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India may have purposely Infected Afghanistan with the Indian-Strain Covid-19 to get it into Pakistan!

Clutch

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This Thread is Based on my Analysis: Historical Facts of Indian Government Extremist and terroristic Tendencies. They lied about Pulwama. They will Weaponize Indian COVID-19 as well!



I think there is strong strategic motivation by Hindutva Governed India to weaponized the Indian-Covid into Afghanistan and use Afghans as mules to infect Pakistan.

Afghanistan’s doctors braced for rapid spread of India Covid variant
The country has no testing capacity for the B.1.617.2 strain and medics are concerned about resilience of health system

Doctors in Afghanistan have expressed fears that the Covid-19 variant first discovered in India could now be spreading quickly in the country.
At Kabul’s main Covid hospital, where all 100 beds are occupied, doctors said that many critically ill patients had recently returned from India. Up to 10 people die here every day.
The health ministry reported more than 500 new Covid infections on Friday, but actual numbers are likely to be much higher, as many people continue to recover at home without seeking medical care.




Facilities to test for the B.1.617.2 variant that originated in India are not yet available in Afghanistan, the health ministry’s spokesperson Dastagir Nazari said. He couldn’t officially confirm whether the variant was spreading in the country.
“We’ve seen a steep increase in patients in the last two weeks, many of them needing oxygen, and many having a history of recently returning from India or having been around relatives who returned,” said Dr Qandagha Hassan, who works at the Afghan-Japan hospital for communicable diseases – the main Covid clinic located on Kabul’s western outskirts.
“It’s very concerning, especially after watching the situation unfold in India. We need a lockdown in place and we’ve appealed to the government to stop flights between India and Afghanistan,” he said. Several airlines continue to regularly operate between Kabul and Delhi.


THE PULSE | SECURITY | SOUTH ASIA
Afghanistan Fears Impending COVID-19 Crisis
The rise of COVID-19 cases coupled with health missteps in the war-torn country spread fear of a tragedy amid a raging war.
Ezzatullah Mehrdad

By Ezzatullah Mehrdad
May 03, 2021
This article is free
The Diplomat has removed paywall restrictions on our coverage of the COVID–19 crisis.
COVID: A huge tragedy is unfolding in Afghanistan
16.06.2021
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02:25 mins.

| 16.06.2021
COVID-19: Afghanistan's health system at breaking point
The delta variant is possibly behind a surge in infections in Afghanistan. But official figures don't give the real picture, and there hasn't been much media attention to the ongoing wave.

The number of COVID-19 cases in Afghanistan has risen exponentially over the past few weeks, with hospitals struggling to deal with the ongoing wave.

Health officials in almost all Afghan provinces are sounding the alarm, saying the country is facing a devastating health crisis.

Doctors in one of Kabul's two main hospitals told DW that there aren't enough beds to treat new COVID-19 patients.

"We have 150 beds but somehow managed to admit 170 patients. The number of COVID patients coming here is increasing, but we don't have beds or oxygen to help them," Tariq Akbari, head of the Afghan Japan Hospital in Kabul, told DW.

"At the moment, we can provide oxygen to only 30 patients. We are trying to attach the oxygen supply system to other beds, but it will take some time," he added.

As most hospitals in Afghanistan are not equipped to treat COVID-19 patients, people infected with the virus are forced to seek help from common clinics.

"I contracted the coronavirus, but the hospital staff told me they do not have enough beds," Abdullah, a resident of Herat province, told DW.

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A worsening health crisis
According to Afghanistan's Public Health Ministry, more than 3,800 people have died of COVID-19 as of June 16, but experts say the actual number is much higher because of the low testing rate. Also, many COVID deaths are not being registered as virus-related fatalities.

"This wave is deadlier. We believe it is the Indian-origin delta variant that spreads faster," Akbari said, adding that an average of 14 daily deaths are being recorded in his hospital.

The government has closed schools, universities, wedding halls and beauty salons to slow the spread. But these measures have not proven effective so far, as other places where the virus can spread rapidly — markets, shops — remain open to the public. Most people are not wearing masks and following health protocols because the government has not made it mandatory.

The vaccination rate is also very low in Afghanistan. The Muslim-majority country of some 36 million people has administered only 1 million doses of COVID vaccine, mostly to front-line health workers and members of the security forces. Last week, Afghanistan received 700,000 doses of China's Sinopharm vaccine, but health experts say the number of vaccinated people is too low to achieve herd immunity.

c19en20210615_QASKD15b_image_1024x576_3.jpg

02:29 mins.

| 15.06.2021
Ask Derrick: The Delta variant
Almost no media attention

Even though a huge health crisis is unfolding in Afghanistan, there hasn't been much coverage of it in the international media.

Afghans, however, continue to share pictures and videos of COVID-19 patients on social media, which illustrate a dire situation.

"Everyone knows someone who has died of COVID. I used Facebook to have a good time in the past, but now it has become too depressing, with almost everyone posting about COVID-related deaths," Mehrabuddin Hakimi, a Kunduz resident, told DW.

Rampant poverty and a weak public health infrastructure are complicating Afghanistan's battle with the pandemic. The ongoing conflict between the government and Taliban militants also makes the health emergency extremely difficult to control. More than half of the districts in Afghanistan are controlled by the militant group, and hardly any tests are available in these regions.

"People cannot keep distance from COVID patients. They need to take care of them, and because they are not health professionals, they end up getting the virus, too," Hakimi said.

Despite assurances of financial support from the international community, there are not enough testing kits and medical equipment to treat everyone in Afghanistan.

Experts say Afghanistan needs immediate international help to deal with the virus, otherwise things will get out of control there.

Additional reporting by Karim Saleh and Parwaneh Alizadah.
 
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The border crossing points should be suspended indefinitely, The Indian variant of Covid-19 is already causing havoc here in UK, let the Afghans deal with the situation themselves, I'm sure Hindustani's will allow them to fly to shining Hindustan with special vedic treatment.
 
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Immediately suspend all border crossings. Make provisions for rapid antigen tests and allow 10 percent of people in based on antigen tests
 
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