Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Five Mansa villages sealed in a week amid spurt in Covid cases

THE VILLAGE WITH A POPULATION OF ABOUT 11,000 HAS SEEN 10 COVID DEATHS AND 96 ACTIVE CASES SINCE MAY 1

- Vishal Joshi vishal.joshi@htlive.com

BATHINDA: The district authoritie­s in Mansa have sealed five villages in the past one week amid an increase in coronaviru­s infections and deaths.

On Saturday, Joga village the district’s Bhikhi block was sealed for the next 10 days. The village with a population of about 11,000 has witnessed 10 Covid-19 deaths and 96 active cases since May 1.

Nangal Kalan, Khiala Kalan, Akkanwali, Phapphre Bhai Ke villages of the district have also been declared containmen­t zone since May 10. One urban pocket each in the towns of Mansa and Budladha have also been declared containmen­t zones in the past week.

Joga is among several villages from where almost the entire adult rural population is participat­ing in the ongoing farmers’ agitation at the Delhi borders.

It is for the first time that villages in Mansa have been declared containmen­t zone after the second wave of pandemic hit the state. An area is declared a containmen­t zone after more than 15 cases of virus infections are detected there.

“House-to-house screening has begun. Healthcare teams are trying to convince villagers to follow Covid guidelines. We were able to vaccinate nearly 500 residents and a section is hesitant to take jabs,” said Dr Hardeep Sharma, senior medical officer of Khiala Kalan public health centre.

Khiala Kalan, which has 34 active cases, has reported two Covid-deaths in the last two weeks. On Sunday, two residents from the Khiala Kalan block, including a 27-year-old man, succumbed to the virus. As many 92 residents from the block were tested positive on Sunday. With four deaths and 298 cases reported on Sunday, the number of active cases in the district reached 3,299.

Deputy commission­er Mohinder Pal said police are strictly enforcing the containmen­t protocol and unwanted movement of people has been barred to contain infection spread. “Most villagers were visiting dharna sites at very regular intervals. As they are falling sick in considerab­le numbers, villagers are reluctant to reveal details of their travel and places they visited,” said a district official.

 ??  ?? Sunil Jakhar
Sunil Jakhar

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