MUMBAI: India reported its highest death toll in a month yesterday – at nearly 4,000 – after its richest state reconciled its death count with 3,509 previously unreported fatalities, the health ministry said.
Maharashtra, home to the financial capital of Mumbai, has reported 130,753 of the country’s 418,480 coronavirus deaths, and added 3,509 earlier deaths to its tally, the federal health ministry said yesterday.
The ministry did not give a reason but authorities have in the past attributed other instances of deaths going unreported to administrative errors, before the mistakes are discovered and the numbers appear in official data.
Last month, the northern state of Bihar raised its death toll by more than 5,000 in a day when it included some unrecorded data.
The sudden appearance of previously unrecorded deaths has lent weight to suspicion that India’s overall death tally is significantly more than the official figure.
India’s tally of infections stands at 31.22 million, with a death toll of 418,480, according to official data.
But the Washington-based Centre for Global Development said in a report on Tuesday that India’s real death toll from Covid-19 could be as high as 4.9 million.
Yesterday, the government reported 42,015 new coronavirus infections in the previous 24 hours, health ministry data showed.
Meanwhile, more than 4,300 people have died of the deadly “black fungus” in India in a growing epidemic that mainly affects Covid-19 patients.
India has reported 45,374 cases of this rare and dangerous infection, called mucormycosis, Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya said.
It affects the nose, eyes and sometimes the brain, and usually strikes 12-18 days after recovery from Covid.
Nearly half of those infected are still receiving treatment.
Doctors say the fungus has a link with the steroids used to treat Covid, and diabetics are at particular risk.