The Phnom Penh Post

Islamic event in India becomes virus hotspot

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A LARGE religious gathering in New Delhi has sparked a manhunt across India for suspected coronaviru­s cases after being linked to dozens of infections and several deaths.

The gat her ing emerged as one of I ndia’s major v i r us hot spot s a f ter t housands f locked to an Islamic religious centre in the Nizamuddin West neighbourh­ood of Delhi.

Some returned home to other states after the gathering, but many remained in the vicinity, saying they were trapped because public transport had been shut down due to the virus.

Late on Monday and Tuesday, the warren of lanes near the religious centre – near several prominent Sufi shrines – was taped off by officials in hazmat suits.

More than 1,000 people were taken in buses from the area by police, with 335 admitted to hospital and the rest quarantine­d, Delhi Minister of Health and Family Welfare Satyendar Jain told reporters on Tuesday.

At least 10 attendees – including six in southern Telangana state and three in Delhi – have died from Covid-19 in the past few days, authoritie­s said.

The Press Trust of India said around 8,000 people took part in the event, with Telangana officials saying at least 1,000 attendees were from that state alone.

Infections in other states and territorie­s have also been linked to the gathering.

Delhi officials estimated that almost 300 foreigners attended the gathering, the Press Trust of India reported.

Their whereabout­s were not immediatel­y known.

“A grave crime has been committed,” Jain said of the event, which took place as the Delhi government started to i nt roduce rest r ic t ions on la r ge gatherings on March 13.

The centre, the global headquarte­rs for the Tablighi Jamaat missionary movement, insisted it had followed regulation­s.

It said attendees were stranded after public transport was shut down ahead of a nationwide curfew imposed from March 25.

“We were always taking this issue seriously, we had been in touch with authoritie­s to arrange for transport for the attendees,” Musharraf Ali, a member of the movement, told reporters on Tuesday.

It was not yet clear if the Indian outbreak is linked to another Tablighi Jamaat event that was held in Malaysia from February 27 to March 1.

About half of Malaysia’s 2,626 infections have been directly linked to that event, which was attended by 16,000 people – including 1,500 foreigners.

 ?? AFP ?? Men wait on a bus taking them to a quarantine facility after they attended an Islamic gathering which has turned out to be a hotspot for coronaviru­s infections in New Delhi.
AFP Men wait on a bus taking them to a quarantine facility after they attended an Islamic gathering which has turned out to be a hotspot for coronaviru­s infections in New Delhi.

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