Thursday, April 9, 2020

டாக்டர்கள் போர் வீரர்கள் போன்றவர்கள்: சுப்ரீம் கோர்ட்

Added : ஏப் 09, 2020 02:25 

புதுடில்லி: 'டாக்டர்கள் மற்றும் மருத்துவ ஊழியர்கள், போர் வீரர்களைப் போன்றவர்கள்' என சுப்ரீம் கோர்ட் தெரிவித்துள்ளது.

கொரோனா சிகிச்சையில் ஈடுபட்டுள்ள டாக்டர்கள் மற்றும் மருத்துவ ஊழியர்களுக்கு, போதிய பாதுகாப்பு உபகரணங்கள் வழங்கக் கோரி, உச்ச நீதிமன்றத்தில், மூன்று மனுக்கள் தாக்கல் செய்யப்பட்டன. இந்த மனுக்களை, நீதிபதிகள் அசோக் பூஷண் தலைமையிலான அமர்வு, 'வீடியோ கான்பரன்ஸ்' மூலம், விசாரித்தது.

அப்போது, நீதிபதிகள் கூறியதாவது: டாக்டர்கள் மற்றும் மருத்துவ ஊழியர்கள், போர் வீரர்களைப் போன்றவர்கள். அவர்கள் பாதுகாக்கப்பட வேண்டியவர்கள். மேலும், சேவை துறையை சேர்ந்த பலர், வீட்டில் இருந்து பணியாற்றுகின்றனர். அவர்களின் உடல் மற்றும் மனநலன் குறித்தும், அரசு கவனம் கொள்ள வேண்டும். இவ்வாறு, நீதிபதிகள் தெரிவித்தனர்.

சேலத்தில், 'குவார்ட்டர்' ரூ.600

Added : ஏப் 08, 2020 23:07

சேலம் : சேலத்தில், 'குவார்ட்டர்' மது பாட்டில், 600 ரூபாய் வரை விற்பனை செய்யப்படுகிறது.

ஊரடங்கு அமலாகும் முன், சேலம் மாவட்டத்தில், முன்னாள் சாராய வியாபாரிகள், பார் நடத்துவோர், சந்துக்கடை வியாபாரிகள், டாஸ்மாக் மது பாட்டில்களை, பெட்டி பெட்டியாக வாங்கி குவித்தனர்.பதுக்கப்பட்ட சரக்குகளின் விற்பனை, ஒரு வாரம் தீவிரமாக நடந்த நிலையில், தட்டுப்பாடு ஏற்பட்டது. இதனால், கள்ளச்சாராய வியாபாரிகள், சேர்வராயன் மலை, ஜருகு மலை, கல்வராயன் மலைகளில் இருந்து சாராயத்தை வாங்கி வந்து, விற்பனையில் ஈடுபட்டனர்.இதையடுத்து, தனிப்படை போலீசார், ஐந்து நாட்கள் மலைப் பகுதிகளில், 'ரெய்டு' நடத்தி, 163 பேரை கைது செய்ததோடு, இரண்டு கார்கள், 14 இருசக்கர வாகனங்கள், 365 லிட்டர் சாராயம் ஆகியவற்றை பறிமுதல் செய்தனர்.

இதனால், கள்ளச்சாராய விற்பனை தடை பட்டது. சுதாரித்து கொண்ட, 'டாஸ்மாக்' பதுக்கல் வியாபாரிகள், தங்களிடம் இருப்பு உள்ள சரக்குகளில், போதை மாத்திரை, தண்ணீர் கலந்து, விற்பனையில் ஈடுபட்டு வருகின்றனர்.சேலத்தில், கிச்சிப்பாளையம், கொண்டலாம்பட்டி, சூரமங்கலம், வீராணம் உள்ளிட்ட பல பகுதிகளில், 30க்கும் மேற்பட்டோர், டூ - வீலர்களில் சென்று, மது விற்பனை செய்கின்றனர். கடந்த வாரம் வரை, குவார்ட்டர், 300 ரூபாய்க்கு விற்கப்பட்டது. நேற்று, 600 ரூபாயாக விலை உயர்ந்தது.
சபரிமலை வழிபாடுக்கு, 'ஆன்லைன் புக்கிங்'

Added : ஏப் 08, 2020 23:09

சபரிமலை : சபரிமலை பக்தர்கள், தங்கள் வழிபாடுகளை நிறைவேற்ற, 'ஆன்லைனில்' முன்பதிவு செய்யும் வசதியை, தேவசம் போர்டு செய்துள்ளது.

கொரோனா பரவுவதை தடுக்க கடைப்பிடிக்கப்படும் ஊரடங்கால், சபரிமலையில் பங்குனி உத்திர ஆராட்டு திருவிழா நடைபெறவில்லை. சித்திரை விஷு திருவிழா ரத்து செய்யப்பட்டது. ஆனாலும், சித்திரை மாத பூஜை நடைபெறும் எனவும், பக்தர்களுக்கு அனுமதியில்லை எனவும் தேவசம் போர்டு தெரிவித்துள்ளது.சித்திரை மாத பூஜைக்காக, ஏப்., 13 மாலை, 5:00 மணிக்கு நடை திறக்கப்பட்டு, ஏப்., 18 வரை பூஜைகள் நடக்கும்.பக்தர்கள் இந்த நாட்களில், தங்கள் சார்பில் நீராஞ்சனம், நெய்விளக்கு, அஷ்டோத்தர அர்ச்சனை, சகஸ்ரநாம அர்ச்சனை, சுயம்வர அர்ச்சனை, நவக்கிரக நெய்விளக்கு, கணபதி ஹோமம், பகவதி சேவை என, எட்டு வகை வழிபாடுகளை நடத்தலாம் .

