This story is from May 01, 2021
Indian diaspora struggles to help a homeland ‘gasping for air’
Read our coronavirus live blog for all the latest news and updatesJaspreet Rai is desperately trying to do her part for the country she left more than 30 years ago: help its people breathe.
Rai, 53, who moved to Endicott, New York — the birthplace of IBM — from Punjab, in India, is the founder of Sanrai International, a provider of
Read our coronavirus live blog for all the latest news and updates
“This is probably the hardest time they’re going through,” Rai said of her 100-strong staff on the ground, who will supply 30,000 units across India in May, several times the 1,500 Sanrai normally provides in a year. “When you don’t have equipment, and you’re trying to hold people, and they’re gasping, literally gasping for air. And you’re like, look, I’ve sold my last unit, I have to wait until the next stock comes in.”
Like Rai, millions of Indians spread across the globe — one of the world’s largest diasporas — are trying to do what they can to help their country of origin as heart-wrenching images of people lining up for oxygen cylinders, waiting outside hospitals for a bed or huddling around funeral pyres flash across their screens. Some have been unable to do anything to save family members who have succumbed to the disease.
Feeling helpless
They are collecting funds, lobbying governments in countries where they reside and making pledges to shuttle essential supplies and equipment. But the scale of the task is leaving many feeling helpless as the health-care infrastructure in the world’s second-most populous country teeters on the brink of collapse.
“They need doctors and hospitals,” said Venktesh Shukla, general partner at Monta Vista Capital in Silicon Valley. “I’ve been struggling for the last three to four days to figure out what to do. Like a lot of Indians, we want to do something. We just can’t find a short-term solution to help.”
India in chaos as
In spite of that frustration, the need to “do something” in the face of the unfolding tragedy is spurring many into action.
Like Sudhir Ravi. Little did Ravi know he would be embarking on a humanitarian mission when the Chicago-based private equity boutique TJM Capital Partners, where he is an operating partner, bought the largest US supplier of military-grade oxygen generators in a strategic acquisition in April.
But with Covid raging, Ravi soon identified 11 industrial strength oxygen concentrators between the US and Germany that can be distributed to hospitals in India. The devices can offer oxygen to 50,000 people in the next six months.
For the last week, he and Raghu Gullapalli, a close contact and executive director at the LV Prasad Eye Institute in Hyderabad, have been frantically looking for ways to get them to India, requesting the services of Amazon and FedEx. A consortium of Indian philanthropists have committed to cover the $100,000 cost of shipment, and Ravi said they’re hoping to get the cargo in the air on May 5.
“Right now, time is measured in lives,” said Gullapalli.
Billionaire action
Indian-born billionaires and executives are also piling in with help. Tech investor Vinod Khosla tweeted that he’s willing to send supplies by the “planeload.” Google, headed by Sundar Pichai, promised $18 million in cash assistance to victims’ families and medical equipment. Microsoft Corp., led by CEO Satya Nadella, pledged to draw on the company’s network to provide essential supplies.
In the UK, home to around two million Indians, aid has come from people like steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal and Karan Bilimoria, who helped draw support from companies as the first Indian head of the Confederation of British Industry.
“We are focused on getting this help that is desperately needed as quickly as possible,” said Bilimoria, whose company produces Cobra beer, a staple of Indian restaurants in the UK Air Liquide SA, the French gas supplier that helps create the bubbles in Bilimoria’s beer, has pledged its oxygen production in India to support Covid patients.
A patient receives medical oxygen in a ward at the Covid-19 Care Center set up at the Commonwealth Games Village Sports Complex in New Delhi.
Mittal’s Indian operations are providing 210 metric tons of liquid oxygen a day. “Helping the people of India means helping India, and that’s crucial for the entire world,” he said in an emailed statement.
The charitable foundation of UK-based billionaire brothers Mohsin and Zuber Issa, who bought supermarket chain Asda, donated 2.5 million pounds ($3.5 million) to four hospitals in the western Indian state of Gujarat, from where their family hails.
