Thailand Sends 100s Of Lifesaving Medical Aid To India Amid COVID Second Wave

Thailand amongst several other countries has come forward to lend its medical support to the subcontinent. Gifted 210 oxygen cylinders plus concentrators.


Amid India grappling with the fatal and rapid spread of COVID-19 infections, Thailand amongst several other countries has come forward to lend its medical support to the subcontinent. As India continues to counter the mounting crisis posed by a record rise in the second wave of the contagions of the COVID-19 virus, on Saturday, fellow ASEAN partner, Thailand which is also in the extended neighbourhood gifted 200 oxygen cylinders and 10 oxygen concentrators.
Official Spokesperson of Indian Foreign Affairs Ministry, Arindam Bagchi established reception of said medical aid. Indian community in Thailand have also managed to dispatch their share of contribution in the ongoing crisis subsequent to pandemic India. He took to Twitter to demonstrate his gratitude.


Nations solidarity to India’s COVID-19 crisis
Exponential hike in COVID-19 infections across India since the inception of the second wave has evidently overburdened Indian production sectors, the medical infrastructure, and thousands of frontline medical staff in the country. While COVID-19 management and curbs have been harder for India to attain, solidarity has been an outpouring from numerous countries. Amid ascending COVID-19 figures in India, media reports, and gutting images of collapsing medical infrastructure, several countries have been outpouring solidarity with India’s ordeals. Previously, Ukraine, Israel, Netherlands, Romania on behalf of the European Union, United Kingdom, United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, China, Singapore, Bhutan amongst few that have come forward in providing assistance to India in procuring tonnes of liquid medical oxygen, transporting mobile oxygen plants, drugs, and vaccine to cater as requirements against the destructive COVID-19 second-wave.
This inflow of medical oxygen from overseas would meet oxygen requisites across states which are currently facing grave shortages. In the recent past, COVID-19 patients have succumbed to the virus due to a dearth of medical oxygen supply at hospitals.