இதற்கு, www.onlinetdb.com என்ற இணையதள முகவரியில் முன்பதிவு துவங்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. இதற்கான கட்டணத்தையும் ஆன்லைனில் செலுத்தலாம். விரைவில் காணிக்கை செலுத்துவதற்கான வசதியும், இந்த இணையதளத்தில் செய்யப்பட உள்ளது. சபரிமலை அய்யப்பனுக்கு, காணிக்கை செலுத்த விரும்ப விரும்பும் பக்தர்கள், தனலெட்சுமி வங்கி கணக்கு எண்: 012600100000019, 012601200000086 ஆகியவற்றில் செலுத்தலாம்.இத்தகவலை, திருவிதாங்கூர் தேவசம் போர்டு தெரிவித்துள்ளது.
பல்கலை தேர்வு திட்டம் குழு அமைத்தது யு.ஜி.சி.,

Added : ஏப் 08, 2020 23:23

கொரோனா விடுமுறை நாட்களை சரிக்கட்டி, புதிய கல்வி ஆண்டை திட்டமிடுவது குறித்து ஆலோசிக்க, நிபுணர் குழுவை, பல்கலை மானிய குழு அமைத்துள்ளது.இந்தியாவில், மார்ச், 15 முதல், கல்வி நிறுவனங்களுக்கு தொடர் விடுமுறை அறிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

பல்கலைகள் மற்றும் கல்லுாரிகளில், பாதியிலேயே பாடங்கள் முடிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன. ஆண்டு பருவ தேர்வுகள் தள்ளி வைக்கப்பட்டு உள்ளன.வரும், 15க்கு பின், ஊரடங்கு தளர்த்தப்பட்டாலும், உடனடியாக தேர்வுகளை நடத்த முடியாத சூழல் உள்ளது.இந்நிலையில், கொரோனா விடுமுறை நாட்களை சமாளித்து, செமஸ்டர் தேர்வுகளை, உரிய நேரத்தில் நடத்தி முடிப்பது குறித்தும், வரும், 2020 - 2021ம் கல்வி ஆண்டை திட்டமிடுவது குறித்தும், உரிய முடிவு எடுக்க, பல்கலை மானிய குழுவான, யு.ஜி.சி., நடவடிக்கை எடுத்துள்ளது.

இதுகுறித்து, ஆலோசனைகள் வழங்க, நிபுணர் குழுவையும், யு.ஜி.சி., அமைத்துள்ளது. ஹரியானா மத்திய பல்கலையின் துணை வேந்தர், குஹாத் தலைமையில், ஆறு உறுப்பினர்கள், இந்த குழுவில் இடம் பெற்றுள்ளனர். இந்த குழுவினர் ஆலோசித்து, ஒரு வாரத்தில், செயல் திட்ட அறிக்கை தாக்கல் செய்ய உள்ளனர்.
ஜூன் வரை ரேஷன் பொருட்கள் இலவசம்? மீண்டும், 1,000 ரூபாய் தர ஆலோசனை

Updated : ஏப் 09, 2020 02:09 | Added : ஏப் 08, 2020 23:11 |

சென்னை : ரேஷன் கடைகளில், சர்க்கரை உட்பட, குறைந்த விலையில் விற்கும் பொருட்களை, ஜூன் மாதம் வரை இலவசமாக வழங்கும்படி, பல தரப்பினரும், அரசுக்கு கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளனர்.

தமிழக ரேஷன் கடைகளில், அரிசி, கோதுமை இலவசமாகவும்; சர்க்கரை, துவரம் பருப்பு, பாமாயில் குறைந்த விலையிலும் விற்கப்படுகின்றன. கிலோ சர்க்கரை, 25 ரூபாய்; கிலோ பருப்பு, 30 ரூபாய்; லிட்டர் பாமாயில், 25 ரூபாய் என்றளவில் உள்ளன.

'கொரோனா' வைரஸ் பரவுவதை தடுக்க, மார்ச், 25 முதல் வரும், 14ம் தேதி வரை, ஊரடங்கு அமல்படுத்தப்பட்டு உள்ளது. இதனால், பலரும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு உள்ளதால், அரிசி ரேஷன் கார்டுதாரர்களுக்கு, தலா, 1,000 ரூபாய் ரொக்கமும்; இம்மாதத்திற்கு உரிய அரிசி, கோதுமையுடன், பருப்பு, பாமாயில், சர்க்கரையும் இலவசமாக வழங்கப்படுகிறது.

ஊரடங்கு காரணமாக, வீட்டு வேலையாட்கள், அமைப்புசாரா தொழிலாளர்கள் மற்றும் தினக்கூலிகளின் வாழ்வாதாரம் கேள்விக்குறியாகி உள்ளது. அவர்கள், மீண்டும் இயல்பு நிலைக்கு திரும்ப, பல நாட்களாகும்.

ரேஷன் கார்டுதாரர்கள் கூறியதாவது: ஊரடங்கால், வேலை இல்லாததால், பணப்புழக்கம் குறைந்துள்ளது. வெளிச்சந்தையில், அத்தியாவசிய உணவு பொருட்களுக்கு தட்டுப்பாடு ஏற்பட்டு, விலையும் அதிகரித்துள்ளது. எனவே, ஏழை மக்கள் பயன்பெறும் வகையில், ரேஷன் கடைகளில், ஜூன் வரை, அரிசி, கோதுமையுடன், பருப்பு, பாமாயில், சர்க்கரையையும் இலவசமாக, அரசு வழங்க வேண்டும். இவ்வாறு, அவர்கள் கூறினர்.

இதுகுறித்து, உணவு துறை அதிகாரி ஒருவர் கூறியதாவது: ரேஷனில், அடுத்த மூன்று மாதங்களுக்கு, கோதுமை, அரிசியை இலவசமாக வழங்கும்படி, மாநில அரசுகளுக்கு, மத்திய அரசு தெரிவித்துள்ளது.

தமிழகத்தில், ஏற்கனவே, அவை இலவசமாக வழங்கப்படும் நிலையில், ஜூன் வரை, பருப்பு, பாமாயில், சர்க்கரையை இலவசமாக வழங்க ஆலோசிக்கப்பட்டு வருகிறது.அத்துடன், மே மாதம், கார்டுதாரர்களுக்கு, கூடுதலாக, 1,000 ரூபாய் வழங்குவது தொடர்பாகவும், அரசு பரிசீலித்து வருகிறது. இவ்வாறு, அவர் கூறினார்.
காய்கறி பைகள் வழங்க கூட்டம் சேர்த்த எம்.எல்.ஏ.,

Added : ஏப் 08, 2020 22:44

சேலம் : சமூக இடைவெளியை கடைப்பிடிக்காமல், அ.தி.மு.க., - எம்.எல்.ஏ., காய்கறி பைகள் விற்பனையை துவக்கி வைத்தது, சேலத்தில் அதிர்ச்சியை ஏற்படுத்தியது.

