India's daily virus infections are world's highest but crowds gather for
festival
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[April 12, 2021]
By Neha Arora and Rajendra Jadhav
NEW DELHI, (Reuters) -Hundreds of thousands
of Hindu devotees flocked on Monday to take a holy bath in India's
Ganges river, even as the nation racked up the world's highest tally of
new daily coronavirus infections.
With 168,912 new cases, India accounts for one in six of all new
infections globally, although the figure is still well below the U.S.
peak of nearly 300,000 new cases on Jan. 8.
In the northern city of Haridwar, nearly a million devotees thronged the
banks of the Ganges, a river many Hindus consider holy, to participate
in the months-long 'Kumbh Mela' or pitcher festival.
"The crowd here is surging...the police are continuously appealing to
people to maintain social distancing," police official Sanjay Gunjyal
told Reuters at the site.
By mid-morning a million people had taken a dip in the river, believed
to wash away one's sins.
As India's second wave of infections builds, with fewer than 4%
estimated to have been vaccinated among a population of 1.4 billion,
experts say the situation could have a long way to go before it starts
getting better.
"After cases declined in January-February, we were very comfortable,"
said a panel of high court judges in the western state of Gujarat,
calling on authorities to take urgent steps to rein in the outbreak.
"Almost everyone forgot that there was ever corona," added the panel,
headed by Chief Justice Vikram Nath.
A full opening of the economy from last year's crippling lockdown,
coupled with the mass religious festivals and political rallies in
states heading to elections have fuelled the crisis.
Monday's new infections carried India past Brazil for a tally of 13.53
million, data compiled by Reuters shows, ranking it the second-most
infected country after the United States, with 31.2 million.
TALLY FEARED TO DOUBLE IN TWO MONTHS
India's tally is on course to double in two months, according to
estimates based on data from the Johns Hopkins University Center for
Systems Science and Engineering.
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Devotees gather to take a holy dip in the waters of river Ganges
during Kumbh Mela, or the Pitcher Festival, amidst the spread of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Haridwar, India, April 12, 2021.
REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
Yet authorities appeared unwilling or unable to stop events that
could lead to a calamitous spread of the disease.
Thousands of people are attending political rallies in four big
states set for elections this month, including two events on Monday
in the eastern state of West Bengal, where Prime Minister Narendra
Modi is due to speak.
"With 1.2 million active cases, and the daily number reaching
200,000, it’s bizarre to have poll rallies and a full Kumbh Mela,"
political commentator Shekhar Gupta said on Twitter.
Officials and experts said authorities had underestimated the
resilience of the virus, believing they had beaten it after daily
cases fell below 10,000 in early February.
Officials in the worst-hit state of Maharashtra, home to the
financial capital of Mumbai, said they were considering a broader
lockdown this week after large closures at the weekend.
"It is necessary to break the cycle (of infections)," said a senior
state official who sought anonymity. "We are working on identifying
industries and services that need to be exempted."
The rupee fell to its lowest in nearly eight months and Mumbai's
benchmark index tanked as much as 3.7% in the worst session in more
than six weeks.
India's economy has been limping back to recovery after last year's
hard lockdown caused the deepest contraction in decades.
(Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav, Saurabh Sharma, Sumit Khanna;
Additional reporting by Suchitra Mohanty and Rama Venkat; Editing by
Sanjeev Miglani and Clarence Fernandez)
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