<p>Staff at the luxury Suryaa hotel used to wear bright saris as they welcomed guests. Now they must don medical suits and handle gurneys as New Delhi desperately prepares for a predicted surge in coronavirus cases in the coming weeks.</p>.<p>The pandemic is still raging in India with more than half a million cases. The capital, home to 25 million people, is the country's worst-hit city -- its hospitals at breaking point and authorities reaching deep to confront the crisis.</p>.<p>"For doctors and nurses it is a part of their lives. For us this is a totally new experience and a very difficult one at that," said Ritu Yadav, operations manager at the five-star Suryaa, as staff in masks rush to deep clean the building.</p>.<p>"We have got training from the hospital on how to wear the PPE and then take it off but this is something I never thought I would have to do when I chose hospitality as my career."</p>.<p>Delhi, home to some of India's most crowded slums, has around 75,000 cases so far, but the city government predicts this will soar to half a million by the end of July.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-india-deaths-covid-19-tally-maharashtra-karnataka-delhi-mumbai-bengaluru-icmr-worldometer-info-851629.html" target="_blank"><strong>Follow live updates on coronavirus here</strong></a></p>.<p>With newspapers full of reports about patients being turned away from overflowing hospitals, Delhi told the city's hotels earlier this month they would be roped in to provide hospital care.</p>.<p>It is also converting wedding halls, and has several hundred repurposed railway coaches standing by -- without air conditioning despite outside temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius (105 Fahrenheit).</p>.<p>The Delhi authorities have even started converting a spiritual centre or ashram into a coronavirus isolation facility and hospital with 10,000 beds, many made of cardboard.</p>.<p>But for hotels, the move triggered outrage in an industry already reeling under losses because of travel restrictions.</p>.<p>The owners of Suryaa and four others approached the court, arguing many staff were over 50 and therefore were high-risk themselves, with no experience of hospital care or handling bio-medical waste.</p>.<p>"It came as a shock because we were not spoken to about it, we got to know through the press," Greesh Bindra, a top executive at the hotel, told AFP.</p>.<p>"It's like you are sleeping in a hotel and the next morning when you wake up you are told your hotel has become a hospital. Your first reaction will be how is this possible. We are hospitality, not a hospital."</p>.<p>The hotel won a reprieve from the court -- of sorts.</p>.<p>Instead of becoming a hospital, it could act as a covid care centre, housing patients on their way to recovery with mild to moderate symptoms.</p>.<p>It and around 30 other hotels in Delhi are set to be attached to hospitals which will provide staff to deal with any emergency.</p>.<p>The hotels can charge a maximum $66 a day, including meals. But they and their employees, used just to changing bedsheets and providing room service, have had to improvise and innovate.</p>.<p>From using disposable plates and drawing red lines to ensure social distancing, they have minimum contact with their special guests.</p>.<p>"You have to keep your staff safe as after all they are your people," said Bindra, whose hotel will be offering 200 beds.</p>.<p>But whether the efforts of the Delhi government -- which is squabbling with the federal government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- will be enough is unclear.</p>.<p>Delhi has just over 13,000 beds for coronavirus patients in state-run hospitals with another 10,000 in private ones. The city government forecasts it will need 80,000 beds by the end of July.</p>.<p>The government has cancelled leave of all healthcare staff and plans to rope in volunteers to fight the crisis.</p>.<p>It has refused to reimpose a lockdown, as the southern city of Chennai has done.</p>.<p>Many in Delhi are worried and are taking matters into their own hands.</p>.<p>Some resident welfare associations are buying oxygen cylinders and other equipment, while using vacant flats as isolation wards -- exposing the lack of trust in authorities.</p>.<p>"One of our residents lost his life just because he couldn't get a bed in time. Then we thought we should do something at our level," said Lokesh Munjal, the head of a west Delhi housing society.</p>.<p>"We don't want to be at the mercy of government and hospitals."</p>