கொரோனா பரவலை தடுக்கும் வகையில், ஊரடங்கு உத்தரவு அமலில் உள்ளது. அத்தியாவசிய பொருட்களை வாங்கக் கூட, மக்கள் சமூக விலகலை கடைப்பிடிக்க உத்தரவிடப் பட்டுள்ளது. இந்நிலையில், சேலம் தெற்கு தொகுதி, அ.தி.மு.க., - எம்.எல்.ஏ., சக்திவேல், தோட்டக்கலைத் துறை மூலம், 100 ரூபாய் காய்கறி பை விற்பனையை, செவ்வாய்ப்பேட்டை, லைன் ரோட்டில் நேற்று துவக்கி வைத்தார்.காலை, 7:00 மணிக்கு நடக்க இருந்த விழாவுக்கு, 6:00 மணி முதலே, நுாற்றுக்கும் மேற்பட்ட தொண்டர்கள் கூடினர்.

7:30 மணிக்கு வந்த, எம்.எல்.ஏ., சக்திவேல், 100க்கும் மேற்பட்டோர் முன்னிலையில், சமூக இடைவெளியை கடைப்பிடிக்காமல், காய்கறி விற்பனையை துவக்கி வைத்தார். எம்.எல்.ஏ.,விடம் பைகளை வாங்கிய பலர், முக கவசம் கூட அணியவில்லை. கொரோனா வைரஸ் நோயின் பரவலை தடுக்க, தமிழக அரசு பல்வேறு நடவடிக்கைகளை மேற்கொண்டு வருகிறது.இந்நிலையில், ஆளுங்கட்சி எம்.எல்.ஏ.,வே அரசின் உத்தரவை மதிக்காமல், ஆட்களை கூட்டி பைகளை வினியோகித்தது, மக்கள், போலீசார் மத்தியில் அதிர்ச்சியை ஏற்படுத்தியது.
65-year-old man dies after vain bid to get liquor in TN

09.04.2020

Villupuram: After trying desperately to get a bottle of liqour, a 65-year old man fainted and was later pronounced dead at a government hospital, police said on Wednesday. The elderly man, lined up in front of the shops at Janakipuram along with scores of other consumers. The man, after trying his luck in three shops, came to the fourth and “tried his best to get a bottle of liquor but could not and he fainted. We rushed him to a hospital, but hospital authorities pronounced him brought dead yesterday,” police said. PTI
Modi to hold talks with CMs

New Delhi  09.04.2020

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will interact with Chief Ministers of all States on April 11 to discuss various issues related to the coronavirus outbreak including the lockdown, official sources said on Wednesday.

A number of State governments, as well as experts, have been requesting the Central government to extend the 21-day nationwide coronavirus lockdown that was imposed from March 25. Sources in the government have said that the Centre is going through the requests from States and experts on extending the lockdown. This is for the second time the Prime Minister will interact with the Chief Ministers via video link after the lockdown was imposed. During an interaction with floor leaders of various political parties, who have representation in Parliament, on Wednesday, Modi said the situation in the country is akin to a ‘social emergency’ which has necessitated tough decisions.

According to an official statement, he said States, district administrations and experts have suggested extension of the lockdown to contain the spread of the virus. During his April 2 interaction with Chief Ministers, Modi had pitched for a “staggered” exit from the ongoing lockdown. PTI
Successful StrategyFollow South Korean Covid plans Asian nation’s virus strategy of ‘trace, test and treat’ is helping Germany get ahead of the situation  09.04.2020


Germany spends $5,848 per person each year on healthcare, higher than most other nations; has compulsory health insurance for all and testing is free

In the race against the coronavirus, Germany is betting on widespread testing and quarantining to break the infection chain, a strategy borrowed from South Korea whose success in slowing the outbreak has become the envy of the world. There are a few important indicators, which Germany is leveraging.

Germany has a population of 83 million (8.3 crore) living in 16 States. The country’s proposed plans echo the “trace, test and treat” strategy that appears to have helped South Korea bring its outbreak under control. It has included mass screening for potential cases and heavy use of technology to monitor patients.

Leveraging Smartphones

Although Germany and South Korea are two very different countries, the Asian nation’s virus strategy “can be an example”, according to Germany’s Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for disease control. Germany is already carrying out more coronavirus tests than any other European country at a rate of 300,000 to 500,000 a week, according to officials.

The government aims to ramp that up to at least 2,00,000 tests a day. The goal would be to test all those who suspect they have caught the virus, as well as the entire circle of people who have come into contact with a confirmed case. The current testing criteria are focused on those who are sick with Covid-19 symptoms and have had contact with a confirmed case.

A crucial weapon in the battle would be the use of smartphone location data to trace a patient’s recent movements, to more accurately track down and isolate potentially infected people. While government officials and epidemiologists have come out in favour of cell-phone tracking, it remains a controversial idea in privacy-minded Germany, a nation haunted by the surveillance of the Nazi era and the communist-era Stasi secret police. The mortality rate of Germany due to Covid- 19 is 1.4% — compared with around 10% in hardest-hit Italy, 9% in France, 8% in Spain and 4% in Switzerland. Due to intensive testing, the average age of a German infected with coronavirus is 46, whereas in Italy it is 63. About 80% of all people infected in Germany are younger than 60. In Spain, the number of affected over 60s is around 50%, 12% in Italy and 7% in the Netherlands.

According to medical experts, older people are far more likely to die from the coronavirus, and most deaths occur in those with pre-existing health conditions, which are more common in older people. For example, highly older populations in the most badly affected areas, such as the Lombardy and Bergamo regions in Italy, as well as in regions of France, had very high fatality rates.

Strong Public Healthcare

The solid and publicly-funded German healthcare system is also a reason for Germany’s relatively low death rate. With 28,000 intensive care beds equipped with ventilators, Germany is in a better position than many countries to deal with an influx of patients in respiratory distress.

Germany spends $5,848 per person each year on healthcare, which is higher than most other nations. It has compulsory health insurance for all and the cost of testing is free. It also has the second-most critical care beds per capita in Europe, 621 beds per 1,00,000 people. Italy has 275, and Spain 293.

However, in recent months, some intensive care beds have had to be put out of action because of a lack of staff. Germany currently has some 17,000 unfilled vacancies in nursing care. As a result, many hospitals have resorted to drafting in retired health professionals or student medics to help with the coronavirus onslaught, including at Berlin’s renowned Charite University Hospital of Humboldt University.

Changing Strategy

In view of this situation and increasing number of infections by the day, German Health Minister Jens Spahn has warned that the country could face “a storm” of new cases in the weeks ahead. Germany’s health specialists, however, warn that the dramatic scenes at Italian hospitals at breaking point could happen in Germany as well. Therefore, the government strategy is now to replace the previous method, based on the motto “we test to confirm the situation,” by the approach “we test to get ahead of the situation”.

