A Health care worker in a protective suit amidst the Corona Virus outbreak in India.

by Vishal Manve with Aishwarya Kumar in New Delhi
Indian police barricaded parts of one of Asia’s biggest slums Friday after two coronavirus deaths, as under-pressure Prime Minister Narendra Modi sought to dispel “darkness and uncertainty” with a national light show.
India so far has largely escaped the pandemic with 2,300 infections and 56 deaths, according to official figures, but two fatalities and a third infection in the Dharavi neighbourhood of Mumbai have set alarm bells ringing.
Authorities have set up eight “containment zones” in the area, home to as many as a million people living and working in cramped tin-roofed shanties, flats and small factories — made famous by the 2008 film “Slumdog Millionaire”.
“We have home-quarantined people from these buildings and cordoned off the area so people can’t enter them, and enforced social distancing,” said Vijay Khabale-Patil, spokesman of Mumbai’s city authority.
“We sprayed hydrochloric acid to disinfect these buildings and nearby areas as well… People from Dharavi are following the rules and keeping themselves and their kids inside homes.”
Police on Friday were not letting anyone in or out of the cordoned areas.
The first death from coronavirus in Dharavi, on Wednesday, was a 56-year-old man with no travel history or contact with anyone known to be infected, although he previously had a renal complaint, officials said.
The second fatality — a 51-year-old sanitation worker living in a different area of Mumbai, but who worked in Dharavi — died in hospital on Thursday.
The third case is a doctor who lived and worked in the neighbourhood, who on Friday was receiving treatment.
Experts say the coronavirus could spread like wildfire in slums where social distancing and self-isolation are all but impossible.
Dharavi’s population density is thought to be 270,000 per square kilometre, according to the World Economic Forum.
Resident Mobinuddin Shaikh, 51, whose home is opposite from where one of the patients lived, said people had been largely ignoring India’s 21-day lockdown imposed on March 25, but they were now panicking.
“We are a family of five,” he told AFP by phone. “We use communal toilets or have to get water from public taps.”
“Only God can save us”, he added.

‘Light and hope’

The imposition of the nationwide lockdown on India’s 1.3 billion people has meanwhile been far from smooth.
Tens of millions of migrant workers were suddenly left jobless when the economy ground to a halt.
Around half a million are thought to have attempted to travel back to their home villages, many on foot.
Some have been crammed onto government buses and relief camps with little regard to infection risks.
Police have been criticised for using heavy-handed tactics to enforce the lockdown, including by the UN rights office.
Footage shared online of a group of migrants being hosed down with chemicals provoked outrage.
There have been local media reports of considerable disruption to the transport of food.
Farmers are worried they will be unable to harvest their crops because of a lack of manpower.
Health care workers have complained of shortages and poor quality of protective equipment.
Testing rates are low compared to many other countries, raising doubts about the official numbers infected.
The authorities have appealed to employers to pay wages and landlords not to evict people. The Delhi city government alone is feeding around 400,000 people.
“In spite of all these significant efforts, more needs to be done as the human tragedy continues to unfold before our eyes,” UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet said on Thursday.
On Friday, Modi called on Indians to hold candles and mobile phones aloft on their balconies for nine minutes on Sunday at 9:00 pm.
“Friends, amidst the darkness spread by the Corona pandemic, we must continuously progress towards light and hope,” Modi said in an address to the nation.
“We must defeat the deep darkness of the crisis, by spreading the glory of light in all four directions.”
– AFP

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Elections without democracy? Shifting political landscapes in Singapore and Malaysia

Singapore Armchair Critic for The Online Citizen Singapore and Malaysia, as highly…

Over 2,000 dengue cases reported in the first quarter of 2019

Over 2,000 dengue cases have been reported in the first quarter of…

【冠状病毒19】5月20日新增570例确诊

根据新加坡卫生部文告,截至本月20日中午12时,本地新增570例冠状病毒19确诊,本地累计确诊已增至2万9364例。 新增确诊病患大多为住宿舍工作准证持有者,两名是本地公民或永久居民。 当局仍在搜集新病例详情,并将在晚些时候公布。

何晶称“好些人都默默捐钱” 网友笑问“敢问您年薪多少?”

新加坡总理夫人兼淡马锡首席执行长何晶:“有好些人一路来默默捐钱未公开予众。 不过,网民也不忘在何晶脸书留言调侃,询问何晶的薪资多少?新闻工作者韩俐颖就笑言,自己拿出计算机准备算一算,何晶究竟捐了多少钱、占了她的年薪多少呢? 至于她这番说话,是否是指桑骂槐,暗讽工人党党魁毕丹星捐出国会反对党领袖一半津贴的举措,则不得而知。 何晶是在脸书贴文称,有些人公布部分捐献,但对于经常性捐款也没宣扬。有些行善不留名、或写在遗嘱里。当然,不是所有人都是“天使””。但何晶之后又隐喻,有些人会从亲友家人那里捞钱,有些用偷的、或透过操弄或舞弊。只有部分会被法律制裁。 “每个人都必须回答自己的良心,天地可鉴,报应不爽。”(Everyone has to answer to their conscience, the…