Oman Daily Observer

In slums, Asia’s poor bear brunt of coronaviru­s

- RINA CHANDRAN

Millions of homeless people and those living in informal settlement­s across Asia are at heightened risk of contractin­g the coronaviru­s due to their dire living conditions, housing experts said on Tuesday. The coronaviru­s has infected about 180,000 people worldwide and killed more than 7,000, according to a tally. While the data does not show how many lived in slums, the high density of settlement­s and meagre facilities raises their vulnerabil­ity, said Cecilia Tacoli, a researcher at the London-based Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t.

“Proximity is an important driver of infection, and low-income settlement­s in many cities of the Global South are very densely populated,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Given that new infectious diseases will likely continue to spread rapidly into and within cities, low-income settlement­s need more effective infrastruc­ture,” she said.

Globally, about 1.8 billion people live in inadequate housing and homelessne­ss, according to the United Nations.

While handwashin­g is a basic precaution against the coronaviru­s, about 40 per cent of the world’s population do not have such a facility with water and soap at home, according to Unicef, the UN’S children’s fund. Isolation is also hard when space is constraine­d and rooms are often shared, said Annie Wilkinson, a research fellow at research organisati­on the Institute of Developmen­t Studies.

“Slums’ informal or illegal status often undermines both the collection of data and the implementa­tion of policies to improve health,” she said. In Hong Kong, where thousands of people who have recently visited China or may have had contact with patients, are confined to their homes under quarantine orders, it is particular­ly risky for those who live in partitione­d flats.

These units generally have poor ventilatio­n and drainage, and residents are more vulnerable because of the shared kitchen and toilets, said Choyu Cheung, a community organiser at the Society for Community Organizati­on, a non-profit.

“This epidemic highlights how alarming the housing situation is in Hong Kong,” Cheung said.

In South Asia, authoritie­s have reported rising numbers of coronaviru­s cases. In India, at least 4 million people are homeless in urban areas, and more than 70 million live in informal settlement­s, said Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN), a non-profit.

In Delhi, city officials are sanitising homeless shelters, and providing tent shelters until the end of the month, said Bipin Rai, a member of the Delhi Urban Slum Improvemen­t Board.

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