Germany is following South Korea, which has used mass tests and the isolation of infected people to slow down the spread of the virus without bringing public life to a standstill, as a role model. Unlike China, South Korea did not impose any general curfews.

Experts say that the testing capacity in Germany should be increased “very quickly”, with the aim to carry out 1,00,000 a day from April 13, and 2,00,000 by the end of April. Berlin-based senior virologist Christian Drosten estimated last Thursday that around 5,00,000 tests are currently being carried out per week.

Beyond the plans for mass testing and the preparedness of the healthcare system, many also see Chancellor Angela Merkel’s leadership as one reason the fatality rate has been kept low. Merkel has communicated clearly, calmly and regularly throughout the crisis, as she imposed ever-stricter social distancing measures on the country. The restrictions, which have been crucial to slowing the spread of the pandemic, met with little political opposition and are broadly followed by all sections of the people. This is a strategy many countries could adopt.

(The author is an MLA)
Retired teacher donates Rs 50,000 to CMRF


Retired teacher Bura Mallesham handing over a cheque for Rs 50,000 to Finance Minister T Harish Rao in Siddipet.

State Bureau  09.04.2020

Siddipet

A retired teacher, Bura Mallesham has donated his one month pension, Rs 50,000, towards Chief Minister Relief Fund (CMRF) to help Telangana government to combat the Covid-19. Mallesham his wife Vijaya met Finance Minister, T Harish Rao at his residence and handed over the cheque on Wednesday.

Stating that the government’s revenue has decreased largely due to lockdown, Rao said the donations being made by the philanthropists could be very useful under the prevailing circumstances.

150 paddy cleaners

Meanwhile Harish Rao said the government would get 150 paddy cleaners from Punjab for Siddipet disitrict to clean the paddy at procurement centres and meet the seasonal demand here. Rao, who inaugurated paddy and maize procurement centres at various places in Siddipet, called upon the farmers to bring their produce to procurement centres with token numbers. He said that the procurement centres have been asked to issue token numbers to every farmer.
Narayana donates Rs 1 crore to CMRF


Narayana Group hands over cheque for Rs 1 crore to MA&UD Minister KT Rama Rao on Wednesday.

City Bureau

Hyderabad  09.04.2020

Narayana Group of Educational Institutions have donated Rs 1 crore to the Telangana Chief Minister’s Relief Fund and another Rs 1 crore to AP Chief Minister’s Relief Fund as their contribution in the fight against coronavirus. K Puneet, Executive Director, Narayana Group handed over the cheque for Rs 1 crore to MA&UD Minister, KT Rama Rao on Wednesday. Sindhura Narayana, Managing Director, Narayana Group said all need to cooperate with the government and follow the instructions strictly so that the nation could tide over the coronavirus crisis in a short time.
Pay full salaries to faculty, JNTUH to colleges

Colleges shall take care of the welfare of faculty during the lockdown period with regard to payment of full salaries regularly — JNTUH

City Bureau

Hyderabad  09.04.2020

Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University-Hyderabad (JNTU-H) has directed all the colleges under its ambit to pay full salaries to the faculty members and not to terminate the services of the faculty during the lockdown.

The university, in a circular, said that it had received grievances from some faculty working in various affiliated colleges stating that some managements have terminated their services. They also represented to the university that some colleges did not pay them their salaries while a few gave a partial salary for the lockdown in view of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Following the directions from the State government, the university had decided to close all constituent and affiliated colleges till April 14. The managements were directed not to recruit or terminate any faculty without selection committee or without the university’s permission. However, in case of any emergency, if the college wants to terminate the services of the faculty member(s), it should be done through mutual consent between the college and faculty member(s) as per the established service rules of the institute and with due intimation of the same to the university in advance.

“The university may consider the termination/appointment of such faculty to be valid only as per the affiliation norms, failing which, the college shall be liable for the consequences during the affiliation process for the ensuing academic year 2020-21. Hence, the colleges/institutes are informed that they shall take care of the welfare of the faculty during the lockdown period with regard to payment of full salaries regularly to the faculty and not terminate faculty members,” the circular read.

The college managements were asked to take proactive steps to resolve any grievances raised by their faculty members or students at the college level itself. They were also asked to ensure that faculty and students do not raise any complaint to the university, failing which the university would initiate stringent action against the erring colleges as per the university affiliation norms.
Lockdown won’t go at once: PM


Prime Minister Narendra Modi interacting with floor leaders of the opposition and other parties in Parliament via video conference in New Delhi. —Photo: PTI

New Delhi

Dashing hopes of a complete exit from the ongoing lockdown in one go, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday said the country is facing a “social emergency” like situation as well as serious economic challenges due to Covid-19.

After an interaction with Modi via video conference, floor leaders of opposition and other parties in Parliament said the lockdown might not be lifted completely after April 14 and they were told by the Prime Minister that the pre-corona and post-corona life won't be the same.

“The situation in the country is akin to a social emergency...it has necessitated tough decisions and we must continue to remain vigilant,” the Prime Minister told the leaders, according to an official statement. He asserted that his government's priority is to “save each and every life”. "The present situation is an epoch-changing event in mankind’s history and we must evolve to counter its impact,” Modi said.

“Prime Minister Modi made it clear that lockdown is not being lifted,” Biju Janata Dal leader Pinaki Misra said. Another leader, who participated in the meeting but did not wish to be named, said the Prime Minister told them that he would also consult Chief Ministers. Those participated in the meet included Ghulam Nabi Azad, leader of the opposition in Rajya Sabha, and Nationalist Congress Party head Sharad Pawar. Sources said these leaders were briefed by secretaries of various Ministries — health, home and rural development — on the actions taken by the government to tackle Covid-19 and mitigate the hardships arising out of the lockdown.

PPE shortage

Several opposition leaders raised the issue of shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) for health workers in the country, while a few also suggested that construction of the new parliament building should be avoided, a source said.
Four medical staff among 7 new cases in Anantapur

312 samples collected, results of 112 still awaited

09/04/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,ANANTAPUR

The Government General Hospital in Anantapur. R.V.S. PrasadR_V_S_PRASAD

A 70-year-old man from Kalyandurg in Anantapur district became the fifth victim of COVID-19 in the State.

Four people working at the Government General Hospital, including two doctors, are among seven persons who have tested positive for COVID-19 in Anantapur on Wednesday, according to Collector Gandham Chandrudu. With the seven new cases, the total number of positive cases has shot up from six to 13 in the district. District Medical and Health Officer K.V.N.S. Anil Kumar said at a press conference that six of the seven new positive cases were due to local transmission from the 58-year-old patient from Hindupur, who died while being treated at the GGH here on April 4. Two doctors and two paramedical staff, who attended to the patient before it was known that he was suffering from COVID-19, tested positive. The patient’s wife and son also tested positive. The seventh person who tested positive hails from Kalyandurg and had travelled to Delhi.

