its job in holding all involved feet to the fire. Just like it was done and continue to be done in the West and other countries that developed this crucial institution for the citizen's access to information....when the massive lapses happened there w.r.t covid.

First step to dealing with a problem is openly showing it is there (and the failures associated with creating the problem).

One can contrast this with the place where the virus originally started....w.r.t media independence and credibility....and the final culpability that rests with that regime given the crucial early months.
 

Raptor

Contributor
Messages
534
Reactions
646
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
Meanwhile we have region outside of India with 10X less testing per capita and 10X more repressed media.

Who knows what the situation actually is over there (the discussions/leaks in social media sure aren't good to look at), I guess it will all show up in the census in the end....if they even do those fairly.
Pakistan has still not end polio
Even earlier they used to test less and cases were still popping after all countries ended polio
 

Jackdaws

Experienced member
Messages
2,759
Reactions
1 1,583
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
The buck stops at Modi govt in many ways (along with a number of state govts that have handled this extra bad).

That cannot be denied. They have messed up on huge number of fronts (where govt is concerned and has responsibility) that have been discussed in some depth in the India corona thread.

Indian media is daily doing its job in holding all involved feet to the fire. Just like it was done and continue to be done in the West and other countries that developed this crucial institution for the citizen's access to information....when the massive lapses happened there w.r.t covid.

First step to dealing with a problem is openly showing it is there (and the failures associated with creating the problem).

One can contrast this with the place where the virus originally started....w.r.t media independence and credibility....and the final culpability that rests with that regime given the crucial early months.
Please check Indian media channels like Republic and Times Now. They are trying to salvage the situation for the Govt. - it's like one is Fox News and the other is Newsmax. Yes, many channels are also reporting on the fiasco unfolding.
Pakistan has still not end polio
Even earlier they used to test less and cases were still popping after all countries ended polio
Let's be frank. They don't have the deadly and virulent strain that we do. Apparently that strain has entered Nepal and is wrecking havoc there. Not that we wish such a mutant and deadly strain should enter Pak, but if it does it would also expose the limitation of their health system or indeed if any country.
 

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan
The fact is when cremations grounds are overwhelmed and people begin disposing of dead bodies in rivers it tells us a story quite in contrast to what numbers, stats, test results are touted by the government of Modi which has gone to lengths to hide the true scale of the disaster. It does appear that the Indian strain is more lethal then other strains.

The Indian variant has now been detected in UK and is spreading fast. Public Health England is very cocerned.

Interesting report by Indian anchor who deserves respect that she is bravely exposing the truth. When you get bodies floating down rivers in the Indian heartland you know the official government figures are fudged.

 

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan

WHO says India Covid variant of 'global concern'​

Published
12 hours ago


Related Topics
Small bottles of the Covishield Covid vaccine
image copyrightGetty Images
image captionThe WHO has classified the coronavirus variant first found in India last year as a "variant of global concern"
The World Health Organization (WHO) has classified the coronavirus variant first found in India last year as a "variant of global concern".
It said preliminary studies show the B.1.617 mutation spreads more easily than other variants and requires further study.
The variant has already spread to more than 30 countries, the WHO says.
Three other variants from the UK, South Africa and Brazil have been given the same designation.
A mutation is elevated from a "variant of interest" to a "variant of concern" (VOC) when it shows evidence of fulfilling at least one of several criteria, including easy transmission, more severe illness, reduced neutralisation by antibodies or reduced effectiveness of treatment and vaccines.
The variant is being studied to establish whether it is responsible for a deadly surge in India, which is currently overwhelming hospitals and crematoriums.
India reported 366,161 new infections and 3,754 deaths on Monday, down from record peaks. Experts say the actual figures could be far higher than reported.

 

Jackdaws

Experienced member
Messages
2,759
Reactions
1 1,583
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
The fact is when cremations grounds are overwhelmed and people begin disposing of dead bodies in rivers it tells us a story quite in contrast to what numbers, stats, test results are touted by the government of Modi which has gone to lengths to hide the true scale of the disaster. It does appear that the Indian strain is more lethal then other strains.

The Indian variant has now been detected in UK and is spreading fast. Public Health England is very cocerned.

Interesting report by Indian anchor who deserves respect that she is bravely exposing the truth. When you get bodies floating down rivers in the Indian heartland you know the official government figures are fudged.

The bodies were dumped by ambulance drivers. Not families for lack of cremation space or wood or because of priests.

 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Moderator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
9,764
Reactions
119 19,784
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
Pakistan has still not end polio
Even earlier they used to test less and cases were still popping after all countries ended polio

It is different subject to get into. You don't test, you don't have a problem (officially).

We simply don't have any real information on countries that do very little testing or are opaque in their media narratives.

Extreme case is source of contagion (PRC), anyone honest+reasonable believe the numbers they (govt) have put out given the total lack of media freedom there? In fact they were busy locking up and jailing journalists that were covering things outside of the party line....during the crucial initial months and ended up adding to the suppressing of information to see how lethal this would be for the whole world later.

If people criticize that govt/country fairly (and with appropriate intensity) before they do India's current crisis (and also hold their own govts feet to fire if its low testing + low info regime) , they earn credibility IMO.

