Hospital attendants with a man with a fever lying on a stretcher awaiting a coronavirus swab test at Guwahati Medical College Hospital in Assam, India, on May 17, 2020.
Anupam Nath/AP Photo
Mumbai has been hardest hit, with 20% of the country's cases and 25% of all deaths, the Times reported.
The city of 20 million-plus residents is not only India's financial hub but also where Bollywood and Dharavi, Asia's largest slum, are located. According to the Times, local hospitals have been overrun and police officers are stretched thin. In Dharavi, social distancing at home is nearly impossible, as typically more than half a dozen residents live in rooms bookended by concrete slabs covered with tin roofs.
Migrant workers have been hit hard by the crisis
Among the worst of the population wracked by the virus are some 40 million migrant workers who, when jobs dried up, found themselves stranded in major cities without money or food. Some were forced to walk hundreds of miles over days to get home.
"This lockdown is totally inhuman," lawyer-activist Prashant Bhushan, who has filed a petition in the Supreme Court seeking help for these workers to return home, told BBC News.
"Those who test negative for COVID-19 must not be forcibly kept in shelters or away from their homes and families against their wishes," he added. "The government should allow for their safe travel to their hometowns and villages and provide necessary transportation for the same."
Migrants wait in queues with their families to board buses to reach Ghaziabad railway station as part of their journey to their hometowns during the ongoing COVID-19 nationwide lockdow in Uttar Pradesh, India, on May 18, 2020.
Imtiyaz Khan/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
India's government relaxed some restrictions on May 4, allowing millions of migrants workers to travel by buses and special trains from major cities where they'd been working. This triggered a spike in infections in villages in rural areas where those people headed.
Modi, who introduced a $260 billion coronavirus relief package, is also gradually lifting restrictions to revive the economy. The agriculture industry and small shops have resumed business across multiple states and e-commerce deliveries have restarted.
But restaurants, hotels, colleges, schools, flights, and malls remain closed across the country, according to the Associated Press.
"It's overdue as the economic impact on India is going to be quite severe," Arvind Subramanian, a former economic adviser to the Indian government, said to The Times.
Goldman Sachs on Monday predicted that the Indian economy will shrink by 45% this quarter. The country's GDP will decline by 5% this fiscal year, the company said, marking India's steepest contraction since 1979.
Members of the Central Reserve Police Force patrol a coronavirus containment zone in Ranchi, India, on May 17, 2020.
Diwakar Prasad/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
Meanwhile, the lack of hygiene and lack of space to maintain social distancing continue to complicate India's coronavirus response as is the summer — with temperatures closing in on 100 degrees Fahrenheit and making it difficult for people to stay indoors — and impending monsoons.
Also, experts worry that India's testing rates are low, which is preventing officials from understanding the true scope of its coronavirus outbreak.
But, in a speech that hinted at the lockdown being eased further, Modi said that the country can't be overly bogged down by the virus, The Times said.
"All the experts are telling us that corona will be part of our lives for a long period," he said. "But we cannot allow our lives to revolve around corona, corona, corona."