Vaccine woes
As life in the UK and the US edges ever closer to pre-pandemic normal, for Indians abroad worrying about family and friends, the unequal access to vaccines is becoming evident. Only 2% of the people in India have been fully vaccinated compared with 30% in the US and 21% in the UK, according to the Bloomberg Vaccine Tracker.
Monta Vista’s Shukla said he and 60 other influential Indians lobbied to convince the Joe Biden administration to free up vaccine supplies and steroids. The US has decided to start shipping drugs like AstraZeneca’s vaccine and Remdesivir to India.
Yet for all that, there’s only so much even powerful Indians can do remotely as raw material and equipment shortages, freight delays and labor limits hamper efforts on the ground.
“There’s only so many oxygen concentrators available in the market,” said Jitesh Gadhia, a British politician and a trustee of the British Asian Trust who has helped lead the UK government’s response and engagement with suppliers. “I am concerned that so many people trying to buy a limited stock will just raise prices. What we need is more supply.”
And that won’t be easy. While in Endicott Rai is trying to find charter flights to get around bottlenecks to transport her oxygen concentrators to India from China, she said units her company can provide in a month “could probably just be used in one day.”
Rai, who started her company after her asthmatic grandmother died in 2008 needing oxygen, said she’s saddened by the continued fight in India over something as essential as the air one breathes.
“I couldn’t understand how something so basic as oxygen was so complicated,” she said. “And that question is what I’ve been trying to answer for the past 13 years.”
Rai, 53, who moved to Endicott, New York — the birthplace of IBM — from Punjab, in India, is the founder of Sanrai International, a provider of
oxygen
concentrators. With India now the epicenter of the pandemic, counting about 3,500 Covid-19 deaths daily, and oxygen supplies running out, Rai has rushed to help her former homeland cope with its worst crisis in recent history.Read our coronavirus live blog for all the latest news and updates
“This is probably the hardest time they’re going through,” Rai said of her 100-strong staff on the ground, who will supply 30,000 units across India in May, several times the 1,500 Sanrai normally provides in a year. “When you don’t have equipment, and you’re trying to hold people, and they’re gasping, literally gasping for air. And you’re like, look, I’ve sold my last unit, I have to wait until the next stock comes in.”
Feeling helpless
“They need doctors and hospitals,” said Venktesh Shukla, general partner at Monta Vista Capital in Silicon Valley. “I’ve been struggling for the last three to four days to figure out what to do. Like a lot of Indians, we want to do something. We just can’t find a short-term solution to help.”
India in chaos as
vaccine
drive in disarrayIn spite of that frustration, the need to “do something” in the face of the unfolding tragedy is spurring many into action.
But with Covid raging, Ravi soon identified 11 industrial strength oxygen concentrators between the US and Germany that can be distributed to hospitals in India. The devices can offer oxygen to 50,000 people in the next six months.
“Right now, time is measured in lives,” said Gullapalli.
Billionaire action
Indian-born billionaires and executives are also piling in with help. Tech investor Vinod Khosla tweeted that he’s willing to send supplies by the “planeload.” Google, headed by Sundar Pichai, promised $18 million in cash assistance to victims’ families and medical equipment. Microsoft Corp., led by CEO Satya Nadella, pledged to draw on the company’s network to provide essential supplies.
In the UK, home to around two million Indians, aid has come from people like steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal and Karan Bilimoria, who helped draw support from companies as the first Indian head of the Confederation of British Industry.
“We are focused on getting this help that is desperately needed as quickly as possible,” said Bilimoria, whose company produces Cobra beer, a staple of Indian restaurants in the UK Air Liquide SA, the French gas supplier that helps create the bubbles in Bilimoria’s beer, has pledged its oxygen production in India to support Covid patients.
A patient receives medical oxygen in a ward at the Covid-19 Care Center set up at the Commonwealth Games Village Sports Complex in New Delhi.
