Asia Today: Indian businesses urge easing of virus lockdown

NEW DELHI (AP) — With Chinese industries ramping up production, competing Indian businesses are urging Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to loosen India's 5-week-old coronavirus lockdown when it comes up for review on Sunday.

Gurcharan Das, former head of Procter & Gamble in India, said Wednesday that key industries such as pharmaceuticals, information technology and automobiles, which employ millions of people, can resume manufacturing at half or even one-third of their capacities in areas unaffected by the coronavirus. He said manufacturers should ensure that safeguards are in place for their workers, including safe distancing and the wearing of masks.

If India is unable to bring its economy back on the track, it could lose 30 million to 40 million jobs by the end of this year, leading to a devastating economic crisis, said Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, executive chairwoman of Biocon, a biopharmaceutical company.

India has confirmed more than 30,000 cases and 1,007 deaths.

Modi imposed a three-week lockdown on March 25 and later extended it until May 3, when he is scheduled to address the nation on its future. The government loosened it on Wednesday to allow hundreds of thousands of stranded people to return to their home villages.

In other developments in the Asia-Pacific region:

— INDIA SHELVES HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE PLANS: Public health officials in India have shelved plans to administer the untested anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine, or HCQ, to thousands in Mumbai’s crowded slums as a way of preventing infections in healthy people. Health officials in Mumbai said the plan to conduct tests was still in the cards but had not yet been approved by the government. For now, they will follow federal guidelines that say the drug can only be used for high-risk groups including health care workers taking care of COVID-19 patients, contacts of confirmed patients and those in quarantine centers. Experts say there is little evidence to show that HCQ can help treat COVID-19 infections. The drug had been widely touted by President Donald Trump.

— BANGKOK SET TO EASE RESTRICTIONS: Officials in Thailand’s capital say they're preparing to ease restrictions imposed to fight the coronavirus. The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration said Wednesday that plans call for the reopening of restaurants, markets, exercise venues, parks, hairdressers and barbers, clinics and nursing homes, animal hospitals and pet salons, and golf courses and driving ranges. Restaurants will have to keep their seats at least 1.5 meters (5 feet) apart and practice a wide range of sanitary measures. Thailand has confirmed 2,947 cases, including 54 deaths.