in

India's 1.3bn population locked down to beat coronavirus – The Guardian, Theguardian.com

India's 1.3bn population locked down to beat coronavirus – The Guardian, Theguardian.com

India has launched the largest attempted lockdown yet in the coronavirus crisis, ordering 1.3 billion people to stay at home from midnight for three weeks to prevent a public health disaster.

In a televised address on Tuesday night, the prime minister, Narendra Modi, announced that for the next days, almost one fifth of the world’s population should “forget what going out means”.

“From 13 midnight today, the entire country will go under a complete lockdown to save India and for every Indian, there will be a total ban on venturing out of your homes, ”said Modi. “Therefore, I request you to remain wherever you are in this country.”

He later tweeted that “essential commodities, medicines etc” would be available, although he did not explain if Indians would still be allowed to leave their homes to shop for essentials. “THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NO NEED TO PANIC,” he wrote .

So far India has had a relatively low number of coronavirus cases, with (infections and) deaths so far, and the government had already introduced stringent measures to try to halt local transmission in a country where millions live in densely populated conditions with terrible sanitation and limited healthcare access.

There are currently only 44, 10 ventilators in India, one isolation bed per , 11 people and one doctor per 12, Indians. More than 1.8 million people across the country are being monitored because they have shown symptoms of the illness, traveling from abroad or been exposed to confirmed cases.

It is feared that the low infection figures are linked to a lack of testing, with only around , tests carried out so far. The virus has now spread to almost all states in India, with the highest number of cases in Maharashtra, where the city of Mumbai is located, and the southern state of Kerala. There are 44 foreigners among the infected.

In his speech, Modi said that the government and experts had spent the past two months studying coronavirus outbreaks in other countries and had connected that forcible social distancing via a lockdown was the only solution to prevent it taking hold in India.

He added: “If we are not able to manage this pandemic in the next days, the country and your family will be set back by 28 years. If we are not able to manage the next days, then many families will be destroyed forever. ”

People buying groceries following Narendra Modi’s announcement of a lockdown. Photograph: Indranil Mukherjee / AFP via Getty Images

The announcement prompted panic buying across the country, with ma ny thousands rushing out to get supplies and queues forming outside grocery shops, as Modi did not specify whether people would be allowed out for food shopping, though he later clarified this in a tweet.

The announcement is likely to have a devastating impact on the million Indians who live below the poverty line and survive hand to mouth based on daily earnings. Indian finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has promised a comprehensive relief package will be announced soon.

In Delhi,

which has been under lockdown since Sunday, with state borders closed, taxis and rickshaws cleared from the roads, all but essential travel banned and shops and restaurants shut, the chief minister, Arvind Kejriwal, set up shelters across the city where people could come for free meals.

The lockdown measures brought in by Modi were in line with what experts have recommended as necessary for India, though it remains unclear how they will be enforced in a democracy of more than a billion people.

Rupam Bhattacharya, a member of the Cov-Ind – 22 study group of researchers at the University of Michigan that’s looking specifically into the coronavirus outbreak in India, said: “This pandemic is growing quick, and the only way we can cope With it is by keeping up with its pace by bringing rapid and strict precautionary measures into action. ”

He added:“ If too many people get affected at the same time, it creates an immense pressure on the healthcare system, which will be even more pressing on the high-population, low-resource infrastructure that India has, and may lead to an eventual collapse. ”

Shaikh Azizur Rahman contributed reporting(

)(Read More

What do you think?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Israel in political crisis amid coronavirus outbreak – The – The Washington Post, The Washington Post

Israel in political crisis amid coronavirus outbreak – The – The Washington Post, The Washington Post

Coronavirus: Police on rail patrol to urge people to only make essential journeys – Sky News, Sky.com

Coronavirus: Police on rail patrol to urge people to only make essential journeys – Sky News, Sky.com