Formal criminal charges against the vice president could mean potential jail time
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Sri Lanka has begun mass cremations to clear a backlog of dead bodies from Covid-19 as cases surge across the island, officials said Monday.
Daily virus infections in the country have doubled in a month to more than 2,500 with nearly 100 deaths, putting a huge strain on hospitals.
On Sunday evening Colombo Municipality began mass cremations, disposing of 15 corpses at the Colombo General Cemetery after the island’s main hospital said it had no more freezer space.
The Public Health Inspectors (PHI) union said bodies of Covid-19 patients piled up at hospitals over the weekend as crematoriums working round the clock were unable to cope with a rapid rise in deaths.
“At this rate, we may have to build new crematoriums,” PHI union chief Upul Rohana told reporters in Colombo.
At the Colombo North hospital there were 20 bodies without refrigeration while the number at the Panadura hospital south of the capital was over 50.
At the Colombo National hospital’s mortuary, all 66 freezers were filled and bodies were piling up on trollies and tables, hospital sources said.
Throughout the pandemic the state has disposed of bodies and not released them to families.
Rohana said the surge in infections also meant contact tracing of patients was no longer practical.
Coronavirus restrictions were tightened on Friday as reports emerged of Covid patients dying while awaiting admission to overcrowded hospitals.
The government said state ceremonies and public gatherings were banned until September 1.
Just over 11 million people out of the population of 21 million have been given at least one vaccine jab, while 2.93 million had received both as of Sunday.
Sri Lanka has recorded 5,107 deaths to date and almost 330,000 infections, according to official data. But experts say the true figure is much higher.
The new wave comes after the government relaxed restrictions in April to allow celebrations for the traditional Sinhala and Tamil New Year. Regulations were tightened once more in May and eased again on July 10.
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