India's COVID-19 disaster deepened on Thursday with its
daily death toll climbing above 3,600, as more international aid was flown in
with the United States sending nearly one million test kits.
اضافة اعلان
The United States and several European nations have started
to ease restrictions this week following successful vaccination campaigns, but
the pandemic continues to worsen in many parts of the world.
Among the most devastating of those waves is in India, where
the death and infection rates have been rising exponentially throughout April.
On Thursday, India reported 3,645 deaths over the past 24
hours, while confirmed new cases were a global record at more than 379,000. The
official numbers are widely believed to be far lower than the reality.
The pandemic has claimed at least 3.1 million lives around
the world, with India accounting for more than 200,000 fatalities.
In many Indian cities, hospitals are running out of beds as
relatives of the sick crowd outside pharmacies and suppliers for medicines and
oxygen cylinders.
"We rushed to multiple hospitals, but were denied
admission everywhere," said the son of an 84-year-old woman who died at
home this week after a desperate search for a hospital bed and oxygen in
Kolkata, capital of West Bengal state.
The spiking body count has also overwhelmed crematoriums and
graveyards, and caused a shortage of wood for funeral pyres.
The Indian government will open
vaccinations to all adults
from Saturday. It had previously limited shots to the over-45s and certain
other groups.
Several states have warned, however, that they do not have
sufficient vaccine stocks and the expanded rollout is threatened by
administrative bickering, confusion over prices and technical glitches on the
government's digital vaccine platform.
Many nations have rushed to help India, including the United
States which on Wednesday announced it was sending more than $100 million in
supplies.
A first US military flight, carrying 960,000 rapid tests and
100,000 face masks for frontline health workers, was due to arrive on Thursday.
The World Health Organization has said the virus variant
feared to be contributing to the catastrophe in India has now been found in
more than a dozen countries.
But the body stopped short of saying it is more
transmissible, more deadly or able to dodge vaccines.
Ugur Sahin, the co-founder of vaccine developer and Pfizer
partner BioNTech, said he was confident his company's shot works against that
variant.
- 'Ready for takeoff' -
In the United States, President Joe Biden on Wednesday
hailed his nation's inoculation program as one of "the greatest logistical
achievements" in American history.
More than 234 million doses had been administered by
Wednesday in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
The rollout has boosted hopes that the world's biggest economy is primed for
recovery.
Countries are looking to do the same in Europe, where more
than 50 million known infections have been logged since the start of the
pandemic, according to an AFP tally of official data Wednesday.
The Netherlands on Wednesday ended a curfew and eased
restrictions on outdoor bars and terraces.
It followed similar moves in Italy, Portugal and
Switzerland. France is hoping to join the trend and ease more restrictions this
month.
- 'Never imagined it would come to this' -
Outside of the wealthier parts of the world, however,
governments are scrambling to find any available vaccine stocks so they can
accelerate their rollouts.
In addition to the shots developed in the West, Chinese and
Russian candidates have also been exported and helped many nations launch their
vaccination programs.
But there was a setback for Russia's Sputnik V jab this
week, when Brazil's drug regulator denied permission to import it to the
hard-hit South American nation on the basis that the batches they tested
carried a live version of a common cold-causing virus.
Some scientists have backed that decision, saying it could
be a safety issue for people with weak immune systems.
The Gamaleya Institute, which developed the vaccine, has
denied the reports.
A deal has been signed to produce Sputnik V in Brazil's neighbor
Argentina, where the pandemic restrictions and the resulting economic collapse
continue to punish the poorest.
Before the crisis, Daisy Garcia used to serve meals to
around 80 people at a soup kitchen on the outskirts of the capital Buenos
Aires.
She now distributes meals for almost 1,000.
"We never, never imagined it would come to this,"
said the 26-year-old.
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