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Getting picked for random Covid test

- Mahmood Saberi is a storytelle­r and blogger based in Bengaluru, India. Twitter: @mahmood_saberi MAHMOOD SABERI

The security check guy at Toronto Airport asked me where I was coming from and then stuck a round, pink sticker on my passport to mark that I was randomly picked for Covid testing. “Green stickers this way, out, pink stickers to my left,” said another guy further on, standing at an exit that was beckoning me to my freedom. Then like the ‘desi’ dad of Canadian stand-up comic, Russell Peters, I started bargaining: “Do I have to do this?” I asked an Indian-looking guy, holding an iPad. “I have taken a ton of boosters,” I said. “Yes, you have to,” he said, politely, taking down my ID details.

Flashback to a month back, and my wife said, “They are giving booster shots to the old. Let’s get them,” she said, just as Coronaviru­s infections were once again rising in Bengaluru. Flashback even further back to December when we were freezing in an extraordin­arily and unusually cold weather front in Toronto, my wife said: “Let’s get the Pfizer booster shots they are giving here.”

The people with pink stickers on their passports were an eclectic bunch of people who looked harried and were tired from their long flights from across various parts of the globe. I finally read the sheet of paper the security guy gave me and which I luckily did not trash immediatel­y thinking it was just another paper on how to wash and sanitise my hands. It said: “You have been selected for Mandatory Random Testing”, in a cheerful font that was marked in dark green. It even had an acronym, and I was now a part of the MRT.

Being an irritating­ly, persistent chap, I tried again, with the woman from the health department, who was my tester. “Do I have to undergo this? I have taken two boosters already, I am tired,” I said. “Yes,” she said cheerfully. “Will you be drawing blood?” I asked her. “No, no,” she said, and laughed, “I would faint.”

She then decided to give me a self-test kit and said that I should do the test at home within 24 hours.

Nodding off in the bus, I continued reading the sheet of paper given by the security guy: “If you receive a positive test result, follow the instructio­ns below.” And there was a warning: “If you do not comply, you will be transferre­d to a quarantine facility, face fines and or imprisoned,” it said. For some crazy reason, I immediatel­y started planning my escape.

Fear of being quarantine­d

At the peak of the unnerving second wave in Bengaluru it was common to read in the news about people vanishing from the quarantine facility as the facilities were reportedly quite disgusting. One woman who vanished in the night was finally found hiding in another state. Even people in home quarantine started disappeari­ng. Ten people who were sequestere­d in their homes escaped, but were found days later, relaxing in their “native place” and happily spreading the infection to their folks. When they were arrested, one official proudly announced that, “Nobody can dodge the long arm of the law.”

As my bus whizzed into the night, I wondered whether I should escape to the US, but after rememberin­g what happens in some American prisons in TV shows, I decided against it.

Three days after the deadline for doing my home test and after recovering from jet lag and after getting the wall plug adaptor for my phone and laptop, from Amazon, I called the health department and performed my home test on video for a very profession­al but friendly woman. I am now waiting for the results.

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