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COVID-19 Surge in India “Nothing Short Of Heartbreaking”: Kamala Harris

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US Vice President Kamala Harris said India’s welfare is critically important to the US. (File)

Washington:

Describing the surge of COVID-19 infections and deaths in India as “nothing short of heartbreaking”, US Vice President Kamala Harris said on Friday that India’s welfare is critically important to the United States.

Pledging that the Joe Biden administration is determined to help India in its hour of need, Ms Harris said that the entire government machinery has been galvanised to help the country in this hour of crisis.

India is struggling with a second wave of the pandemic with more than 4,00,000 daily new coronavirus cases being reported in the past few days, and hospitals are reeling under a shortage of medical oxygen and beds.

“At the beginning of the pandemic, when our hospital beds were stretched, India sent assistance. And today, we are determined to help India in its hour of need,” Ms Harris said in her remarks at the State Department’s Diaspora outreach event on US COVID Relief for India.

“We do this as friends of India, as members of the Asian Quad, and as part of the global community. I believe that if we continue to work together – across nations and sectors – we will all get through this,” she said.

The Biden-Harris Administration has announced $100 million assistance to India to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. In about a week’s time, as many as six plane loads of COVID-19 assistance have landed in India. The White House and the State Department are coordinating with the corporate sector, which has mounted an unprecedented private sector relief.

Indian-Americans have been raising millions of dollars and have been sending life-saving health care equipment and medicines to the country. Sewa International USA has raised more than $10 million, American Association of Physicians of Indian-Origin or AAPI have raised $3.5 million and Indiaspora more than $2 million, to name some of them.

Ms Harris recognised the contribution of Indian-Americans on the issue. Ms Harris, 56, is the first woman, the first Black American, and the first South Asian American to be elected US Vice President.

Ms Harris was born to two immigrant parents: a Black father and an Indian mother. Her father, Donald Harris, was from Jamaica, and her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, a cancer researcher and civil rights activist from Chennai.

“For years, diaspora groups like Indiaspora and the American India Foundation have built bridges between the United States and India. And this past year, you have provided vital contributions to COVID-19 relief efforts. Thank you for your work,” said the US vice president.

“As many of you know, generations of my family come from India. My mother was born and raised in India. And I have family members who live in India today. The welfare of India is critically important to the United States,” Ms Harris said.

“The surge of COVID-19 infections and deaths in India is nothing short of heartbreaking. To those of you who have lost loved ones, I send my deepest condolences. As soon as the dire nature of the situation became apparent, our Administration took action,” she said, referring to the steps that the Biden-Harris Administration has taken to help India in this hour of crisis.

On April 26, US President Joe Biden spoke with Prime Minister Narendra Modi to offer America’s support. By April 30, US military members and civilians were delivering relief on the ground, she said, referring to the whole-of-government approach that the administration has taken to help India.

“Already, we have delivered refillable oxygen cylinders, with more to come. We have delivered oxygen concentrators, with more to come. We have delivered N95 masks, and have more ready to send. We have delivered doses of Remdesivir to treat COVID patients,” Ms Harris said.

According to USAID, among the emergency supplies to India include 20,000 courses of remdesivir (125,000 vials) to help treat critically ill patients; nearly 1,500 oxygen cylinders to address critical oxygen shortage, which can be repeatedly refilled at local supply centers and one million rapid diagnostic tests to quickly identify COVID-19 cases and prevent community spread.

The six planes included nearly 550 mobile oxygen concentrators that obtain oxygen from ambient air. These units have a lifespan of more than five years and can serve multiple patients at once, depending on their oxygen needs. The US has also sent nearly 2.5 million N95 masks to protect health care professionals and other frontline workers.

A large-scale deployable Oxygen Concentration System that can provide oxygen to treat 20 or more patients at a time and 210 pulse oximeters to measure oxygen levels in a patient’s blood to determine whether a higher level of care is needed has also been sent to India, USAID said.

Ms Harris also referred to the decision taken by her administration to support a proposal by India and South Africa for a TRIPS waiver for vaccines at the WTO.

“We have announced our full support for suspending patents on COVID-19 vaccines – to help India and other nations vaccinate their people more quickly. India and the United States have the greatest number of COVID-19 cases in the world,” she said.

India has welcomed the US move. “We appreciate the US administration’s announcement of its support for waiver of IPR for COVID-19 vaccines,” India’s Ambassador to the US Taranjit Singh Sandhu said early this week.

Save A Life. Help Fight The Coronavirus Outbreak In India.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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