The Guardian Australia

Taj Mahal reopens as coronaviru­s cases continue to rise in India

- Agence France-Presse in Agra

The Taj Mahal, India’s “monument to love”, has reopened after a six-month hiatus with special rules introduced – including no touching the white marble walls of the mausoleum built for a Mughal emperor’s favourite wife.

Only 5,000 visitors are allowed daily – a quarter of usual capacity – and all have their temperatur­e taken by staff wearing face shields, masks and gloves.

Visitors can whip off their masks for a photo, but security personnel are quick to remind them to put them back on once the shutter has been pressed.

And the famous bench where people usually sit to have their picture taken has been laminated in plastic, to help cleaning between every photo op.

“We have all the safety measures in place,” said Vasant Swarnkar from the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI), which oversees the Unesco world heritage site in Agra, south of Delhi.

“We want to send out the message that things are not so bad and you will be safe if you follow the instructio­ns.”

Neither the new rules nor the dangers of catching the coronaviru­s put off a steady stream of visitors to the breathtaki­ng 17th-century monument on Monday morning.

“The moment I heard the Taj is reopening I decided to visit. I had been planning it for so many years,” said 25year-old Debargha Sengupta, an engineer who took a train from Allahabad 500km (300 miles) away.

“It’s amazing, it’s incredible. I had read about the Taj in books and seen the pictures but to see it [for] real is so amazing,” he told AFP.

“I am not worried about the coronaviru­s. It’s been six months and I am totally fed up now. We cannot sit at home forever.”

The return of visitors is a huge relief to the many people of Agra who depend on Taj Mahal tourists for their livelihood­s.

“It was so frustratin­g to sit idle at home for six months,” said an elated Zahid Baig, a rickshaw driver.

“Agra looked like a ghost city without the Taj tourists,” he said.

The reopening comes as the Indian government seeks to get Asia’s thirdlarge­st economy moving again even as virus cases rise.

So far it has recorded more than 5.4 million coronaviru­s cases – second only to the US, which it could overtake in the coming weeks.

A lockdown imposed in March left tens of millions out of work almost overnight, while the economy shrank by almost a quarter between April and June.

“People have suffered a lot and it is time the country opens up fully,” said 35-year-old Ayub Sheikh, a bank official visiting with his wife and baby daughter.

“We are not afraid of the virus. If it has to infect us, it will,” he told AFP.

“Not many people are dying now. I don’t think it is going to go away soon. We have to get used to it now.”

There were few foreigners present on Monday as India has not yet opened up to internatio­nal tourists.

But Ainhoa Parra, from Spain – who lives in India – did make the trip.

“Coronaviru­s is in every country,” Parra told AFP after posing for a selfie with her husband and two friends.

“We have to be careful, but if we have to get infected we will.”

The allure of the monument, commission­ed in about 1630 by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan for his wife, Mumtaz Mahal, looks set to endure.

“Taj has a magnetic effect on people. They are crazy about it,” said ASI’s Vasant.

“Everyone wants to visit it at least once in their lifetime.”

 ?? Photograph: Pawan Sharma/AP ?? A small number of tourists outside the Taj Mahal as it reopened at sunrise on Monday.
Photograph: Pawan Sharma/AP A small number of tourists outside the Taj Mahal as it reopened at sunrise on Monday.
 ?? Photograph: Pawan Sharma/AP ?? A soldier stands guard outside the Taj Mahal.
Photograph: Pawan Sharma/AP A soldier stands guard outside the Taj Mahal.

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