Reuters met and interviewed relatives of 30 people who died of the
virus in India, from coastal Kerala on the country's southern tip to
the Himalayan region of Kashmir in the north.
The 30 victims were ordinary people from all walks of life, and
included police officers and doctors on the frontlines of the fight
against the virus.
In what is still a conservative and developing country, some of the
relatives said they faced ostracism after their loved ones caught
the virus. Others said they have suffered from depression and money
troubles. All said more could have been done to save the people who
died.
LIFE AFTER
Javed Ali, a 42-year-old doctor in India’s capital New Delhi, died
in July. His wife, Hena Kausar, also a doctor and now the sole carer
for their two children, said she doesn’t know what she will do
without him.
“Our whole life has changed,” she said. “I still want to be a doctor
(but) I have to choose between my job and kids.”
Nineteen-year-old student Fardeen Khan was orphaned after his mother
Noor Jahan died in June. His father had died in 2018.
“I have no financial support now,” he said. “I have no job”
Some relatives said they found the reaction from authorities and
neighbours after their bereavements difficult to bear.
Sunita Patil’s husband Vivek, a 46-year-old music teacher, died
suddenly at home in Mumbai before a bed at a local hospital became
available. The next morning, she said, municipal workers came to the
house shouting for them to come outside to be taken to a quarantine
centre.
“They were not sensitive to the fact that there has been a death in
the family just a day back, and we are in mourning,” she said.
Nadeem Akhtar’s sister Shabana Ahmed, a 52-year-old architect, died
in New Delhi in April.
“What really upsets me more than the healthcare system was the
behaviour of society,” he said.
“My sister’s neighbourhood boycotted her family. There was no
emotional or moral support even after her death. Society failed us.”
[to top of second column] |
CHANCES MISSED
India’s rudimentary healthcare system has at times struggled to cope with the
huge number of coronavirus cases.
Many of the victims' relatives said there were missed opportunities to cure the
infected.
Jamal Khan, a 41-year-old farmer, developed a fever in August in the Bijnor
district of Uttar Pradesh state, India's most populous.
His brother, Asim, said local doctors failed to realise he was COVID-positive.
It was only when he was transferred to Delhi, ten days after he first became
ill, that he was diagnosed.
By then, his lungs were badly damaged, and he died soon after, according to Asim.
“If he would have been diagnosed on time in his own native place, he would have
surely survived,” Asim said.
Rekha Khandait’s 58-year-old husband Jayant is one of more than 200 police
officers who died from the virus in the western state of Maharashtra alone. She
was one of several people who said a lack of oxygen contributed to the death.
“I can’t believe that six months have passed, she said. “I still haven’t told
our son yet about his death.”
Tilak Raj, a 38-year-old software engineer, said when his mother Krishna Devi
was hospitalized, there was no oxygen in the ambulance. When they arrived at the
hospital, the cylinder that was provided was empty in five minutes.
“If we had a better health system, my mother would have survived,” he said.
(Reporting by Danish Siddiqui, Adnan Abidi and Anushree Fadanvis in New Delhi,
Amit Dave in Ahmedabad, Francis Mascarenhas in Mumbai, Sivaram V in Kochi, Sanna
Irshad Mattoo in Srinagar and Rupak De Chowdhuri in Kolkata; Writing by Alasdair
Pal; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |