Haryana’s vaccinated dying 5x more than unvaccinated

The COVID-19 death rate in Haryana, India is five times higher among the vaccinated than the unvaccinated this year, a development that has gone unreported by mainstream news outlets. 

According to The Indian Express, the Haryana Health Department conducted an initial analysis which shows that among the 155 deaths recorded so far since January 1, 2022, at least 34 deaths were vaccinated, while seven were unvaccinated. The vaccination status of the other deaths remain unknown. 

Haryana, which has a population of over 25 million people, has had a total death toll of 10,237 since the start of the pandemic. 

On January 16, 2021, the World Health Organization (WHO) boasted that India, the origin of the Delta variant, rolled out “the world’s largest COVID-19 vaccination drive”.  

Haryana has had a COVID-19 vaccine mandate in place since January 1st, barring any vaccine-free individuals from entering public venues such as cinemas, restaurants and malls. The Haryana Health Minister more recently instituted a vaccine mandate for children 15-18 years old. Any of the 1.5 million children in that age group who do not get the shot will not be allowed to return to school. 

It is unclear if the higher death rate among the vaccinated will effect any change to the vaccine mandate in Haryana. If it does not, the Haryana government will need to justify why it is forcing vaccines on its population when the vaccines may cause death. 

Such a development flies in the face of the current COVID-19 narrative, which assures that while the vaccinated are more prone to contract and transmit the disease, they have a lower mortality rate than the unvaccinated. 

The UK is also experiencing its own vaccine death toll. According to a recent report by the UK Health Security Agency, over 70% of COVID-19 deaths are among those who are full vaccinated.  

In September 2021, President Joe Biden warned of a “pandemic of the unvaccinated”, predicting that the unvaccinated will die in droves from COVID-19.