<p>Staff at the luxury Suryaa hotel used to wear bright saris as they welcomed guests. Now they must don medical suits and handle gurneys as New Delhi desperately prepares for a predicted surge in coronavirus cases in the coming weeks.</p>.<p>The pandemic is still raging in India with more than half a million cases. The capital, home to 25 million people, is the country's worst-hit city -- its hospitals at breaking point and authorities reaching deep to confront the crisis.</p>.<p>"For doctors and nurses it is a part of their lives. For us this is a totally new experience and a very difficult one at that," said Ritu Yadav, operations manager at the five-star Suryaa, as staff in masks rush to deep clean the building.</p>.<p>"We have got training from the hospital on how to wear the PPE and then take it off but this is something I never thought I would have to do when I chose hospitality as my career."</p>.<p>Delhi, home to some of India's most crowded slums, has around 75,000 cases so far, but the city government predicts this will soar to half a million by the end of July.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-india-deaths-covid-19-tally-maharashtra-karnataka-delhi-mumbai-bengaluru-icmr-worldometer-info-851629.html" target="_blank"><strong>Follow live updates on coronavirus here</strong></a></p>.<p>With newspapers full of reports about patients being turned away from overflowing hospitals, Delhi told the city's hotels earlier this month they would be roped in to provide hospital care.</p>.<p>It is also converting wedding halls, and has several hundred repurposed railway coaches standing by -- without air conditioning despite outside temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius (105 Fahrenheit).</p>.<p>The Delhi authorities have even started converting a spiritual centre or ashram into a coronavirus isolation facility and hospital with 10,000 beds, many made of cardboard.</p>.<p>But for hotels, the move triggered outrage in an industry already reeling under losses because of travel restrictions.</p>.<p>The owners of Suryaa and four others approached the court, arguing many staff were over 50 and therefore were high-risk themselves, with no experience of hospital care or handling bio-medical waste.</p>.<p>"It came as a shock because we were not spoken to about it, we got to know through the press," Greesh Bindra, a top executive at the hotel, told AFP.</p>.<p>"It's like you are sleeping in a hotel and the next morning when you wake up you are told your hotel has become a hospital. Your first reaction will be how is this possible. We are hospitality, not a hospital."</p>.<p>The hotel won a reprieve from the court -- of sorts.</p>.<p>Instead of becoming a hospital, it could act as a covid care centre, housing patients on their way to recovery with mild to moderate symptoms.</p>.<p>It and around 30 other hotels in Delhi are set to be attached to hospitals which will provide staff to deal with any emergency.</p>.<p>The hotels can charge a maximum $66 a day, including meals. But they and their employees, used just to changing bedsheets and providing room service, have had to improvise and innovate.</p>.<p>From using disposable plates and drawing red lines to ensure social distancing, they have minimum contact with their special guests.</p>.<p>"You have to keep your staff safe as after all they are your people," said Bindra, whose hotel will be offering 200 beds.</p>.<p>But whether the efforts of the Delhi government -- which is squabbling with the federal government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- will be enough is unclear.</p>.<p>Delhi has just over 13,000 beds for coronavirus patients in state-run hospitals with another 10,000 in private ones. The city government forecasts it will need 80,000 beds by the end of July.</p>.<p>The government has cancelled leave of all healthcare staff and plans to rope in volunteers to fight the crisis.</p>.<p>It has refused to reimpose a lockdown, as the southern city of Chennai has done.</p>.<p>Many in Delhi are worried and are taking matters into their own hands.</p>.<p>Some resident welfare associations are buying oxygen cylinders and other equipment, while using vacant flats as isolation wards -- exposing the lack of trust in authorities.</p>.<p>"One of our residents lost his life just because he couldn't get a bed in time. Then we thought we should do something at our level," said Lokesh Munjal, the head of a west Delhi housing society.</p>.<p>"We don't want to be at the mercy of government and hospitals."</p>