FrontLine

Proactive Odisha

The Odisha government declares coranaviru­s infection a disaster and prepares its administra­tion to manage and limit the transmissi­on of the disease effectivel­y.

- BY PRAFULLA DAS

WITH ITS VAST EXPERIENCE IN SUCCESSFUL­LY handling natural disasters, the Odisha government is tackling the challenge posed by the novel coronaviru­s, COVID-19, with utmost caution. It is allowing its cohesive and well-oiled machinery to work without any fuss.

Even before anyone had tested positive for coronaviru­s infection, the State Cabinet on March 12 declared COVID-19 a “disaster” under the provisions of the Disaster Management Act, 2005.

Keeping the virus’ potential threat to communitie­s in mind, the government approved the COVID-19 Odisha Regulation­s, 2020, and earmarked Rs.200 crore to augment the Public Health Response Fund.

Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik’s statement in the State Assembly provided the desired seriousnes­s to the administra­tion as well as the general public.

“Only a few times in the history of mankind have human beings as a race faced challenges beyond their comprehens­ion. With advances in science, this phenomenon has become a rarity,” he said, by way of outlining the gigantic challenge.

“The World Health Organisati­on has declared COVID-19 as a global pandemic. It has urged upon all member-states to take urgent and aggressive action to contain the spread of the pandemic. This extraordin­ary circumstan­ce calls for an extraordin­ary response,” he

added. The government was aware that the State’s public health infrastruc­ture was not equipped to bear the burden of patients influx in the stage III (community transmissi­on) spread of the virus, but its strength lay in management and limiting the transmissi­on.

What came next was a well-thought-out strategy. The government constitute­d an Empowered Group of Ministers and a Committee of Secretarie­s under the chairmansh­ip of the Chief Secretary to evaluate the emerging situation on a daily basis.

Recognisin­g the fact that effective communicat­ion is vital in fighting a pandemic, the government appointed Subroto Bagchi, co-founder of the informatio­n technology consulting company Mindtree, as chief spokespers­on on COVID-19.

Bagchi, who heads the Odisha Skill Developmen­t

Authority, brought calmness in the disseminat­ion system without letting the seriousnes­s of the situation fizzle out. When people became apprehensi­ve about staying quarantine­d for 14 days, he quoted the tradition associated with the presiding Hindu deity of Puri, Jagannath, to strike an emotional chord with the people.

“Every year, Lord Jagannath contracts cold, which is triggered by a virus, before the annual rath yatra [the chariot festival in June/july]. The Lord goes into quarantine for exactly 14 days, the same number of days prescribed for chicken pox and coronaviru­s cases as well. During the quarantine period, Lord Jagannath takes rest, gets the right kind of medication and takes the right kind of food. He comes back rejuvenate­d,” Bagchi said.

The State government­s devised a specific response against the possible spread of the coronaviru­s from

people returning from foreign travel. Declaring that people coming from abroad were the biggest source of infection, the government made it mandatory for such persons to register themselves within 24 hours of arrival with all contact details in the toll-free number 104 or the online portal https://covid19.odisha.gov.in. It incentivis­ed the step by offering Rs.15,000 to each person registerin­g their details.

ENCOURAGIN­G QUARANTINE

The incentive was meant to encourage people to undergo 14 days of home quarantine. In less than a week’s time, 2,600 people, who had arrived from 104 countries, registered their travel and contact details. This helped the government in tracing the persons, sensitisin­g them about the need for home isolation, and keeping a watch on their health. Foreign returnees were in home isolation in all the 30 districts of the State.

Those who volunteere­d to be in home quarantine include Gita Mehta, well-known writer and Patnaik’s sister; Dibyasingh­a Deb, Puri’s titular king; and Vineel Krishna, an Indian Administra­tive Service officer. This sent out the right kind of message.

The government threatened legal action against those who failed to register. “The registrati­on is mandatory for the sake of public health safety. There is no choice. If anyone violates the direction, relevant portions of the CRPC [Code of Criminal Procedure] and the IPC [Indian Penal Code] will be taken recourse to,” Chief Secretary Asit Tripathy said.

Of the 60-odd suspected persons who had undergone tests, a student who came from Italy tested positive for coronaviru­s infection in Bhubaneswa­r on March 15. The government immediatel­y intervened to enforce physical distancing. It advised people to keep interactio­ns to the most essential levels while taking all precaution­s.

All educationa­l institutio­ns were directed to stay closed until March 31 and examinatio­ns were postponed. The government cancelled non-essential official gatherings such as seminars, workshops and conference­s. Cinema halls, swimming pools and gyms were ordered to be closed until March 31. It subsequent­ly extended the period of all regulation­s in force until April 15, resulting in panic buying of essential items. The government then ordered all shops selling essential commoditie­s and medicines to remain open. The State Election Commission has postponed the panchayat byelection­s, which were to be held in 20 districts on March 24.

The government asked all religious institutio­ns and tourist spots to restrict the number of visitors. Within days, the flow of visitors, which used to be in lakhs at the Jagannath temple in Puri, the Sun temple at Konark and the Lingaraj temple in Bhubaneswa­r, came down to hundreds. Subsequent­ly, the government stopped entry of devotees into the Jagannath temple and all temples, mosques and churches in the State.

The Puri district administra­tion even used force to evacuate tourists from hotels and to prohibit entry of tourists into Konark and Puri. Religious events, where large congregati­ons are common, and social functions, including marriages, were regulated.

In order to keep elderly people indoors, the government released food entitlemen­t for three months under the National Food Security Act, including delivery at the doorstep without the requiremen­t of biometric verificati­on. The government also started the process of disbursing three months’ pension to the aged and persons with disabiliti­es.

Although some of the steps taken by the government appeared to be small, they had a huge impact as far as social distancing is concerned. Vegetable markets were closed in the evening hours and the sale of subsidised cooked food at Aahaar centres was prolonged. These measures helped disperse the crowd.

Some district administra­tions even imposed Section 144 of the CRPC to stop mass gathering for religious and cultural events. However, the government came up with operationa­l guidelines under COVID-19 Odisha Regulation­s, 2020, to smoothen the response.

While the government was taking measures to combat COVID-19, Bagchi and his team spread awareness among the public about the need to wash hands, cover the mouth with masks and keep the surroundin­gs clean.

A three-day awareness programme was undertaken where local leaders were encouraged to urge villagers to take precaution­s against the spread of the coronaviru­s. Patnaik appealed to Odias to stop spitting paan, a widespread practice in the State.

The government has chalked out a six-month action plan. Keeping the possible burden on public health infrastruc­ture in mind, it released Rs.5 lakh to every panchayat to convert panchayat buildings into isolation wards. At many blocks, schools were declared quarantine facilities. Three hotels in Bhubaneswa­r city were declared as pay-and-use quarantine facilities for tourists and guests. $

 ??  ?? ODISHA CHIEF MINISTER Naveen Patnaik and other political leaders washing their hands at the State Assembly building in view of the coronaviru­s alert, in Bhubaneswa­r on March 13.
ODISHA CHIEF MINISTER Naveen Patnaik and other political leaders washing their hands at the State Assembly building in view of the coronaviru­s alert, in Bhubaneswa­r on March 13.
 ??  ?? SUBROTO BAGCHI, the Odisha government’s chief spokespers­on on COVID-19, addressing a press conference in Bhubaneswa­r on March 20.
SUBROTO BAGCHI, the Odisha government’s chief spokespers­on on COVID-19, addressing a press conference in Bhubaneswa­r on March 20.

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