Asia | Indian brink

India is recording more cases of covid-19 than any other country

South Asia is becoming the hub of the pandemic

|DELHI

ON APRIL 7TH India detected more than 125,000 new cases of covid-19—more than any other country in the world. The same day neighbouring Bangladesh registered far fewer—just over 7,600—but that was nonetheless a record for the country. Pakistan, too, is suffering a surge in infections, with the president, prime minister and minister of defence among those afflicted. In all three countries, testing in rural areas is almost non-existent, so the official tally of cases is likely to be a drastic undercount. On its current trajectory, South Asia, home to a quarter of humanity, will soon eclipse the European Union as the centre of the pandemic. Having suffered almost 200,000 known deaths from the disease already, the region is on the verge of further tragedy.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Indian brink”

Riding high: A special report on the future of work

From the April 10th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Portrait of Lee Jae-myung with a background of red-and-blue circles and a map.

Who is Lee Jae-myung, South Korea’s possible next president?

The Economist interviews the divisive progressive leader

Hun Manet, Cambodia’s prime minister

Is Cambodia slipping out of China’s orbit?

A new generation of leaders could be more receptive to the West


Residential buildings in the Guanxin district of Hsinchu, Taiwan

Why Taiwanese youth complain of becoming “housing slaves”

A new generation is questioning the value of homeownership


The Quad finally gets serious on security

The Indo-Pacific coalition signals a tougher approach to China

Taiwan’s political drama is paralysing its government

Domestic dysfunction plays right into China’s hands

An angry culture war surrounds Australia Day

Conservatives claim that wokeness is destroying the national holiday