Authorities at the central jail in IIOJK’s main city of Srinagar said they were preparing to shift some prisoners after 102 of the 480 tested positive. REPRESENTATIONAL IMAGE

One in five at IIOJK's jail tests positive as India Covid cases soar

Doctor in occupied valley says hospitals are full with Covid-19 patients and they are running out of oxygen beds


Reuters August 14, 2020
SRINAGAR:

One in five prisoners at the largest jail in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) has tested positive for the coronavirus, authorities said on Friday, as the health ministry reported a daily nationwide rise of more than 60,000 cases for the third straight day.

India is the world’s third worst-hit country, behind only the United States and Brazil, with more than 2.4 million confirmed coronavirus cases, according to a Reuters tally.

And numbers are expected to rise in coming weeks, as infections move deeper into the vast hinterland.

Authorities at the central jail in IIOJK’s main city of Srinagar said they were preparing to shift some prisoners after 102 of the 480 tested positive.

“We are taking extra care and all new entrants are being tested and then quarantined for two weeks,” VK Singh, Kashmir’s Additional Director General of Prisons, told Reuters.

The occupied valley has reported more than 20,000 cases, of which nearly 5,500 people remain currently infected.

The people of occupied valley have been suffering under curfew since August last year after New Delhi revoked its autonomous status and deployed tens of thousands of additional troops.

Following Covid-19 outbreak, the disputed valley was put under a cycle of coronavirus-related lockdowns since late March but cases are continuing to rise, putting pressure on medical infrastructure, doctors said.

Dr Nisarul Hassan, an associate professor at Srinagar’s Government Medical College that has around 2,200 beds, of which some 350 are for Covid-19 patients, said resources were stretched.

“Our hospitals are full with Covid-19 patients. We are running out of oxygen beds,” he said, “Patients have to wait for ventilators as there are not enough of them.”

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