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Part 1

Hit by the Covid-19 Tsunami, India Will Spread Economic Stimulus

The Indian government is reportedly working on an economic stimulus plan to help


several sectors severely affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Citing the Times of India, according to several sources, the stimulus will be given to
sectors such as the tourism, aviation and hospitality industries, along with small and
medium enterprises. However, this plan is only in its early stages.

"The discussion is still in its early stages and no deadline for the announcement has been
decided," the source said.
The latest wave of Covid-19 infections has made India a global hotspot for the pandemic
and has been destroying travel since the second wave. Even the country of Bollywood
had recorded daily infections that reached over 400 thousand cases.

Until now, the country, which has a capital in New Delhi, is still trapped in the shadow
of the explosion of the Covid-19 virus infection. This infection has ravaged the country.
The sight of hospitals running out of beds and people desperate for oxygen and other
medical equipment has graced the country to this day.
Even so, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's very strict closure was not immediately
carried out by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the grounds that the lockdown would
destroy the economy.

The majority of the area of the spread of Covid-19 in India has indeed occurred in
several economic centers of the country. That prompted many economists to cut their
forecasts for the financial year starting April 1, as rising unemployment and dwindling
savings among consumers dimmed opportunities for double-digit growth.

Pressure is also mounting on the central bank, which functions as the regulator of the
banking sector, to loosen up loan repayment rules, especially for sectors badly hit by the
virus wave.
Part 2
The wave of Covid cases in India has surged in the last seven days compared to
other countries.
People die waiting in line for hospital beds, while oxygen availability continues to
decline and hospitals are under unrelenting pressure.

Recently, the process of cremating bodies has also been carried out outside the
crematorium, operating for 24 hours without stopping. The cremation workers even said
they had no free time since the last funeral ceremony.

For Hindus, cremation is traditionally an important part of funeral rituals, because they
believe the body must be destroyed to separate it from the soul.
Part 3
In Delhi City, cremation workers are forced to build piles of wood for emergency
burning, with parking spaces and other open spaces used as cremation sites.

It was also reported that the authorities had cut down trees in the city park for use as
firewood.

Families have to wait hours to wait for their family members to be cremated. The family
was also asked for help to stack wood and help with other rituals.

Below are photos from Delhi showing workers and families of Covid-19 victims taking
part of the cremation.
It was also reported that the authorities had cut down trees in the city park for use as
firewood.
Families have to wait hours to wait for their family members to be cremated. The family
was also asked for help to stack wood and help with other rituals.
Below are photos from Delhi showing workers and families of Covid-19 victims taking
part of the cremation.
The bodies on the banks of India's holiest river tell a tale of an unseen and unknown
death toll in official data.
I interviewed local journalists, officials and local eyewitnesses in some of the worst
affected districts of Uttar Pradesh.
The result, found the stories behind hundreds of bodies that floated ranging from
traditional beliefs, poverty, and a pandemic that killed people with lightning speed.
Officials said some of the bodies may have come from routine cremations carried out on
the banks of the Ganges, but there are also other allegations that the bodies had been
dumped into the river. The police also installed nets on the water to catch more.
A day later, 10 kilometers from Chausa, dozens of rotting corpses were found strewn by
a river in Gahmar village, Ghazipur district, Uttar Pradesh, with wild dogs and crows
"feasting" on them.
Locals said the bodies had been stranded on the embankments for several days, but
authorities had ignored their complaints about the stench until news of the corpses made
headlines.
Dozens of swollen and rotten bodies floating in the river were found by villagers in the
neighboring district of Ballia while taking a morning bath in India's holiest river. The
Hindustan newspaper reported that the police found 62 bodies.
In Kannauj, Kanpur, Unnao and Prayagraj, riverbeds are filled with shallow graves.
Video sent to the BBC of the Mehndi ghat embankment in Kannauj shows a number of
mounds about the size of a human body.
Many look like lumps on the riverbed, each containing a human body. Near Mahadevi
Ghat, at least 50 bodies were found.
Thus the up date of the Covid-19 news that occurred in India,I Siti Sae Sabenga L.A
reported conveyed from the case where the case was

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