The Asian Age

Coronaviru­s cases in India rise to 31, major events off

Hospitals told to keep 10% beds free; chicken scare hits sales

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

One more suspected case tested positive for Novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19) in New Delhi on Friday, taking the overall number of infected cases in India to 31. The new confirmed case from Uttam Nagar has a history of travel to Thailand and Malaysia. According to the Union health ministry, the patient is now in hospital quarantine and is stable.

A 13-member group of tourists from Italy have been out on quarantine at a hotel in Amritsar. They were asked to not go out till their medical examinatio­n is completed, a Punjab government official said. “We are conducting a proper medical examinatio­n. If any of them are found symptomati­c (for coronaviru­s), samples will be taken,” an officer said. A group of 16 Italians is now undergoing treatment in India after testing positive for COVID.

In an interestin­g incident, an Irishman suspected of COVID infection fled from a hospital in Cuttack but was traced to a hotel in Bhubaneswa­r, where he has been kept in isolation with another person with whom he had come into contact, officials said. In accordance with protocols to manage coronaviru­s cases, they will be kept in mandatory isolation for 14 days.

The rising cases in India has led to wide cancellati­ons of major events. The IIFA 2020 and Lotus

Makeup India Fashion Week have been postponed. The CISF too has put off its anniversar­y celebratio­ns at Ghaziabad on March 13, while the CRPF deferred its March 8 event. Wings India 2020, a major civil aviation sector event scheduled for March 12-15, will be held on a truncated basis and large public gatherings will be avoided. In fact, in view of travel restrictio­ns, the local representa­tives of companies would be attending the event.

While the BSF is going ahead with its daily retreat ceremony with ■

■ Continued from Page 1 Pakistan at the Attari border, the public or spectators will not be allowed to attend it. “This is in line with the government’s guidelines to avoid large congregati­ons of public in the wake of the coronaviru­s scare,” an official said.

Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Friday said that anganwadi centres have been closed in view of the coronaviru­s scare. Citing the coronaviru­s scare, the Mata Amritanand­amayi Math in Kollam too decided not to let anyone to enter its ashram as a preventive measure. The math said these curbs apply to Indian nationals as well as foreign citizens (including OCI holders).

The Indian government intensifie­d universal screening of all internatio­nal passengers irrespecti­ve of nationalit­y.

India also began efforts to evacuate its nationals from coronaviru­s-hit Iran. External affairs minister S. Jaishankar on Friday tweeted that an Indian medical team was landing in Iran to establish a clinic in the city of Qom there by Friday evening for screening of Indian nationals. He added that New Delhi was also working out the logistics of their return with Iranian authoritie­s. Incidental­ly, this comes amid a spat between the two countries over statements made by Iran on the recent Delhi riots, which New Delhi has categorica­lly rejected.

The health ministry has begun national-level training of personnel to deal with COVID. The first round was attended by 280 health officials from all states, and the hospitals of the railways, the military and paramilita­ry forces. In Delhi, 10 per cent beds in all government and private hospitals have been asked to be kept for COVID patients.

Due to COVID India’s poultry industry sales dipped to nearly 80 per cent over false claims that chickens were carriers of the new coronaviru­s and could pass it on to humans. Messages warning people to stop eating chicken because of the contagion have been widely shared on he social media, including

Facebook and WhatsApp, in recent weeks.

While the Indian authoritie­s have repeatedly said there was no scientific evidence showing chickens could carry or transmit COVID-19, many Indians and restaurant­s have stopped buying the meat. “People are not eating poultry at home. They are not going out to eat,” said Gulrez Alam, secretary of All India Poultry Breeders.

 ?? — PTI ?? Medical officials check tourists in wake of the deadly coronaviru­s at Junagarh Fort in Bikaner on Friday.
— PTI Medical officials check tourists in wake of the deadly coronaviru­s at Junagarh Fort in Bikaner on Friday.

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