Hunt on for 65 contacts

“It was the negligence of the GGH staff in not suspecting the patient to be COVID-19 positive, which led to the spread of the infection. The patient was a regular visitor to GGH with bronchial problems and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which led to complacency among the medical staff,” Dr. Anil Kumar said.

The son of the deceased COVID-19 patient is a Registered Medical Practitioner at Hindupur and had treated 65 other patients after contracting the virus and had also treated his own father, it is learnt. The district administration is now scrambling to locate all those who came in contact with the RMP. The district so far has collected 312 samples, 13 of which have tested positive and 87 negative. Results of 112 samples are awaited. With the capacity of Anantapur VDRL Laboratory at the Government Medical College being limited, the authorities have sent some samples to SVIMS, Tirupati and are in touch with a private laboratory called VIMTA Labs in Hyderabad to get more samples tested there if needed, Dr. Anil Kumar said.

‘No dearth of masks’

The Collector said that there was no dearth of Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) for doctors and paramedical staff attending to suspected or confirmed COVID-19 patients. The district currently has 1,711 PPEs, 3,241 N-95 masks, 53,692 normal masks, 2.17 lakh surgical gloves, 90 HIV surgical kits and 4,226 delivery kits in addition to others. All these have been positioned in various places to enable immediate replenishment, he said.
Additional guidelines for COVID-19 body disposal

‘Body should be prepared as per rituals of the religion concerned’

09/04/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,HYDERABAD

The State government, on Tuesday, issued separate guidelines for the safe management and disposal of Hindu and Christian bodies infected with COVID-19, in addition to a separate set already issued, which was applicable to Muslims.

Accordingly, the body should be prepared as per the rituals of the religion concerned, be it cleaning or wrapping.

Family members not exceeding three will be permitted to see the body at the hospital at any point of time through protected glass window. Body will be placed in a leak proof zip bag with transparent section for viewing face of the deceased.

Two GHMC vehicles with supporting staff in full PPE gear will accompany the transportation vehicle, with COVID safety material and power spraying cans. Each designated hospital is required to designate a COVID Liaison Officer (CLO) who will interact with the family and make required provisions.

A hospital-level committee with the Resident Medical Officer, Deputy commissioner of the circle concerned, Assistant Commissioner of Police, and Hospital CLO should meet daily and sort the issues with regard to disposal of bodies.

No family members will be allowed on the vehicle during transit to the graveyard, and only five persons may attend the last rites. They should reach using their own transport, and wear masks and gloves given by the hospital CLO.

It is the responsibility of the CLO to ensure that all the arrangements are in place at the graveyard or crematorium, before releasing the body.

On reaching, the body should be carried to the cremation spot by handlers not exceeding four in number. The funeral pyre should be encircled on all sides by a temporary rope barricade, at four meters distance.

Customary ‘Pradakshinas’ may be allowed within four metre distance, and the pyre should be lit with three-metre long stick from outside the barricade.

The local police should arrange for video recording of the entire process and submit the same to the ACP concerned.

After the funeral, all family members and body handlers should wash with liquid soap, and all the PPE gear should be disposed with in a separate cover.

The body handlers should spray disinfectant solution on their PPE and the vehicle. GHMC should identify three to five cremation or burial grounds and prepare certain area earmarked for disposal, in advance.

In case of Christians, the family should indicate the cemetery. If space is not available there, GHMC should provide it. Coffin shall be arranged by the family, to be shifted by Police and GHMC staff from coffin maker to the hospital. From there, the coffin with the body will be transported in GHMC vehicle.

The grave should be dug to a depth of 10 feet and sprayed with disinfectant, into which the coffin is to be lowered using ropes. After filling the grave with soil, another round of disinfectant should be sprayed on the top. As per the earlier guidelines, distance of three feet should be maintained between two graves.
Pharm.D graduates offer services

09/04/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,HYDERABAD

The Pharm.D Doctors Welfare Association has come forward to join the State government in the fight against COVID-19 pandemic.

Association representatives led by its president Chandrashekar Naik, who met State Planning Board vice-chairman B. Vinod Kumar here, said in the present circumstances, the system might require clinically trained professionals and as there was an excessive burden on the healthcare staff, it was better to accommodate Pharm.D doctors, pharmacists, nurses, lab technicians and other paramedics.

There are a total of 1,900 interns and 5,700 graduated Pharm. D andPharm.D (P.B) doctors in the State.
No move on extending curfew yet: Punjab CM

‘Call would be taken after Cabinet meeting on April 10’

09/04/2020, VIKAS VASUDEVA ,CHANDIGARH


CM Amarinder Singh

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Wednesday said that no decision had been taken yet on extending the curfew in the State beyond April 14 even as the State reported seven fresh cases of COVID-19.

The State government was yet to take a decision in the matter and a call in this regard would be taken after the Cabinet meeting on April 10, he said in a statement here.

The government was continuously assessing and reviewing the evolving situation, which was changing day to day, and any decision would be taken in the context of the conditions prevailing around mid-April, keeping in mind the overall interest of the State and its people, he said.

“Though pandemic was currently in control in Punjab, nothing could be predicted at the moment, given the ever-changing dynamics of the situation,” he said, adding that all the factors would be taken into account before coming to a final decision on extending or lifting the curfew, either fully or partially.

The Chief Minister also announced that a task force would soon be set up to find ways for the State to gradually come out of the unprecedented lockdown.

Earlier in the day, the Chief Minister held a video conference with industrialists.

After the meeting, he tweeted, Interacted over video conferencing with experts of Punjab’s industry regarding measures to be taken to assist industry during the #Covid19 crisis.

106 positive cases

According to the State health department two patients who tested positive are from Jalandhar, while one is from Faridkot. Four other cases were from Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar, taking the tally of confirmed Covid-19 cases to 106, it added.

(With PTI inputs)
20 areas sealed in Capital, 93 fresh COVID-19 cases reported

State government will distribute essentials to the residents of sealed areas in city

09/04/2020, STAFF REPORTER,NEW DELHI


The total number of COVID-19 cases reported in the city stands at 669. Sushil Kumar Verma

On Wednesday, 93 new COVID-19 cases were reported in Delhi, taking the total number of cases to 669, according to a daily health bulletin of the Delhi government. All of the 93 new COVID-19 positive cases are people from a centre run by Tablighi Jamaat in Nizamuddin, which was evacuated by the authorities.

Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia on Wednesday said that the Delhi government has sealed 20 areas in the city and people will not be allowed to enter or exit these areas to control the spread of COVID-19 in the city.

Residents will have to stay inside their houses in these areas and government will distribute essentials to people in these areas.

“Total there are 20 areas in Delhi that have been sealed. People will not be allowed to enter or exit from these colonies, streets, or apartments,” Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia told the media.

The areas, which have been termed as “containment zones” by the government, include “Markaz Masjid and Nizamuddin Basti”, Nizamuddin West (G and D Block), street near Gandhi Park in Malviya Nagar, Shahajahanabad society in Dwarka Sector 11, and J, K , L and H pockets of Dilshad Garden among other places.

Delhi government on Wednesday also ordered to cordon off Bengali Market area near Mandi House after three people tested positive for COVID-19 in the area.

“DCP, New Delhi District, to immediately cordon off the entire Bengali Market Area... to prevent the spread of COVID-19,” an order issued by Tanvi Garg, District Magistrate (New Delhi), on Wednesday read. The DM has also directed the DCP to take action against the owner of the Bengali Pasty Shop, where around 35 people were found in “highly unhygienic conditions”, compromising social distance measures.

“Three people have been tested positive near Bengali Market — a man who runs a sweet shop at the market, his son and their domestic help. They have been shifted out of the area,” an official said.

“Two workers with flu-like symptoms have been shifted to quarantine facilities. Rest of them [around 35] have been moved to night shelters,” the official said. “At a Moti Bagh slum, a person and his son have been tested positive. It has also been cordoned off,” the official added.

A total of 426 people from the centre have tested positive for COVID-19 so far just in Delhi alone. No death was reported in the city due to the virus on Wednesday. Nine people have died due to COVID-19 in the city.
Residents flock to markets after video of strict lockdown surfaces
Authorities take to Twitter asking locals to avoid panic buying

09/04/2020, VIJAITA SINGH, JATIN ANAND,NEW DELHI/NOIDA


People queue up at a chemist shop to buy medicines on Wednesday. Vijaita Singh

On Wednesday afternoon, after a video clip of Uttar Pradesh Chief Secretary R.K. Tiwari announcing that “affected areas” with “high load” of COVID-19 cases in 15 districts, including Noida and Ghaziabad, will be sealed till April 14 surfaced, several residents thronged the nearest markets.

With no clear communication from bureaucrats in Lucknow, people came out in hordes in the two satellite cities of Delhi. Cars could be seen hurriedly backing out of their parking spaces in housing colonies as people rushed to petrol pumps, grocery and chemist shops, and departmental stores to stock up on essentials.

‘100% home delivery’

The Chief Secretary’s statement that mandis will not be allowed to open in the affected areas and officials would ensure “100% home delivery” added to the panic. By the time the authorities concerned took to social media to make appeals to residents not to engage in panic buying, queues were already formed.

Deepak Laroiya, Omega-IV resident, said he got to know via WhatsApp that from Wednesday night there is going to be a “forced lockdown” and borders are going to be sealed. When asked if he was aware that the sealing order was only for specific areas, Mr. Laroiya said, “Nobody told us. There is a difference between what the government says and does.”

At 4.19 p.m., Suhas L.Y., District Magistrate, Gautam BuddhNagar, tweeted: “Dear residents, no need for panic buying. Identified hotspots shall be sealed and home delivery of essential commodities and services shall be available at all places in the district. We shall take strict action against rumour mongerers/spreaders.” He shared the list of 22 hotspots in Noida and Greater Noida at 7.42 p.m. via Twitter. NOIDA Authority CEO Ritu Maheshwari, took to Twitter to state: “I request Noida residents not to panic or engage in panic buying during the strict implementation of lockdown in hotspots. All essential services shall be maintained as earlier including doorstep delivery of essentials.”

By that time, however, the Alpha I commercial belt, which is among the list of 12 hotspots, was already teeming with shoppers lining up outside prominent grocery and departmental stores in the area.

“I rushed here as soon as I heard the term hotspot,” said Sahil Gupta, a local. “Entry of outsiders to our area was the first to be restricted because there was apparently someone who was found COVID-19 positive. I don’t know whether that’s true. I am m sure it will be designated one of the hotspots,” he said. He was proved right a few hours later.
Violence over PM’s lights-out call

Dalit family accuses upper caste men of assault, vandalism

09/04/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT ,GURUGRAM

Eight members of a Scheduled Caste family, including two women, were injured in an attack allegedly by upper caste men in Palwal’s Pingore village following an altercation over switching off the lights on Sunday in response to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s call.

Thirty-one people have been named in the FIR. Three persons were detained on Wednesday evening.

Dhanpal, the complainant, said the call for lights-out on Sunday was only for nine minutes starting at 9 p.m. and they had switched off their lights. He said around 9.30 p.m. around 35 people belonging to the Gujjar community barged into his house casting casteist slurs and ordered them to keep their lights switched off the whole night. He said the accused, armed with sticks, iron rods and bricks, beat them up and vandalised the house. They also threatened them with dire consequences if the matter was reported to the police.

Besides Dhanpal, his son and daughter, five more members of his family suffered injuries in the attack.

Station House Officer, Sadar, Jitender Kumar said the children of the two families had fallen out over switching off the lights in response to the PM’s call and the matter then escalated. The two parties pelted each other with stones and a vehicle parked in a house was also damaged.

The police officer said the remaining accused were on the run. “The matter is being investigated by a Deputy Superintendent of Police-level officer,” said Mr. Kumar.

A case of causing hurt and criminal intimidation, among others, has been registered.
In Andhra Pradesh, many are deprived of benefits due to ‘erroneous’ Aadhaar seeding

Beneficiaries demand solution, stage protest at Discom office

09/04/2020, SANTOSH PATNAIK,VISAKHAPATNAM


Seeking justice: People queuing up outside the office of the Andhra Pradesh State Electricity Board in Visakhapatnam on WednesdayK.R. Deepak

Bhagavata Radha lives in a ramshackle rented house at Neralakoneru in Allipuram area. With her husband, a painter, left without a source of income due to the lockdown, she is now wondering how much longer their family can sustain themselves.

“We have two daughters. As five electricity consumer numbers have been seeded to our Aadhaar, we have been deprived of benefits being given by the government to beneficiaries,” Radha told The Hindu on Wednesday.

