India’s death toll from coronavirus crosses 400,000 as vaccination drive falters

India’s death toll from coronavirus crosses 400,000 as vaccination drive falters
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government began a nationwide campaign last week to inoculate all of the country’s adults for free. (Reuters)
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Updated 02 July 2021
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India’s death toll from coronavirus crosses 400,000 as vaccination drive falters

India’s death toll from coronavirus crosses 400,000 as vaccination drive falters
  • Overnight, the country recorded 853 deaths, taking the toll past the 400,000-mark
  • Just 6 percent of all eligible adults in the country were inoculated with the two mandatory doses

MUMBAI/AHMEDABAD: India’s official death toll from the coronavirus reached 400,000 on Friday, though experts say the actual number of dead could have reached one million or even higher, with a possible third wave approaching.
India added 100,000 deaths in 39 days, a Reuters tally showed, as a brutal second wave of infections swept across cities and into the vast countryside where millions remain vulnerable without a single shot of vaccine.
Overnight, the country recorded 853 deaths, taking the toll past the 400,000-mark, health ministry data showed.
India’s death toll is the third-highest globally.
“Undercounting of deaths is something that has happened across states, mostly because of lags in the system, so that means we will never have a true idea of how many people we lost in this second wave,” said Rijo M John, a professor at the Rajagiri College of Social Sciences in the southern city of Kochi.
While still elevated, the number of new infections has eased to two-month lows since hitting a peak of 400,000 a day in May.
The government has shifted its focus to mass immunizations amid warnings from disease experts of a looming third wave as the country slowly re-opens and a new variant, locally called the Delta Plus, emerges.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government began a nationwide campaign last week to inoculate all of the country’s adults for free, and aims to reach 950 million people by the end of the year.
But, the pace of vaccinations has floundered, official data showed.
India administered an average of 3.5 million doses a day this week, as against 6.6 million doses last week.
Experts have attributed the peak of 9 million doses on June 21 to states stockpiling for a burst of inoculations to fire up Modi’s campaign.
Just 6 percent of all eligible adults in the country were inoculated with the two mandatory doses, official data from the government’s Co-Win portal showed.
In two of the country’s biggest states governed by Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, police were ordered in to control large crowds outside some vaccination centers, as panic spread over shortages of doses.
In Modi’s home state of Gujarat, several vaccination centers shut down in Ahmedabad, the main industrial city.
In Madhya Pradesh, governed by Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, the pace of vaccinations fell over 40 percent. In one district, police were called in to control a stampede that broke out after crowds broke through a shuttered gate at a local vaccination camp, NDTV news channel reported.
In India’s financial capital of Mumbai, vaccination centers were only open for three hours on Friday and the number of doses available was limited, the city’s civic body said.
India has recorded 30.45 million cases of COVID-19 since the outbreak of the pandemic last year, and is the second-most affected country behind the United States, which has 33 million cases.
The United States has over 604,000 deaths, while about 518,000 people have died in Brazil.