Covid in Varanasi: Anger rises as coronavirus rages in Modi’s constituency
City residents say the first signs of trouble became visible in March. As cases spiked in Delhi and Mumbai and authorities there began imposing restrictions, migrant workers began returning home to their villages in and around Varanasi [whose MP, Narendra Modi, is India’s prime minister] on overcrowded trains, buses and trucks.
Many came home for the Holi festival on 29 March or to vote in the village council elections on 18 April – held against advice from experts. Reports say more than 700 teachers on poll duty died in the state and the elections helped spread the virus.
Varanasi’s hospitals were soon overwhelmed and people left to fend for themselves. Rishabh Jain, a 25-year-old businessman based in the city, told the BBC that when his 55-year-old aunt fell sick he had to drive 19 miles (30km) every day to queue for up to five hours to refill an oxygen cylinder.
“We panicked when her oxygen levels fell below 80,” he said. “We couldn’t find a hospital bed so the family started phone bashing to find an oxygen cylinder. We tried 25 numbers for 12 to 13 hours and finally with help from social media and the district administration, we managed to get a cylinder. She’s recovering now.”
Alarmed by the situation, the Allahabad high court on 19 April ordered a week’s lockdown in Varanasi and four other cities in the state, saying the pandemic had “virtually incapacitated our medical infrastructure”. The state refused to enforce it and challenged the order in the Supreme Court, arguing it had to “protect both lives and livelihoods”.
Critics now say the government has failed to do either. With the district administration imposing intermittent weekend curfews and with most businesses and shops shut from fear, thousands are losing their livelihoods and the virus is still spreading.
Varanasi has so far recorded 70,612 infections and 690 deaths. But 46,280 – or 65% – cases were recorded since 1 April. The official Covid death toll for the district hovers most days around 10-11. On Sunday, the government data put it at 16. But everyone I spoke to in Varanasi dismissed these numbers as a fiction.
A long-time city resident, who lives close to the Harishchandra and Manikarnika ghats – the two main cremation areas on the banks of Ganges river – says funeral pyres have been burning non-stop for the past month.
Earlier, the two locations between them would have 80-90 cremations a day, but for the past month, the resident said, he believed the number has risen to roughly 300-400 a day. [Continue reading…]