India records 320,000 new cases with '115 people dying per hour' as foreign help arrives

This video contains distressing images

ITV News Correspondent John Ray reports on the desperate scramble for oxygen and drugs to treat Covid, being sold on the street at extortionate prices


India recorded more than 320,000 new cases of coronavirus infection on Tuesday as the country’s sinking health system started receiving much-needed support from foreign nations.

Tuesday’s 323,144 new infections raised India’s total past 17.6 million, behind only the United States.

It ended a five-day streak of recording the largest single-day increases in any country throughout the pandemic, but the decline likely reflects lower weekend testing rather than reduced spread of the virus.

The health ministry also reported another 2,771 deaths in 24 hours, with roughly 115 Indians succumbing to the disease every hour.

The latest fatalities pushed India’s death toll to 197,894, behind the US, Brazil and Mexico. Experts have also said even these figures are probably an undercount.


'You are seeing the funerals...many people are dying': Doctor in India says the government and health ministers in the country are unprepared for this coronavirus wave

Dr Manish Jangra told ITV News he fears the government in India and health ministers said they were prepared, but they weren't.

He said: "They were not prepared for anything, our health minister used to say 'we are prepared, we are prepared'."

"Our prime minister used to say 'we will fight this corona, we will fight this corona', and you are seeing the funerals.

"You are seeing many people are dying, dying, dying."


'They say the only people dying from Covid are dying in hospital...I know what the truth is': Jitendra who volunteers at the Covid mortuary says he is picking up countless bodies

Jitendra Singh Shunty, who volunteers on Covid-19's frontline in India, now sees death every single day - his life is now dominated entirely by it.

Each day he collects bodies - often families who died side-by-side from coronavirus.

At the mortuary, even the dead have to wait their turn.

"I don't know whether to be angry or laugh. They say the only people dying from Covid are dying in hospital."

"When I am picking up 50 dead bodies, I know what the truth is."

Foreign ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi tweeted photos on Tuesday of the first shipment of medical aid India received from Britain. It included 100 ventilators and 95 oxygen concentrators.

Other nations including the US, Germany, Israel, France and Pakistan have also promised medical aid to India.

The countries have said they will supply oxygen, diagnostic tests, treatments, ventilators and protective gear to help India at a time of crisis which World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Monday called "beyond heartbreaking".

The surge, spurred by insidious new variants of coronavirus, has undermined the Indian government’s premature claims of victory over the pandemic.

A relative of a Covid victim reacts at a crematorium in Jammu Credit: Channi Anand/AP

The country of nearly 1.4 billion people is facing a chronic shortage of space on its intensive care wards. Hospitals are experiencing oxygen shortages and many people are being forced to turn to makeshift facilities for mass burials and cremations as the country’s funeral services have become overwhelmed.

Meanwhile, in a bid to tackle the shortage of beds, Indian authorities are turning to train carriages, which have been converted into isolation wards.

India has also started airlifting oxygen tankers to states in need. Special trains with oxygen supplies are also running in the country.


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The White House was moving to share raw materials for the production of the AstraZeneca vaccine with India by diverting some US orders to the vaccine manufacturer, Serum Institute of India.

White House Covid-19 coordinator Jeff Zients told The Associated Press the Biden administration was working to satisfy other “key requests” from the Indian government, namely for personal protective equipment, tests, therapeutics and supplies of oxygen and respiratory assistance devices.

Epidemiologists from America’s Centres for Disease Control and Prevention were also expected to soon travel to India to assist with its virus response.