Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Scant space for social distance in Delhi’s congested walled city

- Manoj Sharma manoj.sharma@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI: Tell Khalil Ahmed that you want to come and visit him in the walled city and he will tell you to make sure you wear a PPE kit. “I am not saying it for myself; that is perhaps the only way for you to be safe here,” says Ahmed, who lives near Hauz Qazi, in old Delhi, which has always defied urban ideals of order.

Social distancing, he adds, is an oxymoron in old Delhi , which has a population of about 12 lakh crammed in an area of 6 square kilometres. “Besides, the walled city has some of the country’s biggest wholesale bazars, attracting thousands of people from all parts of country. Call it a lack of choice or education, but most people here no longer care about corona.”

World Health Organisati­on advises maintainin­g a distance of at least 1 metre (3 feet) from others to prevent contractin­g corona infection through droplets sprayed during speaking, coughing, sneezing, etc.

Ahmed is not exaggerati­ng. Like ever before, roads and lanes around Jama Masjid and many other parts of the walled city are jammed, with pedestrian­s, rickshaws, e- rickshaws, carts, jostling for space, leaving little room for social distancing.

Not that no one is trying. There are announceme­nts everyday on loudspeake­rs in many markets and mosques, exhorting people to maintain social distancing. “This is aimed at making people understand the dangers of Covid- 19 and how it is the religious duty of everyone to keep themselves and others safe,” says Abu Sufiyan, a resident of the walled city who runs, Purani Dilli Walon Ki Baatein, a well-known walled-city blog.

Sufiyan, who lives in Suiwalan, says while the walled city has opened, he tries to stay at home as much as possible, preferring to venture out only in the afternoons when the streets are comparativ­ely less crowded. But finding those empty hours in the everbustli­ng old Delhi is quite a challenge for those who are cautious of Covid-19.

Forget the capital’s politics and pollution, the population, they will tell you is the biggest problem here, its density breaching all acceptable limits. “There are houses with as many as ten families. So, even if a fraction of the population ventures out, its congested roads and lanes become so crowded,” says Sufiyan.

Another problem, many in

Shahjahana­bad , once a flourishin­g centre of art , culture, poetry, say, is that it has had its own socio-cultural mores, which have endured for over three centuries. “Everyone here has inherent sociabilit­y, and they are finding switching to social distancing pretty difficult,” says Mohammad Naeem, co-founder, Hazrat Shah Waliullah Library , who lives in Pahari Imli, near Choori Walan. “Used to abysmal lack of access to healthcare, people here have failed to appreciate the dangers posed by coronaviru­s. I believe that the government should set up a testing centre here.”

The story is no different in other parts of the walled city. Many people are changing their workdays and hours. Take , for example, Ankit Agarwal who lives in west Delhi and has office in Chawri Bazar.

Unlike in the past, when Sunday was a holiday, he now chooses to go to his office on Sunday—the

only day, when, he says, he has some chance of maintainin­g social distance in the walled city. “Social distancing is an idea, which faces a test everyday in the walled city. The problem is that a lot of people here are out on the roads without any purpose,” says Agarwal , who was born and bought up in the walled-city. “Surprising­ly, even now people here do not want to miss their daily dose of samosa and Kachori. Just go and witness the scene around Chawri Bazar Metro Station.”

Well, Agarwal, is referring to the old Delhi tradition of breakfast congregati­ons at confection­ery shops, where one can catch whiff of steaming samosas and kachoris , with dozens of people crowding around food stalls. While the Metro station remains closed, the area around it retains its chaotic din.

And not all wear masks as they walk in close proximity in crowded streets. “Sometimes it is hard to breathe in the mask while pulling the cart. I feel suffocated,” says Rakesh Kumar, a dailywage labourer. Ask him about ‘social distancing’, and he looks at you bewildered.

Dinesh Kumar Goyal, who runs one of the most famous camera shops in the Camera market in Chandni Chowk , says the walled city is a great leveller, and your socio-economic status does not make social distancing any easier. “Here, everyone has to walk through the same crowded streets with all the attendant risks. ,” says Goyal, adding his business has taken a severe beating.

 ?? BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT PHOTO ?? ■
Pedestrian­s and vehicles jostle for space near Jama Masjid on July 8.
BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT PHOTO ■ Pedestrian­s and vehicles jostle for space near Jama Masjid on July 8.

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