The Jerusalem Post

India’s packed trains ready to roll again

- • By SANJEEV MIGLANI

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of people have booked seats on Indian trains that were due to restart on Tuesday after a nearly seven-week lockdown, raising concerns of spreading the coronaviru­s in the absence of social distancing.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is starting to pull back from one of the world’s tightest lockdowns. It has affected 1.3 billion people and has left millions out of work and stranded in cities far from home while infections keep rising.

State-run railways restarted services from New Delhi to 12 cities, including Mumbai, Chennai and Bengaluru. Within an hour of opening, all seats were booked online, a spokesman said.

“The trains will run full,” another official said. “Reservatio­ns have been made for 54,000 passengers.”

Tuesday was to be a small opening for the notoriousl­y overcrowde­d rail system, which in normal times moves more than 20 million people a day.

Passengers will have to wear masks throughout the journey and will be screened before they board the train, the Railway Ministry said. They also have to sign up for a government-backed contact-tracing app on their phones, the ministry said.

The move comes as India’s coronaviru­s infections reached 70,756, adding 3,604 over the previous day. At the current rate, India is set to surpass the number of infections in China in less than a week. China’s case toll now stands at 82,918.

Deaths from COVID-19 at last count were 2,293 in India and 4,633 in China.

India’s numbers are still small compared with those of the United States, United Kingdom and Italy. But many state leaders are wary of opening up rail, road and air networks for fear of an exponentia­l rise in infections that would overwhelm the limited medical facilities.

During a video conference with Modi to decide the way out of the lockdown that has battered the economy, the chief minister of eastern Bihar state, Nitish Kumar, said restarting rail services was a mistake.

His state was already seeing a surge in infections as migrant workers from India’s big cities, including Mumbai and Delhi, reached home, he told the meeting, according to a state official.

The chief minister of the southern state of Telangana, K Chandrasek­har Rao, said restarting trains from Delhi, one of the coronaviru­s hot spots, was risky.

“It will not be possible to conduct tests on everyone,” he said. “It is also difficult to put all those who traveled by train under quarantine.”

But pressure to ease restrictio­ns has been building on Modi from political leaders, businesses and people whose livelihood­s have been destroyed by the shutdown.

 ?? (Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters) ?? A POLICE officer urges people to maintain social distancing at a railway station on the outskirts of Kolkata yesterday.
(Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters) A POLICE officer urges people to maintain social distancing at a railway station on the outskirts of Kolkata yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel