India is experiencing a severe wave of the emerging corona virus (Covid-19), which may pose a threat to the supply of Corona vaccines manufactured by India and supplied to more than 90 countries, and the Indian strain of the virus may be transmitted, as it has been registered so far in 17 countries, which means What India is experiencing may have wide effects on the entire world, and the Corona "tsunami" in India may hit all beaches.

The epidemic crisis is escalating in India, as the Ministry of Health announced Thursday that 3,645 deaths of Covid-19 were recorded within 24 hours, with nearly 6 million cases recorded in April alone, which is a third of the total recorded since the beginning of the epidemic, according to Agence France-Presse.

Vaccine manufacturing

India is the most capable place to manufacture vaccines in the world. It has the Serum Institute of India, which is at the heart of the global Covax project’s plans to share a Coronavirus vaccine, and is seen as the key to ensuring billions. People outside the West are on protection, according to a Sky News report.

The majority of the 93 countries that received vaccine supplies from India are in Africa and Asia, which are among the poorest and smallest countries that do not have their own production capacity and the population is in dire need of protection.

The “Sirm of India” institute has committed to providing more than a billion doses of the vaccine “AstraZeneca” and “Novavax”, while 3 other vaccines - namely, “Johnson & Johnson” and Cofaxin, are produced by Bharat Biomedica's Covaxin and Russia's Sputnik-V are produced in India.

This graphic design includes 9 of the most prominent symptoms of Corona, and to learn more about the symptoms of infection with the Indian strain of Kurna virus, click on this link.

More than 66 million doses of the five vaccines have been sent to 93 different countries and United Nations agencies, and the largest single recipient is Bangladesh, which borders India, with 10.7 million doses.

The United Kingdom also gets vaccines from India, and has received 5 million doses of the original order of 10 million doses of AstraZeneca, but when India banned the export of the second five million, the National Health Service in Britain was so concerned that it asked to stop giving the first dose. For those who are temporarily under the age of fifty.

With the escalation of injuries and deaths, there are concerns that the country may not be able to continue exporting vaccines sufficiently, by re-directing these vaccines internally.

India had committed to delivering 200 million doses of the Corona vaccine during the Kovacs program by June, but this is now in great doubt, as only 40% of the order schedule has been fulfilled so far.

And when India began to limit the export of vaccines, the head of the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said, such moves could be "catastrophic" for African countries.

"If the delay (of vaccines from India) continues - I hope it is a delay rather than a ban - it will be catastrophic to meet our vaccination schedule," said Nkengasung, at the beginning of April, according to the Australian ABC website.

This delay has persisted and is likely to continue for some time.

Crisis for everyone

The Corona outbreak is not just a crisis for India, it is a crisis for everyone.

"The virus does not respect borders, nationalities, age, gender or religion," says the chief scientist at the World Health Organization, Dr. Sumiya Swaminathan, according to a BBC report.

The Corona epidemic revealed how interconnected the world is, and if a country has very high levels of infection, it is likely to spread to other countries.

Even with travel restrictions, multiple tests, and quarantines, the infection can still be transmitted.

The mutated version, B.1.617 (B.1.617) - better known as the Indian mutant or the Indian strain due to its first discovery in India - was found in more than 1,200 genome sequences in "at least 17 countries," the World Health Organization announced Tuesday. .

The situation in India is a reminder that no one in the world will be safe until everyone is safe.