Hindustan Times (East UP)

Amid spike, mask mandate, fine return in Delhi

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: In view of spike in coronaviru­s cases in the city, the Delhi government on Wednesday made wearing of mask mandatory in public places and imposed a fine of ₹500 on violators.

Officials said the Delhi Disaster Management Authority (DDMA), in its meeting, also decided not to shut schools, but chose to come up with a separate Standard Operating Procedure in consultati­on with experts.

The government is expected to issue an official order regarding the mandatory use of masks soon.

Officials said authoritie­s have been asked to keep a close watch on social gatherings and ramp up testing in the national capital.

They said Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal is closely monitoring the situation and instructio­ns have been issued to officials for taking steps to check the spread of the virus and preparatio­ns for treatment of Covid patients.

In the DDMA meeting, emphasis was laid on vaccinatio­n of eligible groups as it will help keep in check the impact of the pandemic, officials said.

Several participan­ts asserted that there was no need to panic since the number of hospitalis­ations was low despite a rise in new Covid cases, they said.

It was highlighte­d that the trends of hospitalis­ation needed to be closely monitored for the next fortnight as well as conducting genome sequencing of all positive samples put through RTPCR test.

It was also decided to raise the number of tests being done with the focus on people with symptoms, they said.

According to official figures, there are 9,735 beds for Covid patients in Delhi hospitals and just 80 (0.82 per cent) of them are occupied.

On Tuesday, Delhi recorded a nearly 26 per cent jump in fresh Covid-19 cases.The health department said 632 fresh cases were reported on Tuesday and the positivity rate was 4.42 per cent.

The city had on Monday recorded 501 cases and zero death while the positivity rate stood at 7.72 per cent.

The number of daily Covid-19 cases in Delhi had touched the record high of 28,867 on January 13 this year during the third wave of the pandemic.

The city had recorded a positivity rate of 30.6 per cent on January 14, the highest during the third wave of the pandemic which was largely driven by the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant of coronaviru­s.

India’s effective reproducti­on number (R) for Covid, an indicator of how quickly the infection is spreading, has increased to over one for the first time since January, estimates a researcher from Chennai’s Institute of Mathematic­al Sciences.

The country’s R-value, steadily increasing over the last few weeks, is 1.07 for the week between April 12-18, according to Sitabhra Sinha. In the preceding April 5-11 week, it was 0.93.

The last time the R-value was above 1 was in the week between January 16-22, when the value was 1.28, Sinha said.

 ?? PTI ?? Tourists visit the Red Fort on a hot summer day, amid a slight surge in coronaviru­s cases in New Delhi on April 16.
PTI Tourists visit the Red Fort on a hot summer day, amid a slight surge in coronaviru­s cases in New Delhi on April 16.

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