Vietnamese expats struggle amid India’s devastating COVID-19 outbreak

The Vietnamese community in India faces fear and uncertainty as COVID-19 spreads virtually unchecked in the country.
Vietnamese expats struggle amid India’s devastating COVID-19 outbreak ảnh 1Vietnam Ambassador to India Pham Sanh Chau stands in front of a hospital where a Vietnamese engineer working for the Vietnam Embassy has been treated for infection with the coronavirus in New Delhi, India. (Photo courtesy of the Ambassador)
Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - The Vietnamese community in India faces fear anduncertainty as COVID-19 spreads virtually unchecked in the country.

Indiais currently witnessing the worst COVID-19 surge in the world withinfections and deaths seeing record spikes on a daily basis. More than 1million new cases have been reported over the past three days, bringing thenation’s healthcare system to its knees and pushing the country into anunprecedented crisis.

Thedevastating situation has put millions of lives and livelihoods at risk, includingamong the Vietnamese expat community.

HuynhThuy Vy, a Vietnamese expat in Chennai Capital in Tamil Nadu State, told theVietnam News Agency that things have been much worse since the resurgence ofthe pandemic last month.

Herbeauty salon has received few customers lately and would be closed for the nextseveral days.

Travellingand getting access to essentials have become difficult and Vy said herfamily tried to avoid going outside and maintain a healthy diet during thepandemic.

Sheeven stored a range of different types of medicine just in case.

“Thecost of hospital treatment has been incredibly expensive. Plus hospitals arealready overcrowded and have a severe shortage of health staff and medicalequipment and supplies,” she said.

TamiNadu is among the states hit hard by the second wave of COVID-19 with more than15,000 newly infected cases added daily in the last few days, and active casesas of April 26 topping 100,000 cases.

Thelocal government has announced stringent curbs, including the closure ofshopping complex, malls, beauty spas and salons. A complete lockdown is set tobe applied on May 2.

Vysaid a friend of her family flew to India for healthcare treatment but gotstuck due to the pandemic.

“Theyare struggling to get back home on the next rescue flight, but I’m not sure ifthey managed to do that as the pandemic is getting worse,” she said.

NguyenViet Thanh, a PhD student at Odisha University of Agriculture and Technology inOdisha State, also expressed concern about the COVID-19 crisis.

Whenthe first wave of coronavirus hit India last September, Thanh had to return toVietnam due to the closure of the school. He recently returned to India tofinish his studies, but doing so is impossible amid the crisis.

Thanhsaid what surprised him the most was that many people did not wear face masksand still gathered in temples or at street food stalls without keeping physicaldistance.

Someparts of his school campus have been used as isolation areas for COVID-19patients. Thanh said all he could do now was to avoid gatherings, wear masksand gloves and wash his hands properly.

Vyand Thanh are among those lucky to be healthy in the epicentre of thepandemic. On Saturday, AFP reported India hit the rate of one COVID-19 death injust under every four minutes in Delhi. 

Overwhelmed

Asthe healthcare system is already overwhelmed and unable to take care of localpeople, the risk of serious illness or death of foreign residents is very highif they get infected.

Nhan,a Vietnamese engineer working for the Vietnamese Embassy in the capital NewDelhi, was left in critical condition after contracting the coronavirus.

Ina letter, Vietnam Ambassador to India Pham Sanh Chau sent to Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper April 25, hewrote to the infected engineer: "Nhan, please don't die!"

Theengineer had a constant high fever and a blood oxygen level down below 90 percent. He was at high risk of superinfection and needed to go to ahospital immediately.

Heneeded a COVID-19 test to be hospitalised and had to wait three days for a testas most testing facilities were overloaded. After three days of waiting,he received his positive result. 

Withthe embassy’s support, Nhan was finally hospitalised for treatment afterthree hospitals refused to receive him. He received the oxygen cylinder whenhis oxygen level had fallen below 80 per cent.

