NEW DELHI: Haunted by the specter of last year's crisis, India is bracing for a deluge of COVID-19 cases, with authorities of various megacities bringing in restrictions in a bid to keep infections in check. Case numbers have yet to match the enormous figures seen last spring, when thousands died each day and the Hindu holy city of Varanasi maintained round-the-clock funeral pyres for the mass cremation of virus victims.

New cases passed 100,000 on Friday, a surge driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant that some experts worry could again see the country's hospitals overwhelmed. An overnight curfew has been imposed in the Delhi area that includes the capital, where weekend movement restrictions began on Friday evening, with all non-essential workers asked to stay home.

Tech hub Bangalore has also declared a weekend curfew, while sprawling financial center Mumbai introduced a night curfew. "Even a small percentage of a large number of cases translates to a large number in absolute terms," Gautam Menon, a professor at India's Ashoka University who has worked on COVID infection modelling, told AFP. "This could potentially stress out healthcare systems to levels comparable to or worse than the second wave."

Doctors and nurses who spoke to AFP have so far been optimistic, with fewer severe cases among those patients admitted to hospital - and with the benefit of experience. "Last year, we didn't know what exactly we were dealing with. I think now, mentally, it's a little better," one frontline worker at a Delhi hospital said. Suresh Kumar, director of Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Hospital in the capital, where cases have quadrupled from a handful at the start of the week to 20, said the rise was "not a cause for panic".

Meanwhile, an Indian court on Friday rejected a bid to cancel a major Hindu festival despite fears the vast gathering could spread coronavirus infections. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to attend the annual Gangasagar Mela festival, which began yesterday on an island where the holy river Ganges enters the Bay of Bengal. It marks the harvest season and will reach a climax next weekend ahead of the new moon on Jan 17.

Kolkata-based doctor Avinandan Mondal sought a court order to ban the festival over coronavirus concerns. But the Calcutta High Court rejected the request, instead asking the regional government - which estimated attendance at no more than 500,000 and supported the gathering - to issue advertisements warning people about the risks of attending. "People from all states in the country will attend the religious festival and take a holy dip," environmentalist Subhash Dutta told AFP. "They may carry variant viruses and this religious festival may end up being the biggest superspreader in the coming days," he added.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration has so far shied away from the drastic nationwide lockdown introduced during last year's catastrophic outbreak. But local officials have watched the sharply rising case numbers with alarm and some of India's biggest urban centers have moved to impose restrictions again. Earlier virus lockdowns were a hammer blow to the Indian economy and many are worried about the financial impact of new restrictions.

"I will be working only for 15 days this month," said Delhi resident Tumul Srivastava, whose office is subject to the 50 percent occupancy limits imposed by the city. "My salary may be deducted. All this is adding to my anxiety."

'The system may crumble'

India appears better placed to weather Omicron than it was ahead of the calamitous Delta wave it suffered last spring, when more than 200,000 people died in a matter of weeks. Back then, hospitals ran out of oxygen and patients desperately scrambled to source medicine after a run on pharmacies. In the time since, Indian health workers have injected nearly 1.5 billion vaccine doses, with government data showing nearly two-thirds of the country fully vaccinated.

That campaign, combined with last year's Delta sweep of towns and villages around the country, may help lessen the impact of the latest spread. "Though we do not have data, this may give strong hybrid immunity against severe outcomes," University of Michigan epidemiologist Bhramar Mukherjee told AFP. Preliminary studies have so far suggested the Omicron variant has led to less severe health consequences among those infected, despite its rapid spread.

Mukherjee warned however that an uncontrolled spread of new infections could still pose serious problems for India, even if the direct virus toll is a fraction of that seen last year. "As you are witnessing in the US and UK, a major chunk of the working population being sick is affecting the societal infrastructure and leading to chaos," she said. "I am afraid there may be a period in India when we see the same thing - just the sheer volume may make the system crumble." - AFP