Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Lockdown extended in Delhi, to be eased in phases

- Abhishek Dey

NEW DELHI: Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Sunday extended the month-long lockdown in the Capital by another week, but said that the government will consider a phased withdrawal of restrictio­ns from May 31 if the daily cases of the coronaviru­s disease continue to decline.

Taking a cautionary stand, the chief minister said that the larger public opinion supported the extension of the lockdown for another week – till 5am on May 31.

“In the last 24 hours, we asked several sections of people what to do and the larger opinion is that the lockdown should be extended by another week. If we open everything now, there is a risk that we may lose all gains on the Covid-19 front we have made over the last one month,” Kejriwal said at a virtual press briefing.

“However, if the curve (of Covid-19 cases) continues to decline like this for a week, we will start a phased un-lockdown process from May 31. We cannot open everything at one go. There is immense risk in it. So the relaxation­s have to be implemente­d in a phased way. I hope people will cooperate in this,” he added.

There is no word yet on the relaxation­s that may be announced by the government. Under the existing lockdown, general movement of people and economic activities are prohibited, with exemptions only for those engaged in essential services. Metro services, too, have been suspended for the last two weeks and will remain closed for now.

On April 19, the weekend curfew in Delhi was turned into a full lockdown for six days.

This is the fifth extension of the lockdown that was necessitat­ed by the fourth and the deadliest wave of infections in the city; at the time, Delhi was adding an average of 20,065 cases per day with every one in five person tested being diagnosed as Covid-positive.

This runaway spread of the outbreak unraveled the city’s public health infrastruc­ture, particular­ly from April 22 to the first week of May, when hospitals faced an acute shortage of oxygen and other drugs as patients and their families scrambled to find hospital beds.

Since then, the city has scaled up medical facilities and services while the transmissi­on of the outbreak has slowed down -a trend experts attributed to the effect of the lockdown, adherence to Covid-appropriat­e behaviour and a natural ebbing of the wave that is likely to have infected those vulnerable.

Delhi has added an average of 3,286 new cases daily in the last seven days. On Sunday, the Capital city recorded 1,649 new cases, its lowest single-day tally since March 30 and 189 deaths, according to the government’s health bulletin.

The positivity rate, which soared to a peak of 36% on April 22, dipped to 2.42% on Sunday. Epidemiolo­gists say a positivity rate – the proportion of samples testing positive for the viral illness – below 5% indicates that the outbreak is under control.

Health experts said the government’s move to wait for another week before taking a call on lifting restrictio­ns to allow some resumption of economic activities appeared to be well thought-out.

“The city cannot remain under a complete lockdown forever. That is understand­able. Before relaxing the lockdown, Delhi should ideally have a positivity rate of less than 5% for at least one week. Cases are declining and they are likely to further decline by May 31. A phased re-opening of important economic activities can be considered at that point. Also, people must remember that they cannot let their guards down like they did before the second wave of the pandemic hit India. For government­s, this is also the time to scale up vaccinatio­n,” said Dr Puneet Misra, professor of community medicine at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi.

Traders associatio­ns, too, said they welcome the decision to consider lifting curbs. “Relaxing the lockdown at this point and at one go could have led to a surge in cases again. The government, however, should consider giving some compensati­on to traders whose income has been affected by the lockdown,” said Praveen Khandelwal, secretary general of the Confederat­ion of All India Traders.

Several residents said they were in favour of keeping the lockdown for another week as well. Saurabh Gandhi, general secretary of United Residents of Delhi, a collective of around 1,800 resident welfare associatio­ns (RWA) in the city, said: “It was evident that the situation in Delhi would not come sufficient­ly under control till the end of this month… Now they should focus on increasing vaccine coverage.”

Kejriwal on Sunday echoed a similar stand and said that the threat is not over even though Delhi is in a “much better shape”. “In one month, with the cooperatio­n of Delhi’s residents, we are in a much better shape. I will not say that the Covid-19 wave is over but it has significan­tly come under control. We overcame the shortage of hospital beds and medical oxygen in this phase with the help of people, central government, Supreme Court and the (Delhi) high court,” he said, referring to the clutch of orders given by the courts to ease the public health crisis in recent weeks.

The chief minister added that the government’s priority is to vaccinate the city’s population at the earliest to avoid another outbreak. “There is speculatio­n of a (national) third wave. We have to prepare for that aggressive­ly in terms of scaling up hospital beds, ICUS, oxygen, tankers, oxygen storage facilities, etc. But high vaccine coverage can totally reduce the possibilit­y of a third wave. We have had talks with several manufactur­ers on how vaccine coverage can be increased in Delhi. We are ready to buy vaccines for our entire population, no matter how much it costs,” he said.

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