Oman Daily Observer

Crowded south Asia sees rise in coronaviru­s cases

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KARACHI/KABUL: Health authoritie­s across South Asia reported rising tallies of coronaviru­s cases on Monday, raising the prospect of rapidly spreading outbreaks overwhelmi­ng poor medical facilities in a region that is home to a quarter of the world’s people.

South Asia has been relatively lightly hit by the virus compared with neighbours to the east, like China and South Korea, and to the west like Iran and parts of Europe.

But measures that have reined in epidemics in China, where the coronaviru­s emerged late last year, and South Korea are unlikely to work in poor, crowded parts of South Asia, health officials say.

“As compared to developed countries like the United States and China it will be difficult to (enforce) social distancing, especially in slum areas,” said Giridhara R Babu, an epidemiolo­gist at the Indian Institute of Public Health in the city of Bengaluru.

“The living environmen­t itself is crowded and it may not be practical to ask them to maintain minimum distance from each other.” Pakistan recorded a sharp rise in coronaviru­s cases on Monday, up 40 to 94, according to a Reuters tally of statistics from central and provincial government­s.

The majority of new cases were in the southern province of Sindh in

PAKISTAN REPORTS 40 NEW CASES TAKING TALLY TO 94

patients who had recently travelled from Iran — which has one of the world’s worst outbreaks.

Saeed Ghani, a cabinet minister in the Sindh government, told reporters on Monday existing quarantine facilities in Pakistan’s Baluchista­n province on the Iranian border were inadequate, resulting in large numbers of coronaviru­s cases.

“Out of 100 plus samples, 50 resulted positive, which is a huge number,” he said.

AFGHAN PANIC Afghanista­n saw its tally rise to 21 with the majority of cases in the western province of Herat, which borders Iran and where thousands of Afghans cross back into their home country every day, some after being deported and others to escape a worsening Iranian economy.

Transport costs from the Iranian border to Herat city have quadrupled since the outbreak of the virus, officials said.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Health workers on motor-bike fumigate, as a preventive measure against coronaviru­s, along a street in Hyderabad, Pakistan.
— Reuters Health workers on motor-bike fumigate, as a preventive measure against coronaviru­s, along a street in Hyderabad, Pakistan.

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