Bodies wash up on banks of Ganga in India's Bihar, causes Covid panic
Dozens of bodies were seen floating in the river at Chausa town - on Bihar's border with Uttar Pradesh - and later piling up on the banks, to the horror of residents
In frightening new visuals that expose the scale of India's Covid crisis, bloated, decomposing bodies washed up on the banks of Ganga at Bihar's Buxar on Monday.
Dozens of bodies were seen floating in the river at Chausa town - on Bihar's border with Uttar Pradesh - and later piling up on the banks, to the horror of residents, reports the NDTV.
People woke up early this morning to the grotesque sight and raised an alarm. The local administration believes the bodies floated down from Uttar Pradesh and belong to Covid patients whose relatives may have been unable to find space to cremate or bury them.
"Some 40-45 bodies were seen floating," said Chausa district official Ashok Kumar, standing at the site of the horror, Mahadeva Ghat in Chausa. He said the bodies seem to have been thrown into the river. By some accounts, there could be closer to 100 bodies.
"They are bloated and have been in the water for at least five to seven days. We need to investigate where they are from, which town in UP," said another official, KK Upadhyay.
There is panic in the town and others nearby about infection from the bodies and from the river water.
"People are terrified of getting Covid. We have to bury the bodies," said Narendra Kumar, a villager.
"A district administration official came and said they would pay Rs500 for cleaning up the bodies," he told reporters.
The bodies have led to a blame-game between UP and Bihar.
India has recorded over three lakh Covid cases daily for nearly three weeks and hit record deaths, over 4,000, last week.