DoThanh Hai, Counselor and Deputy Chief of Mission at the Embassy of Vietnam inIndia, said most of the 1,000 registered Vietnamese expats in India had gone home. 

Currently,only about 100 Vietnamese expats remain scattered across India and theembassy has kept in touch with them to give support when needed.

Haisaid a strict lockdown had been imposed in New Delhi and travelling had becomedifficult, so the Embassy had sent people to collect and supply food forthose in need.

Headded that the embassy had not received any urgent requests from the Vietnamesecommunity, except for a few COVID-19 infected Vietnamese engineers involved inthe construction project of the embassy in the capital New Delhi recently.

Inthe context of the intense outbreak, the embassy had to switch to remote workbut had maintained basic activities to serve the protection of citizens whennecessary.

Anembassy official had also been infected and was currently in quarantine. Theofficial was in good health and was making positive progress, he said./.
VNA

See more

Automated ticketing system is used on the urban railway Cat Linh-Ha Dong line in Hanoi. (Photo: VNA)

Digital transformation powers Hanoi metro expansion

Beyond convenience, stable fares and the elimination of fuel, parking and maintenance costs have made urban rail increasingly attractive. The growing preference for metro travel is also contributing to a greener, more modern urban lifestyle.

Delegates cut the ribbon to inaugurate the operation of electric bus route No. 43. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi accelerates shift to green buses, targets 100% by 2030

In the 2027–2030 period, the city will accelerate the transition towards the complete phase-out of fossil fuel-powered buses. The share of electric and green energy-fueled buses is projected to reach 79–89% by 2029 and 100% by 2030.

At the second session of the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Council (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City greenlights central square, administrative centre in Thu Thiem

The new central city square and administrative centre will create a modern, centralised political-administrative complex for Ho Chi Minh City, designed to house around 8,000 officials, civil servants, and employees. It will also handle daily traffic of 1,500- 2,000 citizens and business representatives through a unified one-stop-shop administrative service system.

A working session at the job fair (Photo: VNA)

Vietnamese students flock to Seoul Job Fair 2026

The second annual Job Fair 2026 was held for Vietnamese students in the Republic of Korea. Organisers pitched it as a straight-up bridge between eager students and bosses hungry for young talent who can actually handle multicultural workplaces.

Defendants at the court (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City court opens trial over Agribank lending scandal

The investigation revealed that multiple credit files were incomplete or riddled with inaccurate information, while some pledged assets lacked proper legal standing yet were accepted and grossly overvalued. As a result, the loans became high-risk and largely unrecoverable, leading to losses surpassing 1 trillion VND.

Hanoi introduces 53 electric buses from April 18 (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi to add 53 electric buses from April 18

According to the plan, all buses operating within Ring Road 1 will use green energy by July 1, 2026. The requirement will expand to Ring Road 2 by January 1, 2028, and to Ring Road 3 by 2030.

Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

National, local traffic safety committees to be dissolved from June 1

Under the dicision, ministries and ministerial-level agencies will assume responsibility for tasks previously performed by the committee, in line with their mandates under the Law on Government Organisation, the Law on Road Traffic Order and Safety, the Law on Roads and other relevant legal frameworks, ensuring that traffic safety and order are maintained without disrupiton.

Visitors explore technology showcases at the exhibition held during the Da Nang Startup and Innovation Festival (SURF 2025). (Photo: VNA)

About 10,000 students expected at National Startup Day 2026

This year marks the rollout of the “Student Startup Support Programme for 2026 – 2035”, approved under Decision No. 336/QD-TTg, which places emphasis on practical outcomes, real products, real testing, real partnerships, and measurable impact.

Hong Quang High School pilots teaching mathematics in English starting from the 2025–2026 academic year. (Photo: VNA)

National foreign language proficiency framework issued

The circular establishes a unified benchmark for foreign language proficiency across the national education system, providing a foundation for curriculum design, teaching, testing, assessment, and certification. It is expected to help learners better map out their language development pathways while enabling educational institutions to improve training quality and strengthen articulation between different levels of education.