Mittal’s Indian operations are providing 210 metric tons of liquid oxygen a day. “Helping the people of India means helping India, and that’s crucial for the entire world,” he said in an emailed statement.
The charitable foundation of UK-based billionaire brothers Mohsin and Zuber Issa, who bought supermarket chain Asda, donated 2.5 million pounds ($3.5 million) to four hospitals in the western Indian state of Gujarat, from where their family hails.
Vaccine woes
As life in the UK and the US edges ever closer to pre-pandemic normal, for Indians abroad worrying about family and friends, the unequal access to vaccines is becoming evident. Only 2% of the people in India have been fully vaccinated compared with 30% in the US and 21% in the UK, according to the Bloomberg Vaccine Tracker.
Monta Vista’s Shukla said he and 60 other influential Indians lobbied to convince the Joe Biden administration to free up vaccine supplies and steroids. The US has decided to start shipping drugs like AstraZeneca’s vaccine and Remdesivir to India.
Yet for all that, there’s only so much even powerful Indians can do remotely as raw material and equipment shortages, freight delays and labor limits hamper efforts on the ground.
“There’s only so many oxygen concentrators available in the market,” said Jitesh Gadhia, a British politician and a trustee of the British Asian Trust who has helped lead the UK government’s response and engagement with suppliers. “I am concerned that so many people trying to buy a limited stock will just raise prices. What we need is more supply.”
And that won’t be easy. While in Endicott Rai is trying to find charter flights to get around bottlenecks to transport her oxygen concentrators to India from China, she said units her company can provide in a month “could probably just be used in one day.”
Rai, who started her company after her asthmatic grandmother died in 2008 needing oxygen, said she’s saddened by the continued fight in India over something as essential as the air one breathes.
“I couldn’t understand how something so basic as oxygen was so complicated,” she said. “And that question is what I’ve been trying to answer for the past 13 years.”
Top Comment
wangjianguo
1233 days ago
In 2021, when India most needs help from the United States, the American media kept fanning the epidemic in India and inciting people to hate the Modi government. On August 28, the US CNN TV station quoted extremely exaggerated forecast figures that the Indian epidemic may cause 500 million infections, shocking the world. CNN focused the camera on the "flaming fires" crematoriums in various parts of India, as well as dying patients and angry family members. In the report, the epidemic in India seemed to be "the end of the world." Western media are now not only humiliating India, but also slandering and insulting "third world" countries. The whole world should resist this rogue behavior of the US media.Read allPost comment
Popular from India
- ‘Never a dull moment’: Shashi Tharoor predicts action-packed Trump presidency after inaugural address
- Neutral expert upholds India's stand on Indus Water Treaty against Pakistan
- Snan of ‘most beautiful sadhvi’ splits seers at Maha Kumbh
- Mystery behind 17 deaths in J&K's Rajouri will be resolved soon: Omar Abdullah as probe intensifies
- 'Halal' certification making items costlier: Govt tells Supreme Court
end of article
Trending Stories
- Citizenship by birth curtailed even for legal immigrants: Over 1 million Indians in green card queue impacted
- Baba Vanga predictions 2025: Major life transformation for 3 Zodiac Signs
- First lawsuit filed in US court contesting end to citizenship by birth
- International flight carrying Steve Jobs wife Laurene Powell from Prayagraj airport brakes 93-year spell
- ChatGPT maker OpenAI CEO Sam Altman: My kid is never gonna grow up being smarter than...
- Maoist commander with Rs 1 crore bounty among 14 ultras killed in encounter in Chhattisgarh
- JEE Mains 2025: NTA issues important notice regarding change of examination centre, check details here
Visual Stories
- 10 most beautiful sea animals
- 10 simple and practical ways to achieve internal happiness
- 10 ways to add fiber-rich cabbage in daily diet
- 10 South Indian dishes that are easy to make for breakfast
- From Lion to Butterfly: 10 animals and what do they symbolise
UP NEXT