In the end anyway it will show up in the raw mortality numbers in end of year, population surveys and census etc....to compare with the average number of deaths in previous years.

Please check Indian media channels like Republic and Times Now. They are trying to salvage the situation for the Govt. - it's like one is Fox News and the other is Newsmax. Yes, many channels are also reporting on the fiasco unfolding.

Let's be frank. They don't have the deadly and virulent strain that we do. Apparently that strain has entered Nepal and is wrecking havoc there. Not that we wish such a mutant and deadly strain should enter Pak, but if it does it would also expose the limitation of their health system or indeed if any country.

I don't like the bulk of Indian TV media.....especially those that are clear sycophants for ruling govt/party or sycophants for opposition.

Lately I just follow "The Print" and a few specific journalists/twitter handles I know are credible and relatively independent and non-partisan.

The extra virulent strain is just one factor that caused this second wave tragedy (striking past India's greater institutional basis relative to the region)

- There was gross under-preparation by certain states (relative to their means + capacities), this is playing out in different states performance right now in handling it. Delhi has been especially bad.

- Spread by religious gathering, political rally etc, when these could have been totally avoided along with other activities outside of basic economic livelihood (w.r.t opening up).

- Inadequate central pressure on states run by it (NDA) and states not run by it too w.r.t above on the things (O2 capacity etc) that they are pointing fingers at each other now. I understand health is a state issue in the end, but centre did not apply full pressure + followup (on things like onsite O2 generation that was started last year) where it should have to get the job done.

- No clear technocratic apolitical taskforce set up last year when 1st crisis and lockdown happened, so that any future emergencies like this one had as many non-politicians running it as possible without political interference. Rather than just have some advisors for health ministry. Such a taskforce would have likely done the lab testing/analysis at scale (which was not done, a big miss by India's developed capacity in the end) to detect new strains well and direct policy to steer for the extra transmission rate they give.

- Vaccination program just lacking the succour of full logistical utilisation. It needed big information campaign like was done for swacch bharat.....an participation of private sector past the biggest hospitals. There was big mismatch of doses available and uptake by citizenry for crucial weeks prior to the 2nd wave.

Politicians are good at taking credit or deflecting to something they can...... but not criticism.

They will not admit this failure is what is going to sting extra hard.

Thank God for the spread of journalists on the ground, imagine if India was totalitarian state that just let millions die because it doesnt even report the problem on ground to population to apply pressure on forces that be.
 

Kaptaan

Experienced member
Think Tank Analyst
Messages
1,734
Reactions
4,073
Nation of residence
United Kingdom
Nation of origin
Pakistan

Ambulance staff in India accused of dumping Covid dead in the Ganges​


Corpses have washed up on the banks of the river for the second consecutive day


By Joe Wallen in Mumbai 11 May 2021 • 3:32pm


Relatives of a Covid-19 victim place floral garlands on the body before a cremation by the River Ganges – a ceremony which has becomes commonplace


Ambulance staff in India have been accused of dumping the bodies of Covid-19 victims into the Ganges River, as corpses washed up on its banks for the second consecutive day.
On Tuesday, an MP from India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Janardhan Singh Sigriwal, claimed that the bodies of the Covid dead were being thrown into the river by ambulance staff in the northern state of Bihar.
Video was then shared by leading Indian news channel NDTV showing ambulance staff apparently throwing corpses into the river.
On Tuesday, more than a dozen bodies were seen floating in the Ghazipur district of Uttar Pradesh, one of the Indian states worst affected by the country’s enormous second wave of the virus.
Local residents spotted the decomposing corpses in the water and alerted the authorities, who have launched an investigation into where the bodies came from. Their condition suggested they had been in the water for several days.
Police patrols will be established in the area to ensure further bodies are not dumped in the river. Ghazipur is 35 miles upstream from where approximately 100 bodies washed up on Monday, in the Buxar district of Bihar state. Healthcare infrastructure in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, two of India’s poorest states, has collapsed under rising case numbers.
Placeholder image for youtube video: NUkxnbubguE

Villagers in Buxar told the Telegraph that some bodies in the river were partially burnt and had been dumped in the river because crematoriums in the district and further upstream were overwhelmed with Covid-19 deaths.
“During normal times, the crematorium here would usually see between two and three bodies daily. But, the number of dead bodies arriving each day is nearer to 60,” said one resident of the village of Chausa.
Rural Bihar and Uttar Pradesh are very poor and local activists say the price for cremation has skyrocketed from 400 rupees (£3.85) up to 10,000, with shortages of wood also reported, which has forced residents to leave bodies in the river.
“Poverty is one reason for the dead bodies flowing in the Ganges because it costs a lot to burn dead bodies,” added one resident of the Gahmar village.
On Sunday, dozens of bodies believed to be those of Covid victims, were also reported floating on the River Yamuna in the Hamirpur district of Uttar Pradesh.
While a significant drop in testing has led to a slight fall in the number of new daily cases, India’s second wave shows no sign of slowing down.
Twenty Indian states continue to report a positivity rate of over 20 per cent, with Goa at the highest at 48 per cent, while India recorded a seven-day average of new cases at a record global high of 390,995.

 

Follow us on social media

Latest posts

Top Bottom