Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Sale of sweets, rakhis plummets this Raksha Bandhan

- Rajanbir Singh

CHANDIGARH: Raksha Bandhan will be celebrated in the city on Monday, but the markets in the city wear a deserted look.

There was almost no rush on the stalls and people were hesitant to touch anything laid out even though bottles of sanitisers were placed alongside for public use.

As per Diwakar Sahoonja, proprietor of Dewsun in Sector 11, sales this year have been lowest in the past few years owing to the pandemic. “Due to a cash crunch, many people are not buying gift baskets that brothers would usually get for their sisters. We would sell 5,000 rakhis a day in previous years, but now we are barely selling 2,000 pieces. The sale of greeting cards has also been affected. We have special mailers with a card and rakhi and normally we would sell about a 1,000 of them daily. Now, we have managed to sell only around 200 of them.”

Sahoonja also stocks highend cards priced as high as ₹1,000 which in previous years, he said, some ministers and VIPS would buy, but he has not sold a single one yet.

Naresh Mahajan, president of the Sector 23 market welfare associatio­n (MWA), said that many people had embraced e-retailers this year due to which markets had seen a low footfall. “People are too afraid to come to the markets as so many new Covid cases are being reported everyday. Instead, people are ordering rakhis online.”

President of the Chandigarh Beopar Mandal, Anil Vohra, added that shopkeeper­s weren’t feeling the festive spirit associated with Raksha Bandhan: “The administra­tion and police can be seen constantly patrolling the markets. Many times shopkeeper­s and their helpers are challaned even if they take off their masks for even washing their faces. Many shopkeeper­s are feeling harassed.”

Vohra added that the traders’ body had also met UT senior superinten­dent of police (SSP) Nilambari Jagdale.

NOT TOO SWEET

The festival of Raksha Bandhan is incomplete without sweets, but this year, sale of sweets were on the lower side. Proprietor of Uttam Sweets Balwinder Singh said, “We used to get orders for laddoos mostly during Raksha Bandhan, but this time we are mostly getting orders for cashew barfi.”

He was hopeful response will be better on Sunday, but they won’t be preparing less sweets, Singh added.

 ?? GURMINDER SINGH/HT ?? UNDER COVID SHADOW: A woman buying rakhis at Phase 11 market in Mohali.
GURMINDER SINGH/HT UNDER COVID SHADOW: A woman buying rakhis at Phase 11 market in Mohali.

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