She was among many who vented out their woes at the APEPDCL office in Pandimetta for being left out of government benefits after multiple electricity service numbers were ‘erroneously’ seeded to their name. The government, due to the COVID-19 crisis, has decided to give 20 kg rice and one kg of red gram free to the white card holders. This apart, ₹1,000 cash benefit is also given. Selection of beneficiaries for house-sites has also been finalised.

The ward secretariat has informed Lanka Raju, an auto-rickshaw driver, that his ration card will be cancelled as three power connections were seeded to his Aadhaar number.

“I have been deprived of the benefits due to this problem,” bemoaned Lanka Raju who lives in a rented house at Venkateswarmetta. It’s a different story for K. Bhaskar Rao, who works at an automobile showroom. “I was given a house under the Rajiv Gruhakalpa scheme at Marikivalasa. Apart from a grant of ₹15,000 under Amma Vodi scheme, ration and other benefits being extended to those having white ration cards have also been denied to me. The reason being cited is that I apparently own three houses as three electricity service connections are seeded to my Aadhaar number,” he said. An official of APEPDCL clarified that at the time of distribution of LED bulbs, some persons might have fraudulently claimed the bulbs by citing Aadhaar numbers of other individuals.
Heavy rain adds to their lockdown woes

09/04/2020, KUMAR BURADIKATTI,KALABURAGI

Papaya crop that was destroyed in the recent rain at Hebbal village of Kalagi taluk in Kalaburagi district.ARUN KULKARNI

For some farmers in Kalaburagi district, who were hit hard by the country-wide lockdown and have been unable to carry out farm activities, the unseasonal rain that lashed the region for a couple of days has been an additional blow.

For example, Kamalabai of Hebbal village at Kalagi taluk is distraught because she lost her entire crop of papaya that was grown in 2.5 acres spending over ₹3 lakh. When the crop was ready for harvest, the country entered into lockdown, closing all its markets. Now, the rain has doubled her woes.

“A few traders had visited our field and taken some samples. They were supposed to come back to purchase the crop and take it to Hyderabad. Before they did, the lockdown was declared closing the markets and imposing restrictions transportation,” Shankar, son of Kamalabai, told The Hindu. While Ms. Kamalabai was still hopeful of selling her crop after the lockdown, the rain coupled with gusty winds that lashed their area on Sunday night shattered her dreams. The entire crop, 2,600 papaya trees each carrying heavy bunch of fruits, were flattened.

“We did not expect great prices at the time of COVID-19. But we were expecting at least ₹5 lakh income, which was calculated at a very minimum price. All our expectations have been shattered,” said Mr. Shankar. Many others in this village and surrounding areas have suffered a similar fate.

The village accountant visited the field and assured the family of reporting the loss to higher authorities.
Cut in salaries and allowances of legislators, Ministers likely

Today’s Cabinet meet to discuss steps to be taken in case of extension of lockdown

09/04/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,BENGALURU


People wait to collect foodgrains at a PDS outlet at Kengeri in Bengaluru on Wednesday. K. MURALI KUMAR

Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa has called a meeting of the State Cabinet at 11 a.m. on Thursday and it is expected to take a decision on slashing monthly salaries and allowances of MLAs, MLCs, and Ministers. The expected salary/allowances cut is around 30%.

Reliable sources said that Mr. Yediyurappa held a telephonic conversation with Leader of the Opposition Siddaramaiah and consulted him on the salary cut. The Congress leader has reportedly endorsed the Chief Minister’s suggestion.

The Union Cabinet has decided to reduce salaries of MPs by 30% and has suspended MPLAD funds for two years to mobilise more funds to fight COVID-19.

The Cabinet is expected to discuss methods to be adopted in case of extension of the COVID-19 lockdown in hotspot districts and its impact on the State’s finances.

Cabinet Ministers are also expected to brief the Chief Minister of the actions taken by their departments in handling the impact of the disease. Issues related to health, agriculture, and agricultural marketing, transport, drinking water situation, free distribution of KMF milk, rations under PDS, inter-district transportation, and holding of SSLC and PU examinations are likely to figure in the meeting, sources said.

The Finance Department is expected to brief the Cabinet on the impact of lockdown on the fiscal situation, including slowdown in revenue mobilisation from different departments. The State government has constituted 17 task forces in various fields and the government is expected to look into the suggestions of the task forces while taking decisions.

Based on the output received from different districts, departments, and task forces, the Cabinet meeting is expected to chalk out a plan to deal with the situation in case the lockdown is extended as demanded by some State CMs. The Cabinet may take a call on forming a team of Ministers to give suggestions to the Centre on the lockdown and its likely relaxation in COVID-19-free districts of the State.
Family watches last rites of man online

West Bengal man was working in Tumakuru since 30 years

09/04/2020, STAFF REPORTER,TUMAKURU

The family of a 67-year-old man, who died of heart attack in Tumakuru, watched the final rites being performed from their village in West Bengal through a video call on WhatsApp. The deceased, Kanai Das, eked out a living selling handkerchiefs on the pavement in Tumakuru city for the last 30 years, while his wife and two children lived in their native village in West Bengal.

He developed chest pain on March 28 and was taken to Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Research in Bengaluru. He failed to respond to treatment and died on April 2.

Social worker N. Nataraj told The Hindu: “We informed his family members but as there was a lockdown, they could not come to Tumakuru to perform his last rites. They requested us to perform his last rites.”

Expenses

Congress leader Ambarish along with three other people paid to transport the body from Bengaluru to Tumakuru and the funeral charges at the crematorium.
West Bengal begins live lectures on TV

Class 10 and 12 students to benefit

09/04/2020, BISHWANATH GHOSH,KOLKATA

Students will be given assignments that they can submit after school opens. GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKpijama61

West Bengal’s school education department has tied up with television channel ABP Ananda to hold live lectures for the students of Classes 10 and 12 to compensate for the classes they are missing due to the COVID-19 lockdown.

The lectures will be telecast daily from 3 p.m to 4 p.m. — with half an hour being devoted to students of Class 10 and the remaining to those belonging to Class 12 — and will continue till April 13. The televised classes began on Tuesday and the subject was English. The programme is aimed at students following the State board syllabus and, therefore, covers all schools run or aided by the State government.

“It is an excellent initiative by the State government and is a good way of keeping the students pepped up. How effective this is going to be will be seen in the coming days, but it is certainly better than doing nothing,” said Krishnakoli Ray, headmistress of Jaynagar Institution for Girls, a State government-aided school on the outskirts of Kolkata.

