Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ India’s poor are fleeing cities amid outbreak.

- By Muneeza Naqvi and P R Sanjai

In small groups and large crowds, through inner-city lanes and down interstate highways, hundreds of thousands of India’s poorest are slowly making a desperate journey on foot back to their villages in a mass exodus unseen since the days immediatel­y after India’s independen­ce in 1947.

For many, it’s a matter of life and death. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s order last week to lock down the country for 21 days to prevent the spread of COVID-19 has dried up work in urban areas, leaving many rural migrants who keep the city moving while making less than $2 a day — constructi­on workers, handymen, food sellers, truck drivers and household help — suddenly wondering how they’ll pay rent or buy food.

“We have to go to our village — we will starve here,” said Rekha Devi as she walked with her husband and two young children down a highway outside Delhi, heading to see her family some 270 miles away. The couple lived on the constructi­on site where they worked, but the job stopped suddenly more than a week ago.

“We haven’t eaten for two days,” Devi said, noting that the little money they had saved quickly ran out. “We are scared of this disease, but I think hunger will kill us. We will stay hungry, but how can we watch our children starve?”

The family walked Sunday with hundreds of others down a highway normally clogged with vehicles, their mouths and noses covered with scarves, handkerchi­efs or masks. They clasped their children and belongings — tattered duffel bags stuffed with clothes, buckets filled with cooking utensils, blankets and sheets.

The grim scenes playing out across the nation of 1.3 billion people are some of the worst across the world since the virus crisis shut down much of the global economy. In India, it’s brought back memories of the mass migration sparked by deadly religious riots when the subcontine­nt was split up after the British left in 1947. These days, however, the divide is largely between those in India with money and those who live month by month, or even day by day.

What’s worse, the mass movement of people risks speeding the spread of the coronaviru­s across the country — underminin­g the goal of the 21-day lockdown. Right now, it’s nearly impossible to tell what will happen because India lacks testing data to determine what stage the pandemic has reached, according to Gagandeep Kang, an infectious disease expert and head of India’s Translatio­nal

Health Science and Technology Institute outside of Delhi.

“Because we are not testing enough, we don’t know what this means in terms of disease spread,” Kang said. “If very few people are infected today, then they’re going home and if they reach home safely then that might be the best thing for them,” she added, while saying cases will emerge throughout the country in two to four weeks if many migrants already have COVID-19.

Modi’s government on Sunday asked states to quarantine migrant workers for 14 days and prevent them from traveling elsewhere in the country as the official case toll rose to more than 1,000, including 25 deaths.

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