Many people scrambled on Thursday to secure beds in hospitals for relatives stricken with coronavirus as infections surged to a daily record, overwhelming medical facilities and drying up oxygen supplies.
A massive second wave of infections is centred on Maharashtra, which makes up a quarter of the tally, and is spreading wider as doctors and experts blame everything from official complacency to aggressive variants.
The government has blamed a widespread failure to adhere to norms on physical distancing and the use of masks.
"The situation is horrible," said Avinash Gawande, an official of a government hospital in Nagpur that was battling a flood of patients, as were hospitals in Gujarat and Delhi.
"We are a 900-bed hospital, but there are about 60 patients waiting and we don't have space for them."
Maharashtra began a curfew to rein in the spread of disease, a move that spurred a rush to stockpile essential items in advance.
India has added 2,00,739 infections over the last 24 hours, health ministry data showed, for a seventh daily record surge in the last eight days, while 1,038 deaths took its tally to 1,73,123.
Its tally of over 1.4 crore infections is second only to the United States, with 3.14 crore.
Despite injecting about 113 million vaccine doses, the highest figure worldwide after the United States and China, India has covered only a small part of its 1.4 billion people.
Curbs Ordered In Delhi
In New Delhi, authorities ordered a weekend curfew, placing curbs on shopping malls, gyms, restaurants and some weekly markets.
As infections climbed, doctors warned the surge could be deadlier than last year's.
"This virus is more infectious and virulent...We have 35-year olds with pneumonia in intensive care, which was not happening last year," said paediatrician Dhiren Gupta, at the Sir Ganga Ram Hospital. "The situation is chaotic."
Outside a major city mortuary, weeping relatives gathered in the hot sun to wait for the bodies of loved ones to be released.
Forty-year-old Prashant Mehra said he had to pay a broker for preferential treatment before he could get his 90-year-old grandfather admitted to an overstretched government hospital.
"He died after six or seven hours," he said. "We already asked for our money back."
Supplies of oxygen, critical to combat breathing difficulties, ran short in places such as Gujarat.
"If such conditions persist, the death count will rise," the head of a medical body in Ahmedabad told the Gujarat Chief Minister in a letter.
Television broadcast images of a long queue of ambulances carrying virus sufferers waiting to be admitted to a city hospital that can accommodate more than 1,000.
India was producing oxygen at full capacity for each of the last two days, the government said, and it had boosted output.
"Along with the ramped up production...and the surplus stocks available, the present availability is sufficient," the health ministry said in a statement.
In Haridwar, hundreds of thousands of pilgrims had thronged to a religious festival on the banks of the river Ganges on Wednesday, stoking fears of a new surge.
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