India's rich hunker down in safety bubbles
Virus resurgence overwhelms India’s medical system and spurs other nations to shut out Indian travellers
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Some of India's richest people are forming bubbles with their families and staff, while others are leaving for homes outside of major cities as virus resurgence overwhelms the country's medical system and spurs other nations to shut out Indian travellers.
"I've been indoors with my family and our staff, that's my story," said Kris Gopalakrishnan, one of the billionaire-cofounders of IT giant Infosys. Who now runs a Bengaluru-based venture to support startups. The group are shunning outside contact and only eating home-cooked meals, he said.
Another Infosys co-founder, Nandan Nilekani said in a text message that he was also holed up in his home in the Indian tech capital, as a second, more lethal wave of coronavirus cases sweeps the nation of 1.3 billion people.
The return of the virus spurred many wealthy families to flee India, some on private jets, before countries from Australia to the UK started to ban flights from what is now the corona virus epicentre of the world. Others are hunkering down, running vast empires from their homes and helping provide essential aid like oxygen supplies and protective equipment. Byju Raveendran, the billionaire founder of India's most valuable startup, online-education provider Byju's, is confined with his extended family in a series of houses in Bangalore's HSR Layout neighbourhood - popularly referred to as unicorn row given its home to a bevy of startups valued at more than $1 billion. The family's personal staffs are also sequestered with them, Raveendran said. "The support systems are strong and outside contact has been minimal."
Ambani, Adani
India's two richest people have moved to homes in less-populated parts of the country, as the virus hits the capital New Delhi and financial hub Mumbai particularly hard. Mukesh Ambani, Asia's wealthiest man, has shifted from Mumbai with his family to Jamnagar - a township in the state of Gujarat that's home to Reliance Industries Ltd's massive twin oil refinery complex - according to people familiar with their movements who didn't want to be named discussing private matters. Billionaire Gautam Adani, the second-richest person in India, is with his son Karan Adani and other close family members at their home on the outskirts of Ahmedabad in Gujarat, a person familiar said. Representatives for the Reliance and Adani groups declined to comment.
India is reporting record numbers of new cases every day, pushing medical facilities and crematoriums to the breaking point. People have been pleading on social media for everything from oxygen cylinders to food for the elderly in quarantine, and while parts of the country have gone back into lockdown, there are concerns another nationwide order could be disastrous for the poor and the wider economy.