The Morning: India’s new Covid mystery

Plus the Oscars, summer camp guidelines and violence in Somalia

Good morning. Many people in India thought the country had escaped the worst of Covid-19. What happened?

A Covid-19 patient receiving oxygen in a car in Delhi yesterday.Atul Loke for The New York Times

'I would not have dreamt …'

There is a new Covid-19 mystery in India, and it is far grimmer than the first one.

For most of the past year, Covid deaths across much of Asia and Africa have been strikingly low, as I described last month. And they remain low in nearly all of Africa and East Asia — but not India, which is suffering a terrible outbreak. Hospitals are running out of oxygen to treat patients, and confirmed Covid deaths have climbed to 2,000 per day, up from fewer than 100 in February. The true death toll is even higher.

The sharp increase has surprised many people, both inside and outside India. "India's massive Covid surge puzzles scientists," as Smriti Mallapaty wrote in Nature. "I was expecting fresh waves of infection," Shahid Jameel, a virologist at Ashoka University, said, "but I would not have dreamt that it would be this strong."

By The New York Times | Sources: Governments, health agencies and hospitals

The price of hubris

To make some sense of what's happening, it helps to go back to last year, when Indian doctors and officials were preparing for waves of serious Covid illnesses. But those waves never quite arrived. Instead, millions of people contracted only mild cases.

The most plausible explanations — the amount of time people spend outdoors in India, the low levels of obesity, the population's relative youth and the possibility that previous viruses had created some natural immunity — all seemed to suggest that India was not simply on a delayed Covid timetable. The country, like many of its neighbors, seemed to be escaping the worst of the pandemic.

Scientific research suggesting that about half of adults in major cities had already been infected was consistent with this notion. "It led to the assumption that India had been cheaply, naturally vaccinated," Dr. Prabhat Jha, an epidemiologist at the University of Toronto, told me.

Government officials acted particularly confident. As Ramanan Laxminarayan, a Princeton University epidemiologist based in New Delhi, told Nature, "There was a public narrative that India had conquered Covid-19." Some scientists who thought that a new Covid wave remained possible were afraid to contradict the message coming from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government. Modi has a record of stifling dissent, and Freedom House, the democracy watchdog group, recently said India had become only a "partly free" country that was moving "toward authoritarianism."

Confident they had beaten Covid, government officials relaxed restrictions on virtually all activities, including weddings, political rallies and religious gatherings. The northern town of Haridwar held one of the world's biggest gatherings this month, with millions of people celebrating the Hindu festival Kumbh Mela.

By mid-March, though, the virus was beginning to reassert itself. A major factor appears to be that many people who previously had mild or asymptomatic cases of Covid remained vulnerable to it. (A recent academic study, done in China, suggests that mild cases confer only limited immunity.) The emergence of contagious new variants is playing a role, too. This combination — less immunity than many people thought, new variants and a resumption of activities — seems to have led to multiple superspreader events, Dr. Jennifer Lighter of New York University told me.

The situation is so dire that some Indian crematories are overwhelmed. Suresh Bhai, who works in one in the western state of Gujarat, told The Times that he had never seen such a never-ending assembly line of death.

Mourning outside a hospital in Delhi.Atul Loke for The New York Times

What now?

The available solutions are no secret. The same two strategies have worked around the world: restricting the activities that spread the virus, and accelerating the pace of vaccinations.

Over the past two weeks, some local governments, including in Delhi and Mumbai, have announced restrictions on travel, weddings, shopping and other activities. Speeding up vaccinations will be more complicated. About 10 percent of India's population has received at least one shot, leaving more than a billion people to vaccinate fully.

To do so, India — a major vaccine manufacturer — has recently cut back on exporting doses. Indian officials have also criticized the Biden administration for not exporting more vaccine supplies to India, given the large U.S. supply. (The U.S. said yesterday that it would do so.)

Amid all the suffering, there is one glimmer of potential good news, Jha said. Caseloads in India's second-most populous state — Maharashtra, home to Mumbai — have often been a leading indicator of national trends, and cases there have leveled off over the past week. It's too early to know whether that's just a blip, but it would be a big deal if the situation in Maharashtra stabilized.

The latest: In another anti-democratic move, India's government ordered Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to take down posts critical of its handling of the pandemic.

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A funeral for one of the victims of a hospital fire in Baghdad.Alaa Al-Marjani/Reuters
  • A fire in a Baghdad hospital killed at least 82 people, mostly Covid patients and their relatives.
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ARTS AND IDEAS

Why shows sound different

It's hard to imagine the teen drama "Dawson's Creek" without its theme song, "I Don't Want to Wait," by Paula Cole. Yet — to the dismay of many fans — that's the only way to watch it on streaming platforms. Nearly all of the original music for the series, which began airing in the late '90s, is missing on Netflix, Hulu and other platforms.

It's an issue that plagues many shows that find a second life on streaming: They no longer have the rights to use their original soundtracks, as Calum Marsh writes in The Times.

TV shows pay for the right to use songs. Before streaming, producers often opted for short-term licenses on popular songs, to save money. But streaming has increased the number of shows that endure for years, leaving some without their music.

Newer shows aren't making the same mistake. "We have to get rights forever," Robin Urdang, an Emmy-winning music supervisor, said. And some old shows are responding to the fan outcry: Cole said a new deal means that her song will soon be back as the "Dawson's Creek" opener. — Sanam Yar, Morning writer

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Romulo Yanes for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Vivian Lui

This lemon-raspberry danish is simpler than it looks.

What to Listen to
Virtual Travel
Now Time to Play

The pangram from Friday's Spelling Bee was allowance. Here is today's puzzle — or you can play online.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Scratch-off ticket game (five letters).

If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. Battling insomnia? Dubious about supplements? The Times's Well section wants to answer your questions about sleep. Ask them here.

Today's episode of "The Daily" is about Russia's vaccine diplomacy. On the Book Review podcast, Patrick Radden Keefe discusses his new history of the family behind Purdue Pharma.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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