Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Maha crosses 2k cases with biggest 24-hr jump

- Swapnil Rawal and Faisal Malik letters@hindustant­imesc.com ■

MUMBAI: Maharashtr­a doubled its coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) cases to 2,000 in six days, recording its biggest 24-hour jump on Monday, as 11 more deaths in the state vaulted the number of fatalities in the pandemic to 160, prompting the Uddhav Thackeray government to extend the lockdown until the end of April.

The state said 352 more people tested positive for Covid-19, taking the number of patients confirmed to have the infection to 2,334. Of Monday’s cases, Mumbai,

the Indian city worst hit by the disease, alone recorded 242, taking its Covid-19 count to 1,540.

Of the 11 deaths in the state, nine were reported by Mumbai and one each by Pune and MiraBhayan­der. Thirty-nine cases were recorded in Pune; 14 in Malegaon; 11 in Nagpur; nine in Thane; seven in Mira-Bhayander; six in Pimpri-Chinchwad; five in Vasai-Virar; four each in Aurangabad, Buldhana and Kalyan-Dombivli; one each in Ahmednagar, Dhule, Nashik, Navi Mumbai, Panvel, Raigad and Yavatmal. The Thackeray government on Monday extended the lockdown, which was to end at midnight on April 14, until April 30, even as it looks at allowing micro-, small- and medium- enterprise­s to start operations in districts that are not affected, or relatively less affected, by the outbreak. A proposal for allowing industries to reopen is being prepared by the state industries department.

“It was necessary to extend the lockdown period as the state has been the worst-hit by the pandemic and more than a hundred cases are coming per day for more than a week. The spread can be arrested only with the help of a lockdown,” said a senior official, requesting anonymity. On the lockdown extension, a notificati­on issued by chief secretary Ajoy Mehta on Monday read: “It is expedient to take measures further to contain the spread of coronaviru­s; therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred under section 2 of the Epidemic Disease Act, 1897 the state government directs that the lockdown orders shall now be extended up to and inclusive of April 30, 2020.”

Maharashtr­a took 30 days to cross the 1,000-case mark on April 7 and exceeded the 2,000 tally in just six days. The state health department isn’t perturbed because it is still in stage two or the local transmissi­on phase, where the spread of the disease is limited to those with a travel history or are in contact with infected people, and not entered stage 3 or community transmissi­on in which the source of the infection cannot be traced.

State health commission­er Anup Kumar Yadav said, “We are still in stage two of transmissi­on. The spread is now in clusters, but it is not exponentia­l. Our cluster containmen­t plans are showing results and it is not going out of control. ..”.

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