“But many State government-run and State government-aided schools happen to be in interior areas where there’s no dish antenna or cable, so students living in those areas may be missing out on the [televised classes], but this is a good start. Going forward, when villages are better connected, this could become the norm,” Ms. Ray said.

WhatsApp groups

In the event of the lockdown being extended, she said, schools are likely to form WhatsApp groups of Class 10 students to circulate worksheets so that they do not lag behind in preparing for their board exams.

The televised classes could be extended if the lockdown continues. They are being conducted by a panel of experienced teachers, who will also take questions from students on phone — there is a dedicated WhatsApp number — and on email. They will also assign tasks to students, who will submit the completed assignments to their respective teachers once the schools reopen.

The live classes were originally supposed to be telecast on Doordarshan, but according to sources, the arrangement did not work out.
Australia to ensure welfare of Indians

Foreign Ministers hold a conversation

09/04/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,NEW DELHI

Australia has assured India of the welfare of Indian students stranded there due to travel restrictions over the novel coronavirus pandemic, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said after a conversation with Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne on Wednesday.

“A very good conversation with FM Marise Payne on our respective responses to COVID-19. She assured that there is no change in the status of Indian students studying in Australia,” Mr. Jaishankar wrote in a tweet.

“We discussed the importance of Australia’s Indian community in responding to the crisis & supporting Australians in India affected by internal & travel restrictions,” Ms. Payne added on Twitter.

The conversation followed a call between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Australian counterpart, Scott Morisson, on Monday, with the latter saying Indian students would continue to be “valued”. Thousands of Indian students in Australia have been worried by Mr. Morisson’s comments last week that those who are not able to support themselves should “return to their home countries”.

The Australian High Commission in India is planning to charter flights to take Australian citizens from India back home.

However, unlike other countries, India is not at present allowing citizens abroad to return.

“India will fully facilitate arrangements for Australians wishing to return home,” Mr. Jaishankar said.
‘Battle should be at a human level’

Rajasthan Deputy CM favours a staggered approach to lifting the lockdown

09/04/2020, SANDEEP PHUKAN


Rajasthan Deputy Chief Minister and State Congress presidentSachin Pilothas said State governments should follow a staggered approach in lifting the lockdown as the healthcare system may not be able to handle the kind of pressure one has seen in Western countries if more positive cases come in. Edited excerpts:

Two weeks of lockdown are over and another week to go. There are reports that it may be extended, as some States like Telangana have asked for an extension. What’s your view?

There is still a week to take a final call, but my personal view is that it is too early to think of a complete lifting of the lockdown. We have to follow a staggered approach and must not overzealously go back to earlier ways. Yes, I know there is a massive economic cost but we can’t risk the health of our citizens. Frankly, if the rate of infections in India reach anywhere near what western Europe or the U.S. has seen, our health infrastructure and hospitals will not be able to handle and collapse under its weight.

This disease doesn’t differentiate between any region, religion, race or ideology. Therefore, the battle against Corona [COVID-19] has to be at a human level with all hands on the deck.

Okay, but former Congress chief Rahul Gandhi, in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has talked of factoring in India’s complexities. What are your thoughts on that?

Look, no two countries have acted exactly the same way. It’s not just a question of adopting an either/or model but work out something that takes into local factors. Let me give you an example. In Rajasthan, we have already got the spraying of sodium hypochlorite done in 38,000 of the total of 46,000 villages. We have sanctioned ₹50,000 for masks and sanitisers in each of the 11,000 panchayats, changed the system of marking attendance for workers under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) and so on.

Now, these MGNREGA workers would be marking their attendance in isolated spots, following protocols issued by World Health Organization (WHO), [and we have] cleared their wage backlog. We have also started giving soap bars with the MGNREGA kits and asked the workers to wash their hands four times a day.

We have activated the village sanitisation committee, which is headed by the Sarpanch, and have asked them to go door to door to create awareness. It takes a lot of convincing to get behavioural change to come about, especially in rural areas.

One is also hearing of a Bhilwara model, one of the earliest hotspots, in controlling the spread of COVID-19. Can you tell us what is the situation now and what did you do?

The situation is now well under control and just yesterday [April 7] we released a few patients. Once patient zero — who was a medical doctor — was identified, contract tracing, screening and aggressive testing was done. We had imposed a “super curfew,” where even media, NGOs and other voluntary organisations were not given curfew passes and the administration took upon itself to deliver essential commodities at doorstep. People with influenza-like illness were aggressively tested and borders were sealed. We ensured zero movement of people and vehicles in the city. Every household was screened multiple times and those showing symptoms were quarantined and isolated. Doctors and paramedical staff were rotated, but most importantly, the people of Bhilwara whole-heartedly co-operated. That’s how we were able to contain the spread. But it’s important that we don’t take our eyes off the ball.

Now, such protocols are being followed across the State. For example, in neighbouring Tonk, from where I am an MLA, when 18 cases were reported, we imposed a curfew.

We know that a curfew or lockdown cannot be successful if people don’t participate. So, we need to explain to the people the logic but it shouldn’t be the case where people use their connections/influence and are allowed to move about. The sanctity of the curfew needs to be maintained.

What about funding from the Centre? We saw the Rajasthan government suggesting that the Centre should prepare a ₹1 lakh crore package.

You see the package — the ₹1.73 lakh crore economic package that the Union government announced — is a very generic package. I think the Centre should work on a State-specific package, where a State gets funding proportionate to the challenge they face in dealing with COVID-19 patients. I think the package should be made by identifying the hotspots in a particular State and the needs of the State government.

So far, what are the biggest challenges that you have faced as a government and, going forward, what other challenges do you foresee?

We have earmarked 1 lakh beds in Rajasthan to take on the COVID-19 pandemic. There are around 40 places in the State that are under curfew right now. The doctors and paramedics are working round the clock. We will, however, need ventilators, additional PPE [Personal Protective Equipment] kits, etc., as we move ahead.

The challenge is to make sure the poorest amongst us are able to get food and essential commodities. So far, we have managed with our resources and with a lot of people, NGOs and business houses coming forward. But I fear fatigue might set in and then we will need additional resources to manage these requirements.

There have been some suggestions that this is a truly unprecedented crisis and the Central government should formally involve experience and expertise available with the Opposition. What’s your take?

Yes, this is one of biggest challenges of our times and [one that is] beyond any party or ideology. We are one as a nation and should fight as one people. It does not matter in what capacity, but everyone who can contribute should just contribute. Of course, it should be a two-way street.

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