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Top Indian Court Orders Payments to Covid Victims Families

The court said the country’s disaster management agency must pay about $671 each to families whose relatives died of Covid. India’s official death toll is about 450,000, but experts believe the true figure is far higher.

COVID payments ordered by India s supreme court could total hundreds of millions of dollars

COVID payments ordered by India s supreme court could total hundreds of millions of dollars
baltimoresun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from baltimoresun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Covid-19 News Live Updates: Vaccines and Antibody Treatment

Dr. Francis S. Collins, the longtime director of the N.I.H., will step down by the end of the year. Australia and New Zealand inch closer to fully reopening their economies.

Covid 19 coronavirus: A desperate India falls prey to Covid scammers

Covid 19 coronavirus: A desperate India falls prey to Covid scammers 17 May, 2021 06:00 AM 8 minutes to read Unloading oxygen canisters, a precious commodity in India, at a New Delhi hospital this month. Photo /Atul Loke, The New York Times Unloading oxygen canisters, a precious commodity in India, at a New Delhi hospital this month. Photo /Atul Loke, The New York Times New York Times By: Hari Kumar and Jeffrey Gettleman As the health care system fails, clandestine markets have emerged for drugs, oxygen, hospital beds and funeral services. Fake goods may be putting lives at risk. Within the world s worst coronavirus outbreak, few treasures are

Devastated by the pandemic, a desperate India is falling prey to coronavirus scammers

Share Share on Twitter Within the world’s worst coronavirus outbreak, few treasures are more coveted than an empty oxygen canister. India’s hospitals desperately need the metal cylinders to store and transport the lifesaving gas as patients across the country gasp for breath. So a local charity reacted with outrage when one supplier more than doubled the price, to nearly $US200 ($A258) each. The charity called the police, who discovered what could be one of the most brazen, dangerous scams in a country awash with coronavirus-related fraud and black-market profiteering. The police say the supplier a business called Varsha Engineering, essentially a scrapyard had been repainting fire extinguishers and selling them as oxygen canisters. The consequences could be deadly: The less-sturdy fire extinguishers might explode if filled with high-pressure oxygen.

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