India not giving accurate COVID death count: Trump

India not giving accurate COVID death count: Trump
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the media as he departs for a day trip to Norfolk, Virginia, from the White House in Washington, U.S., March 28, 2020. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

New York: US President Donald Trump has said that India does not give a "straight count" on the Covid-19 deaths and is dirtying the environment.

During the presidential debate on Tuesday night with Democratic Party presidential candidate Joe Biden, they both sparred over the extent of the deaths caused by the pandemic.

Biden said that the 200,000 people who died of the coronavirus in America were 20 per cent of the global death toll of 1 million while the US population is only 4 per cent of the world.

Trump shot back, "When you talk about numbers you know how many people dies in China? You know how many people dies in Russia? You don't know how many people died in India. They don't give you a straight count."

Trump said that the pandemic was China's fault, but Biden tried to deflect China's role wanting to pin the blame for its ravages on Trump.

When climate change and the Paris Climate Agreement, from which Trump withdrew the US came up, he said, "China sends up real dirt into the air. Russia does. India does."

Biden made a threat to countries that will not follow his environmental agenda warning Brazil that if it continues tearing down forests, "You're gonna have significant economic consequences."

The first debate held in Cleveland was about domestic issues and there were no international questions on the agenda set out by Chris Wallace of Fox News, who was the moderator for the debate. The mention of India and the other two were among passing references to foreign countries.

Earlier in his news conferences he had mentioned India's record of conducting COVID-19 tests as the second-best in the world and only behind the US.

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