Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Red zone count drops by 200+ after govt redraws boundaries

Move will bring relief to over 240k residents of Delhi who are no longer subject to stringent lockdown rules

- Sweta Goswami sweta.goswami@htlive.com

nNEWDELHI: The Delhi government, in a three-day drive, has brought down the number of containmen­t zones in the city by over 200, bringing relief to 241,888 people from following stringent lockdown rules, revenue minister Kailash Gahlot said on Saturday.

The drive to restructur­e Delhi’s containmen­t zones was conducted between July 28 and July 30 to free up more localities, permit movement of more people and further boost the economy, the government said.

The exercise involved redrawing the boundaries of containmen­t zones to make them smaller. It could be a lane, a building or a larger area, depending on the contacts traced to the Covid patients and high-risk groups identified in the zone.

The containmen­t strategy executed by the 11 districts was reviewed by chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday.

The move comes at a time when the Centre, on July 29, permitted states to de-seal a containmen­t zone 14 days after the recovery of the last Covid-19 patient from the area. Earlier, de-sealing was allowed 28 days after the last Covid recovery case.

Data presented to Kejriwal during Saturday’s review showed that on July 27, Delhi had 715 containmen­t zones — the highest so far — with 348,099 people residing in them, following strict lockdown rules.

By July 31, the number dropped to 496 and now 106,211 people are living in lockdown.

“This drive was conducted for three days and I personally went on the ground to inspect containmen­t zones with the respective district magistrate­s (DMS) in various parts of the city. In the review meeting today, the chief minister expressed his satisfacti­on over the result of the restructur­ing and the subsequent de-scaling of containmen­t zones. The CM has directed that the situation must be reviewed at regular intervals,” Gahlot said.

Documents, accessed by HT, showed that of all 11 districts, southeast district saw the biggest turnaround in terms of the population being affected by it, though the number of containmen­t zones remained mostly the same.

“The southeast district’s containmen­t zones reduced by one only (from 31 to 30), but the boundaries of the containmen­t zones were redrawn afresh. We did it in such a way that now only 7,517 people are living in CZS in our district, instead of 73,612 people recorded on July 27,” said a senior official from the district.

In terms of the number of containmen­t zones, the west district saw the maximum reduction from 104 on July 27 to 61 on July 31. This was followed by Shahdara district (from 47 to 7) and south district (from 77 to 50).

“During the intensive review, we found that a containmen­t zone in southwest Delhi’s H & F Block in Raj Nagar part II, Palam Colony, was the biggest in terms of the population under lockdown. It had 43,000 residents living in it. We broke it down into smaller zones and now only 1,600 people are impacted after the restructur­ing. Similarly, Central Delhi’s A, B and E2 Blocks in Shastri Nagar had 36,423 people under containmen­t. This has now reduced to 1,200 people,” Gahlot said.

According to the documents, the biggest containmen­t zone in Delhi in terms of population now is in northwest Delhi’s C Block, Mangolpuri. It was notified on May 22 and has around 3,000 residents under lockdown. This is followed by Central Delhi’s Jawahar Nagar and north Delhi’s Block 1, Sector 17, Rohini, with 2,500 people each now.

Till June 20, Delhi had 262 containmen­t zones. On June 21, the home ministry, which has been suggesting interventi­ons in Delhi, directed the state to start aggressive re-mapping and redrawing of sealed zones.

After this direction, in just a week’s time, by June 27, Delhi’s containmen­t zones increased to 421, after which the numbers gradually kept increasing.

July 27, 2020

South West

West

North

South

Central

New Delhi

North West

Shahdara

North East

South East

TOP

District

East

10

North West Central North North

South East

South West South East South East North

New Delhi

No. of containmen­t zones

Contained area

C Block Mangolpuri

Jawahar Nagar

Block 1 Sector 17 Rohini

Dhampat Ka Katra (one Side) mandir Wali , Sayyad Wali Gali,dhobi Wali Gali Azadpur

All of Block-e, Block-d, Block-d2 of Hari Nagar Extension, June 25, 2020 Jaitpur, Delhi (area scale down)

H & F Block, Raj Nagar part 11, Palam Colony

Block F-2, Sangam Vihar, New Delhi

Block F-2, Sangam Vihar, New Delhi

10-1151 to D-1200, D-1251 to D-1450, D-1601 to 1650 of D-1 Block, Jahangir Puri, Delhi

Pilanji Village

Dr Lalit Kant, former Head, Division of Epidemiolo­gy and Communicab­le Diseases, Indian Council of Medical Research said, “It is a good idea to keep reviewing containmen­t zones. It helps in more effective contact tracing as well. But it is also important to

Population

July 31, 2020

No. of containmen­t zones

May 20, 2020

July 10, 2020

July 4, 2020

July 4, 2020 May 20, 2020

April 27, 2020

keep testing people in containmen­t zones since by employing this strategy, it becomes possible to identify and isolate those who may have come in contact with the infected individual.”

Residents of Block K in north Delhi’s Jahangirpu­ri, which

Population

Date of notificati­on

May 22, 2020

June 19, 2020

May 30, 2020

opened up after more than three months, said the descaling process enabled them to go to work. “But our RWA is still rightfully exercising caution. The movement is regulated. Some gates are shut until the RWA decides,” said Rajiv Kumar, a resident.

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