Indian court threatens to punish government amid record number of deaths
A New Delhi court has said it will start punishing government officials for failing to deliver life-saving oxygen as Indian hospitals continue to struggle to secure steady supplies.
On Sunday, India recorded a slight drop in new infections with 392,488 from a high of 401,993 in the previous 24 hours. Despite this decline, deaths jumped by a record 3,689, bringing the total to 215,542. Experts believe both figures are an undercount.
The government has been using the railroad, air force and navy to rush oxygen tankers to worst-hit areas where overwhelmed hospitals are unable to cope.
Twelve Covid-19 patients on high-flow oxygen died on Saturday at a hospital in New Delhi after it ran out of the supply for 80 minutes, said SCL Gupta, director of Batra Hospital.
The Times of India newspaper reported another 16 deaths in two hospitals in southern Andhra Pradesh state, and six in a Gurgaon hospital on the outskirts of New Delhi because of the oxygen shortage.
With the government unable to maintain a steady supply of oxygen, several hospital authorities sought a court intervention in the Indian capital where a lockdown has been extended by a week to contain the wave of infections.
“Water has gone above the head. Enough is enough,” the New Delhi High Court said, adding it would start punishing government officials if supplies of oxygen allocated to hospitals were not delivered.
“We can’t have people dying,” said Justices Vipin Sanghi and Rekha Patil.
India records its highest number of coronavirus cases with more than 400,000
Doctors left to comfort dying coronavirus patients in India as they feel 'helpless'
The court said it would start contempt proceedings.
New Delhi recorded 412 deaths in the past 24 hours, the highest since the pandemic started.
The army opened its hospitals to civilians in a desperate bid to control the massive humanitarian crisis. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government also gave emergency financial powers to allow the army to set up new quarantine facilities and hospitals and to buy equipment.
The military also called up 600 doctors who had retired in the past few years. The navy deployed 200 nursing assistants in civilian hospitals, a government statement said.
ITV News reports on the fight to provide the poor with free oxygen amid a flourishing black market
On Saturday, India said all adults 18 and over could receive shots. Since January, nearly 10% of Indians have received one dose. Only around 1.5% have received both, despite the country being one of the world’s biggest producers of vaccines.
India has so far given more than 156 million vaccine doses. Some states have already said they do not have enough for everyone, and even the ongoing effort to inoculate people older than 45 is sputtering.
The United States, Britain, Germany and several other nations are rushing therapeutics, rapid virus tests and oxygen to India, along with some materials needed for India to boost its domestic production of Covid-19 vaccines.
Listen to the ITV News coronavirus podcast