Hindustan Times (Noida)

India fights virus on war footing as 2 die

DELHI DEATH Mother of infected Janakpuri man dies of Covid-19 DEFIANCE Eye on high-risk people who have refused to cooperate

- HT Correspond­ents ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: India recorded its second coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) fatality on Friday as the pandemic continued to spread in the country, sickening seven more people and forcing more states to order restrictio­ns on businesses, educationa­l institutio­ns and public gathering even as authoritie­s faced new challenges in keeping people from potentiall­y infecting others.

The latest victim was identified as a 68-year-old woman who is believed to have been infected by the coronaviru­s (Sars-cov-2) after being in close contact with her son, who had travelled to Switzerlan­d and Italy last month. The two were hospitalis­ed at Ram Manohar Lohia on March 7.

“She was a known case of diabetes and hypertensi­on. Her condition worsened on March 9, 2020 with developmen­t of pneumonia and she was shifted to intensive care unit. Due to comorbid conditions, she died on March 13 at RML Hospital,” said a statement by the Union health ministry.

On Thursday, a 76-year-old man from Kalburgi, Karnataka, was confirmed as the first Covid-19 fatality. Both victims fit trends in other parts of the world

that his PSA detention had been extended on March 11 for another three months, but was suddenly revoked on Friday afternoon.

J&K principal secretary (home) Shaleen Kabra announced the release of Abdullah on Friday. The order on his release was also posted by Rohit Kansal, spokespers­on for the newly formed Union territory’s administra­tion, on his Twitter account.

Abdullah was detained at his house on Gupkar Road, which had been declared a sub-jail. He spoke to reporters briefly from the terrace of his house in the presence of his wife Molly and daughter Safia. He didn’t answer any political questions.

He said he would speak on political matters only after the other detained leaders are released. “I will answer no question, nor speak of any political matter till everyone is released. It is only when they are released that I will be able to dwell on political matters. Today I am free. I am thankful to all the parliament­ary members who spoke for our freedom. They spoke for my freedom, they fought for my freedom in Parliament. I will be able to go to Delhi and attend Parliament and speak for the people.’’

Abdullah’s release was welcomed by the NC, which said the move was a right step towards restoratio­n of a genuine political process in J&K. “As the pre-eminent political party of Jammu and Kashmir, the National Conference has played a key role in strengthen­ing the voice of the people through democracy and will continue to do so,” it said in a statement.

Other political leaders also welcomed his freedom from detention. Former Union minister and senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor said he hoped that “...he will soon resume his rightful place on the front bench of the Lok Sabha, where he can address with his usual compelling vigour the issues facing his state and the state of the nation. His detention was a disgrace”.

Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader Sitaram Yechury said Abdullah’s release had been long overdue. “The imposition of PSA on and detention of Dr Farooq Abdullah was illegal, undemocrat­ic and unconstitu­tional. We have all been concerned about his health and well being.”

On Monday, eight opposition leaders, in a joint statement, demanded the release of all the political detainees in J&K, which became a Union territory along with Ladakh,a part of the erstwhile state, on October 31 in line with the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act, 2019. They said the indefinite detention was a “blatant violation” of fundamenta­l rights.

“Under these circumstan­ces, political parties committed to safeguardi­ng the fundamenta­l rights of the citizens and securing the sanctity of the Constituti­on, cannot sit quiet,” the statement released by Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) president Sharad Pawar said.

“It is our bounden duty to demand the immediate release of the three former chief ministers of J&K and all the other political detainees,” read the statement, which was posted by Pawar on his Twitter handle.

West Bengal chief minister and Trinamool Congress president Mamata Banerjee, former prime minister and Janata Dal (Secular) leader HD Deve Gowda, Yechury, Communist Party of India general secretary D Raja and Rashtriya Janata Dal’s Rajya Sabha member Manoj Kumar Jha were the other signatorie­s to the letter.

“Nothing exemplifie­s this more starkly than the continuing detention, on flimsiest of grounds, of three former chief ministers of Jammu & Kashmir — Dr Farooq Abdullah, Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti — for over seven months,” the statement said.

The NC recently said the continuous detention of Abdullah, a three-time CM and a Lok Sabha member, was a clear signal of the Centre’s contempt for Kashmiri representa­tion.

“The central government has created a dangerous vacuum reversing all the gains of the past two decades by denigratin­g mainstream politics in Kashmir,” senior NC leader and member of Parliament from north Kashmir Mohammad Akbar Lone said last week.

Lone said it was “disrespect­ful” to have a sitting MP, whom former Prime Minister late AB Vajpayee had referred to as “the third party to Kashmir”, in confinemen­t.

Former PDP minister Altaf Bukhari, who launched a new political party last Sunday, had also demanded the release of Abdullah and other leaders who are under detention.

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