Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Jamaat accounts for lion’s share of Delhi’s infections

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: The number of coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) infections in the national capital jumped on Thursday by 141 – the biggest single-day increase yet – with nearly 92% (129) of them linked to the Tablighi Jamaat, a religious group that is now feared to be driving the outbreak in the country despite an unpreceden­ted lockdown that has forced people to stay indoors for three weeks.

The number of fatalities rose by two – both of these patients had also been to the Nizamuddin building – and the country’s overall number of confirmed cases rose 2,520, also soaring by a record number over Wednesday’s figure of 2006.

The national surge, too, was largely driven by Tablighi Jamaat-linked infections from states such as Tamil Nadu, where all 75 new infections reported the same origin. In all, about 9,000 members linked to the gathering in Delhi have been quarantine­d or are being sought out to be isolated after they attended events at the Delhi building that is believed to have turned into a hotbed of the infection this month.

“The home ministry along with states and Union territorie­s launched a massive effort and about 9,000 Tablighi Jamaat workers and their primary contacts were identified and quarantine­d. Among these, 1,306 people are foreigners,” said Punya Salila Srivastava, joint secretary in the Union home ministry, during a daily briefing on Thursday.

Srivastava said that 2,346 people were evacuated from Tablighi Jamaat’s six-storey complex in Nizamuddin since March 29. Of these, 250 were foreigners and 1,804 people were shifted to different quarantine centres, while 334 positive cases were hospitalis­ed, the official said.

Earlier in the day, Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said that the number of cases linked to the Tablighi Jamaat could shoot up since the government has decided to test all of the 2,346 people linked to the building.

The government has begun action at several levels against the missionary group, booking its leader Maulana Mohammad Saad under sections that punish offences that could lead to the worsening of an epidemic and for criminal conspiracy. home min

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