Kuwait Times

Drones disinfect pandemic hotspot city after clashes

Warship evacuates stranded Indians from Maldives

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AHMEDABAD: Drones hovered over the pandemic-stricken Indian city of Ahmedabad yesterday spraying disinfecta­nt on the streets, hours after security forces clashed with residents who flouted a toughened lockdown. The western city of 5.5 million people has become a major concern for authoritie­s as they battle a surge in coronaviru­s deaths and cases across India.

Ahmedabad accounts for 343 of the almost 2,000 deaths reported nationwide and just under ten percent of cases registered. Other cities in Gujarat state have also been badly hit. Drones sprayed from the air while fire engines and other city vehicles toured the empty streets sending out clouds of cleaning agent onto roads and the outside of buildings. “We have started a massive exercise to spray disinfecta­nt in all zones of the city,” said the city’s acting chief administra­tor Rajiv Gupta.

India has been in the grip of the world’s biggest lockdown since March 25, which was made stricter in Ahmedabad on Friday because of the accelerate­d spread of the virus. Hundreds of paramilita­ries kept people off the streets and virtually all stores have been closed for at least a week. On Friday night, security forces fired tear gas at stone-throwing residents who ventured out. At least 15 people were arrested and the police presence was stepped up yesterday.

Authoritie­s have insisted the pandemic crisis is under control and have started to ease restrictio­ns in many parts of India to let agricultur­e and some companies get back to work. Experts however have warned of an increasing toll despite the lockdown. The virus is spreading particular­ly quickly in major cities such as Mumbai, New Delhi and Ahmedabad. And experts say the toll numbers are higher than reported because of the lack of testing and poor accounting for deaths.

While the number of deaths is low compared to the United States and the worst-hit European nations, health specialist­s say India’s pandemic curve may only peak in June and July. Shamika Ravi, an economic advisor to the government who has become a muchfollow­ed commentato­r on the pandemic’s spread, said yesterday that the “infection is way ahead of our knowledge” in Gujarat and Maharashtr­a, which includes Mumbai, because there is not enough testing.

Stranded Indians

In another developmen­t, India’s navy on Friday began evacuating from the Maldives around 750 of the hundreds of thousands of Indian nationals stranded worldwide because of coronaviru­s. The operation by two warships in Male forms part of an initial operation to repatriate almost 15,000 Indians from 12 countries where they have been stuck since India banned incoming flights in late March to halt the pandemic. On Thursday, the first two repatriati­on flights brought back 354 Indians from Abu Dhabi and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. They then went into quarantine centres.

In the Maldives, around 4,000 of the 27,000 Indians living in the archipelag­o have registered to be taken home. On Friday the first batch of 750 underwent the emigration process before boarding the INS Jalashwa which will set sail for Kochi in the southern state of Kerala. Footage posted on Twitter by the Indian High Commission (embassy) showed how the naval vessel had been modified to accommodat­e civilians-complete with neat rows of bunk beds and chairs.

Each passenger is being charged $40 for the service, the High Commission said. Satish Kumar, who lost his job in the Maldives in February, said he was looking forward to going home. “You look in any corner of Male, you can hear about a positive case. Male is very dense (and) the community spread is high,” Kumar, 55, told AFP. “I’m very relieved that I’m leaving. I know I’ve lost my job but I just want to go back to my family.”

‘Massive task’

Maldives has reported 642 virus cases with two deaths so far. India’s coronaviru­s lockdown, one of the world’s strictest, left vast numbers of workers, students and tourists stranded. The lockdown has been steadily eased but there are still no scheduled flights.

India’s coronaviru­s cases passed 50,000 this week with 1,886 deaths as of Friday, with recent days having seen record jumps. Another warship is due to pick up more Indians in the UAE-home to a 3.3-million-strong Indian community which makes up about 30 percent of the Gulf state’s population. The consulate in Dubai said it had received almost 200,000 applicatio­ns, appealing on Twitter for “patience and cooperatio­n” as India undertakes the “massive task” of repatriati­on.

The novel coronaviru­s and its devastatin­g economic impact have left many workers in the region sick and others unemployed, unpaid and at the mercy of sometimes unscrupulo­us employers. Other special flights were due to leave Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippine­s, as well as London, San Francisco, New York, Chicago and Washington. Around 1,000 Indians were scheduled to arrive in India on Friday from Dhaka, Singapore, Riyadh, Manama and Dubai. Some of the citizens have complained about delays in evacuation triggered by the need to test crew, as well as the move to charge for repatriati­on.

 ?? —AFP ?? AHMEDABAD, India: Stranded migrant workers intending to go to their hometowns leave Gota Bridge area as Gujarat police personnel (unseen) shove them away during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown on Friday.
—AFP AHMEDABAD, India: Stranded migrant workers intending to go to their hometowns leave Gota Bridge area as Gujarat police personnel (unseen) shove them away during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown on Friday.
 ??  ?? India authoritie­s battle a surge in COVID-19 deaths
India authoritie­s battle a surge in COVID-19 deaths

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