<p>In the national capital of New Delhi, thousands of commuters crowded into underground train stations and shopping malls on Tuesday, prompting some doctors to warn it could lead to a resurgence in Covid-19 infections.</p>.<p>Major cities have begun lifting strict lockdowns as the nationwide tally of new infections has dropped to its lowest level in more than two months.</p>.<p>But disease experts and doctors have cautioned that a race towards resuming business as usual would compromise vaccination efforts as only about 5 per cent of all 95 crore eligible adults have been inoculated.</p>.<p>Doctors say Delhi's near-complete re-opening is concerning. The city's authorities have said they would reimpose strict curbs if cases rise.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/india-logs-60471-new-covid-19-cases-2726-deaths-in-24-hours-997628.html" target="_blank">Read | India logs 60,471 new Covid-19 cases; 2,726 deaths in 24 hours</a></strong></p>.<p>Thousands died in the capital in May, as oxygen supplies all but vanished and families pleaded on social media over scarce hospital beds.</p>.<p>People paid 20 times the usual price to secure ambulances and hearses, many died in parking lots, and morgues ran out of space.</p>.<p>"Delhi's top #mall saw a footfall of 19,000 people last weekend- as soon as it reopened. Have we gone totally mad?" Ambrish Mithal of Max HealthCare in New Delhi said on Twitter. "Wait for #Covid19 to explode again- and blame the government, hospitals, country."</p>.<p>In the early hours of Tuesday, Delhi's underground rail network put out alerts on Twitter about peak traffic and longer waits, responding to angry commuters angry about long queues.</p>.<p>After a strict five-week lockdown in Delhi, authorities have fully re-opened shops and malls and allowed restaurants to have 50 per cent seating. Suburban rail networks can run at 50 per cent capacity, and offices have been partially reopened.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/delhi-eases-covid-19-curbs-whats-allowed-whats-not-from-today-997229.html" target="_blank">Read | Delhi eases Covid-19 curbs: What's allowed, what's not from today</a></strong></p>.<p>Vaccinations have slowed, however; the city government said inoculation centres for people ages 18-44 would start shutting down on Tuesday, as doses were scarce.</p>.<p>"Delhi ought to have unlocked far more scientifically. We are inviting trouble!" Arvinder Singh Soin, a surgeon and leading liver transplant specialist, said on Twitter.</p>.<p>Nationwide, India reported 60,471 new Covid-19 infections over the past 24 hours, the lowest number since March 31, data from the health ministry showed.</p>.<p>The country's total Covid-19 caseload now stands at 29.57 million, the second-highest globally behind the United States.</p>.<p>India added 2,726 deaths overnight, taking the overall tally to 377,031, data showed.</p>
<p>In the national capital of New Delhi, thousands of commuters crowded into underground train stations and shopping malls on Tuesday, prompting some doctors to warn it could lead to a resurgence in Covid-19 infections.</p>.<p>Major cities have begun lifting strict lockdowns as the nationwide tally of new infections has dropped to its lowest level in more than two months.</p>.<p>But disease experts and doctors have cautioned that a race towards resuming business as usual would compromise vaccination efforts as only about 5 per cent of all 95 crore eligible adults have been inoculated.</p>.<p>Doctors say Delhi's near-complete re-opening is concerning. The city's authorities have said they would reimpose strict curbs if cases rise.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/india-logs-60471-new-covid-19-cases-2726-deaths-in-24-hours-997628.html" target="_blank">Read | India logs 60,471 new Covid-19 cases; 2,726 deaths in 24 hours</a></strong></p>.<p>Thousands died in the capital in May, as oxygen supplies all but vanished and families pleaded on social media over scarce hospital beds.</p>.<p>People paid 20 times the usual price to secure ambulances and hearses, many died in parking lots, and morgues ran out of space.</p>.<p>"Delhi's top #mall saw a footfall of 19,000 people last weekend- as soon as it reopened. Have we gone totally mad?" Ambrish Mithal of Max HealthCare in New Delhi said on Twitter. "Wait for #Covid19 to explode again- and blame the government, hospitals, country."</p>.<p>In the early hours of Tuesday, Delhi's underground rail network put out alerts on Twitter about peak traffic and longer waits, responding to angry commuters angry about long queues.</p>.<p>After a strict five-week lockdown in Delhi, authorities have fully re-opened shops and malls and allowed restaurants to have 50 per cent seating. Suburban rail networks can run at 50 per cent capacity, and offices have been partially reopened.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/delhi-eases-covid-19-curbs-whats-allowed-whats-not-from-today-997229.html" target="_blank">Read | Delhi eases Covid-19 curbs: What's allowed, what's not from today</a></strong></p>.<p>Vaccinations have slowed, however; the city government said inoculation centres for people ages 18-44 would start shutting down on Tuesday, as doses were scarce.</p>.<p>"Delhi ought to have unlocked far more scientifically. We are inviting trouble!" Arvinder Singh Soin, a surgeon and leading liver transplant specialist, said on Twitter.</p>.<p>Nationwide, India reported 60,471 new Covid-19 infections over the past 24 hours, the lowest number since March 31, data from the health ministry showed.</p>.<p>The country's total Covid-19 caseload now stands at 29.57 million, the second-highest globally behind the United States.</p>.<p>India added 2,726 deaths overnight, taking the overall tally to 377,031, data showed.</p>