Hindustan Times (Delhi)

25,000 in quarantine under watch, 247 booked

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: The Delhi Police, using mobile phone surveillan­ce, have filed 160 first informatio­n reports (FIRS) against people in homequaran­tine for violating lockdown orders, officials said on Monday. Chief minister Arvind Kejriwal announced that the mobile phones of 25,000 people in home-quarantine would be monitored.

Besides, the police have also filed 81 FIRS after physical checks at houses of the people under home-quarantine. Six more persons were booked on the complaints of their neighbours, the police said in a statement, taking the total number of those booked till Monday evening to 247.

Most of them are being booked under the Epidemic Diseases Act and sections 188 (Disobedien­ce to order duly promulgate­d by public servant), 269 (Negligent act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life), and 270 (Malignant act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). Firsttime offenders or those who inadverten­tly stepped out of their houses are being booked only under Section 188 of the IPC, the police said.

“People who are deliberate­ly and frequently breaking the home-quarantine rule are charged with all the three sections of the IPC, as the maximum punishment they would be getting is up to two years of imprisonme­nt, or fine, or both. Those found breaking the rule for the first time or unintentio­nally are booked only under Section 188 of IPC and given a warning that harsher sections would be slapped if they are caught violating the order again,” said a police officer, who did not want to be named.

HOW THE ENFORCEMEN­T IS BEING DONE

The police are primarily using geofencing technology to identify the quarantine­d persons venturing out of their residences. “Since we know the address of the persons in home-quarantine, their house is considered the static location. We use software to carry out geofencing of their smartphone­s. If the person leaves the geofencing area, there is a change in their phone’s tower location and we receive an alert,” a senior police officer said.

Each police district has formed a dedicated team, comprising personnel having technical expertise and those who carry out physical checks. “The phone numbers of all the home-quarantine­d people have been uploaded on the software that tracks the movement,” the officer said.

“Any breach of the geofence is communicat­ed to the police station staff concerned. The police then visit the quarantine­d person’s house and confront him/ her with the technical data. If a satisfacto­ry reason is not given, an FIR is registered. The person will be arrested and granted bail,” said the officer, adding that all the sections of the IPC are bailable.

Officers said that they are also conducting surprise checks to ensure that those under homequaran­tine don’t dodge the police by leaving their phones at home. The police are also scanning the CCTV cameras of the neighbourh­ood to track the violators, said Dinesh Kumar Gupta, deputy commission­er of police (Shahdara).

The Delhi government has shared names, phone numbers and residentia­l addresses of more than 25,000 citizens of Delhi who have been put under home-quarantine, to avoid the spread of Sars-cov-2 virus, which causes

Covid-19. A majority of them are people who have foreign travel history, senior police officers said.

Delhi Police spokespers­on, Mandeep Singh Randhawa, said that the number of FIRS will continue to increase. “Our police personnel are regularly conducting house visits and those found absent are being booked,” said Randhawa.

The decision to use phones for tracking people in home-quarantine was taken in a meeting between Kejriwal and Lieutenant Governor (L-G) Anil Baijal almost a week ago.

The use of phone location to track a person in quarantine started in China, and was quickly adopted in Singapore and European countries. To ensure that people who are ordered to stay in isolation do not move out, health department­s and the police had initially started pasting notices outside their houses and encouraged neighbours to report violations.

CHANGE IN MOBILE TOWERS OF THOSE IN HOME-QUARANTINE AUTOMATICA­LLY SENDS ALERTS TO THE POLICE

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