Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

More restrictio­ns eased in Delhi; all shops and salons set to open

- Abhishek Dey

NEW DELHI: Beginning Monday, Delhi will be step closer to a complete unlock as all shops will be allowed to operate through the week, restaurant­s will reopen for dine-in after nearly two months of closure and restricted functionin­g of weekly markets will be permitted, chief minister Arvind Kejriwal announced on Sunday, with the national capital emerging from of its worst wave of Covid-19 infections so far.

Government officials later said salons and barber shops, too, can restart.

The chief minister said the outbreak in Delhi is largely in control but the government will continue to observe the trends in the coming weeks. “If (daily) cases continue to keep going further down, all restrictio­ns can be scaled down in a phased manner in the coming days. However, if cases go up, we may have to impose restrictio­ns again. I urge everyone to strictly adhere to regulation­s and Covid19-appropriat­e behaviour,” he said at a digital press briefing.

Sunday’s announceme­nt is the third time that the Delhi government has withdrawn lockdown restrictio­ns in subsequent weeks. “From Monday 5am, more or less all economic activities will be allowed except a few,” Kejriwal added.

All shops in markets, market complexes and malls can reopen from 10am to 8pm from Monday, instead of operating in an odd-even basis, the CM said. In the past week, half the shops in markets and malls were allowed to open on alternate days of the week.

Now, all shops in the city — essential and non-essential — can open with no restrictio­ns. This also includes salons and barber shops, at least two government officials said. Spas, however, will remain shut for now.

Kejriwal said weekly markets — which were barred during the lockdown — can reopen but only one weekly market per municipal zone can operate in a day with up to half of the normal count of vendors at a time. Delhi has a total of 12 municipal zones.

“No weekly market will be allowed to function on roadsides. The weekly markets can function at suitable nearby grounds/school grounds, where Sop/guidelines of DDMA are strictly implemente­d,” an order issued by the Delhi Disaster Management Authority said. It also said random testing of Covid-19 will be carried out by district authoritie­s outside these markets.

Restaurant­s can open their doors for dine-in patrons, but only with 50% seating capacity to ensure social distancing on a “trial basis” until June 21, the order released after Kejriwal’s address said.

Consumptio­n of alcohol, tobacco, pan and gutka is prohibited in restaurant­s, malls and markets, the DDMA order said. A third senior DDMA official later clarified that restaurant­s cannot serve alcoholic drinks and bars will remain closed for now. “A very close watch and supervisio­n will be maintained on the overall functionin­g of markets, market complexes, malls and restaurant­s,” DDMA said, warning that if cases of the disease start increasing in the city, these places will be “closed forthwith without any loss of time”.

Places of worship, too, can open but devotees will not be permitted inside, the DDMA statement said.

Some of the previous restrictio­ns and relaxation­s will remain as they are.

This means private offices can function with up to 50% staff in attendance, public buses and Delhi Metro services will run as usual at 50% seating capacity, and cabs and autoricksh­aws can carry two passengers per vehicle. The cap of 20 guests for weddings, which can only be held at courts or inside personal residence, will remain. Funerals can be held with up to 20 people in attendance.

All educationa­l institutes will remain shut; so will swimming pools, gymnasiums, cinema halls, banquet halls, entertainm­ent parks, public parks and banquet halls, the order said. All gatherings — social, political, religious and academic — are still barred.

Delhi went into a strict lockdown on April 19 as a mounting caseload of Covid-19 cases weighed down the health infrastruc­ture in the city, which was firmly in the grip of its fourth wave of infections. The runaway outbreak — which was the worst the city has seen in over a year of the pandemic — forced people to scramble from hospital to hospital for medical oxygen and lifesaving drugs, while bodies piled on in crematoriu­ms across the Capital.

 ?? HT ?? Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal during a press conference on relaxation of Covid-19 curbs, on Sunday.
HT Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal during a press conference on relaxation of Covid-19 curbs, on Sunday.

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