India s citizens helping each other amid shortages of oxygen and medicine | Video Asia
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26 May 2021 10:06PM (Updated:
26 May 2021 10:10PM)
Experts warn that many people in India are dying before they can access basic medical care. Amid shortages of beds, oxygen and medicine, India s citizens are helping each other bridge the gaps. Neha Poonia reports.
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Netizens laud Kejriwal government for smooth execution of COVID-19 vaccination drive
Many took to Twitter to share their experiences of getting vaccinated in the mega drive, which they said was done by calm professionals in a seamless manner while maintaining all protocols.
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A beneficiary gets the COVID19 vaccine, at a government Hospital (COVID-19 Centre) in New Delhi on Friday. (Photo | Parveen Negi/EPS) By PTI
NEW DELHI: Netizens flooded social media platforms with Thank You messages for Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and his government, praising them for orderly arrangements and smooth execution of the ongoing third phase of the COVID-19 vaccination drive.
Synopsis @ArvindKejriwal Thank you Sir, you are really a unique CM I ever seen, I got vaccinated yesterday, the management was incredible there was proper social distancing and the doctor were very polite towards all vaccine takers.. We are proud to hv CM like you. AK70, read the tweet of a Twitter handle @VInduriya.
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Delhi has been vaccinating more than one lakh people everyday. This includes around 50,000 people in the age group of 18-44 years and 50,000 aged 45 years and above, he added.
Netizens flooded social media platforms with Thank You messages for Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and his government, praising them for orderly arrangements and smooth execution of the ongoing third phase of the COVID-19 vaccination drive.
India resists full lockdown despite record new COVID-19 infections, deaths | Video Asia
06 May 2021 10:15PM (Updated:
06 May 2021 10:20PM)
India s government has ruled out a nationwide lockdown, even as COVID-19 cases and deaths surge. But region-specific lockdowns are not helping to flatten the curve. Neha Poonia reports.
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