Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

66 fresh cases surface in Haryana, steepest single-day spike

- Hitender Rao hrao@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: Haryana recorded on Sunday steepest single-day spike in Covid-19 cases with 66 new infections reported from its nine districts, which took the state’s tally to 442.

As per the health bulletin, 18 of these cases were reported from Sonepat district, where the virus has spread among a section of doctors. Meanwhile, Rohtak PGIMS on Sunday confirmed the death of a corona patient from Gurugram.

PGIMS spokespers­on Gajender Singh said the infected man was admitted on April 30 and died on Saturday night.

CHANDIGARH: Nearly 14,000 persons, including students and tourists from Punjab, Haryana, Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, are stranded abroad due to Covid-19 situation and many may have to be brought back by the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) from the foreign shores, as per an estimation done by the central government.

In addition to flights, the central government is also planning to use Indian Navy vessels for the stranded persons’ repatriati­on.

The matter was deliberate­d at length in a meeting held by the Union cabinet secretary Rajiv Gauba with the state government­s on Sunday.

As per MEA’s conservati­ve estimates, there are about 8,700 persons from Punjab, 3,600 from Haryana and 1,000 from J&K and Ladakh who are stuck in about 20 countries across the globe. “Most of them are tourists and students,’’ said an official.

MEA statistics show that of the stranded Haryana residents, over 200 are in Philippine­s, 130 in the US and around 30 in Kuwait.

A majority of Punjab residents are stranded in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Canada, Australia, Ukraine, Russia, Bangladesh, Kuwait, Qatar, United Kingdom, Mauritius, Italy, United States, Malaysia, Philippine­s, Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Spain, as per the informatio­n shared by the Centre.

“How many of these persons actually want to come back will be determined only when the MEA begins the process to facilitate their return. Many of them may not want to come back. An MEA web portal will be put in place by Monday to start registrati­on of the Indian citizens stranded abroad,’’ said an official.

The Haryana government has also asked the deputy commission­ers to collect informatio­n of stranded residents from their respective districts and convey it to the home department.

WHO WILL BE A PRIORITY RETURNEE

Officials said that MEA will prioritise the return of stranded Indians based on their compulsion to come back.

“Those with Covid-free certificat­es would be given priority,’’ said an official.

The central government has indicated that those facing deportatio­n by foreign government­s, pregnant women, elderly persons, ones with medical emergencie­s or seeking treatment for terminal illness, migrant workers who have been laid off, non-permanent residents/short-term visa holders faced with expiry, tourists stranded abroad, those required to return due to death of family member, students whose educationa­l institutes are closed will get priority for return.

SOPS FOR STRANDED PERSONS

The returnees will bear the cost of air travel and would undergo mandatory quarantine as per the standard operating protocol developed by the Union health ministry. MEA additional secretary (Indo-Pacific) Neena Malhotra has been designated as the coordinato­r for bringing back Haryana residents while additional secretary Virander Paul is the coordinati­ng officer for Punjab. Joint Secretary Yogeshwar Sangwan is the coordinato­r for J&K and Ladakh.

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