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The World Responds to India s Distress Call

The World Responds to India s Distress Call Emily Schmall and Karan Deep Singh © Atul Loke for The New York Times A man receiving oxygen outside a Sikh house of worship in Delhi on Sunday. NEW DELHI Oxygen generators from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Raw material for coronavirus vaccines from the United States. Millions in cash from companies led by Indian-American businessmen. As a second wave of the pandemic rages in India, the world is coming to the rescue. But it is unlikely to plug enough holes in India’s sinking health care system to fully stop the deadly crisis that is underway, and the health emergency has global implications for new infections worldwide, as well as for countries relying on India for the AstraZeneca vaccine.

Biden s Covid team split over decision to send vaccine doses abroad

POLITICO The announcement Monday followed a call between President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Biden administration is getting sizable, regular shipments of vaccine from Moderna and Pfizer, which between them have agreed to supply enough shots for 300 million people. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images Link Copied The White House’s decision to send millions of doses of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine overseas has split top Biden administration officials with many arguing that the government cannot reduce its stockpile of doses on hand given recent disruptions in U.S. vaccine production. The announcement Monday followed a call between President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose nation has been overwhelmed by a second wave of cases. The news sent several top administration officials scrambling to figure out who had determined that the U.S. would not need the AstraZeneca shots over the next several months, according to

India s COVID-19 crisis is a continuing nightmare

In multiple countries, the COVID-19 pandemic has reached one of its bleakest points yet. The crisis exposing the divide between rich and poor nations threatens to prolong the pandemic just as Western countries such as the United States have stepped up vaccines and loosened COVID-19 restrictions. India also thought it was turning the corner at the start of the year after undergoing a painful lockdown that was politically unpopular and left millions of mostly migrant workers jobless. With only a few thousand reported daily cases in the country of 1.4 billion, a sense of triumphalism had taken root. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party claimed COVID-19 had been “defeated” under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The health minister said India had reached the “endgame” of the disease. People started to emerge from isolation, relishing the opportunity to return to public gatherings.

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