Indian authorities Friday announced a “very very slow” easing of the lockdown in the capital New Delhi as coronavirus infections fall in major cities after weeks of lockdown.
Rural areas now however seeing the brunt of a surge in cases that has overwhelmed the health care system and killed at least 160,000 people since the start of March.
Arvind Kejriwal, Delhi chief minister, said that from Monday construction work and factories can resume “keeping the poorest section of our society, the labourers and daily wage workers, in mind.”
“We are starting the process of reopening very, very slowly. We will reassess it after a week based on experts and people’s opinions,” he said.
Read more: Mumbai in lockdown as Indian vaccines run short
Daily infections reported across India have more than halved from more than 400,000 earlier this month, according to official statistics.
Delhi reported Friday about 1,100 new infections in the previous 24 hours, down from about 25,000 daily cases when the lockdown was announced six weeks earlier.
The devastating surge was blamed on new virus variants and the government having allowed most activity to return to normal including mass religious and political gatherings.
Tough but crucial #Lockdown decision enabled Delhi to tame deadliest wave
➡️In 6 weeks, Delhi’s avg daily cases plummeted from 23,686 to 2,108
➡️Positivity dropped from 26.1% to 1.9%
➡️Public health experts attributed this easing of the city’s 4th wave largely to the lockdown pic.twitter.com/ZNiBPime1O
— Devender Yadav (देव) (@DevenderYadav_) May 27, 2021
Coronavirus patients died in droves outside hospitals or at home because of a lack of beds, medical oxygen and drugs, prompting a flood of desperate pleas on social media.
Since mid-April hundreds of Covid-19 patients have also contracted the often deadly and usually very rare infection mucormycosis or “black fungus”.
Many other parts of India including the states of Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka too are now also considering easing restrictions on activity.
India’s vaccination programme meanwhile is making only slow progress due to shortages, confusion and squabbling between the central government and state authorities.
Read more: Rahul Gandhi asks Modi to lockdown 1.35 billion Indians as COVID gets out of control
So far some 160 million people, equivalent to only 12.5 percent of the Indian population have received one dose and 45 million, or 3.4 percent, two shots.
AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk