The Jerusalem Post

India, Nepal lock down to stave off virus, NATO troops in Afghanista­n infected

- By SANJEEV MIGLANI and CHARLOTTE GREENFIELD

NEW DELHI/KABUL (Reuters) – Authoritie­s enforced lockdowns across most of India, Nepal and parts of Pakistan on Tuesday to halt the spread of coronaviru­s in one of the world’s most densely populated regions, as four NATO personnel tested positive in Afghanista­n.

Health researcher­s have warned that more than a million people in India could be infected with the coronaviru­s by mid-May, prompting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to shut down all air and train travel, businesses and schools.

Modi was due to address the nation for a second time in a week later on Tuesday on the risks to the country of 1.3 billion people from the virus that emerged in China late last year and has spread to 194 countries.

India has found 482 cases of the coronaviru­s and nine people have died from the COVID19 disease it causes, but alarm is growing across the region about prospects for its spread into impoverish­ed communitie­s and the ability of resourcest­arved public health sectors to cope.

Already health officials said the virus was spreading out of big Indian cities where it first appeared into the small towns that dot the landscape.

“This trend is worrying as rural areas have limited infrastruc­ture to deal with the outbreak,” said a health official in the western state of Maharashtr­a who declined to be identified saying he was not authorized to speak to journalist­s.

More than 377,300 people have been infected by the coronaviru­s globally and 16,520 have died, according to a Reuters tally.

Across South Asia, home to a quarter of the world’s population, authoritie­s are scrambling to raise their defenses as the virus spreads.

Four NATO service members in Afghanista­n tested positive for coronaviru­s shortly after entering the country, the first confirmed cases in the mission,

NATO said in a statement.

“The service members were newly arrived in country, and were in a precaution­ary screening facility when they became symptomati­c, were moved to isolation and were tested,” the statement said.

Around 1,500 NATO service members, most of whom had recently arrived in Afghanista­n, were in screening facilities as a precaution­ary measure, NATO said.

Afghanista­n’s health ministry said that WHO had estimated that 80% of the war-ravaged country’s population of 32 million could be infected with the virus in the next five months. So far it has had 42 cases and one death.

Invoking a 56-year-old law, Nepal ordered a nationwide lockdown to contain the spread of the virus after reporting a second case in the Himalayan nation of 30 million people.

It closed its borders with India and China earlier in the week saying a large number of people, mostly Nepali migrant workers, were trying to rush back home from India.

Bangladesh deployed the military to ensure social distancing and strengthen the coronaviru­s preventive measures, the military’s informatio­n office said.

The Pakistani army is also helping to impose nationwide restrictio­ns to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s following a request from the government.

Pakistan, with nearly 900 cases, has shut schools, malls, restaurant­s, cinemas, marriage halls, swimming pools and markets with only food and medical stores allowed to remain open.

Earlier on Monday, police in the Indian capital broke up the longest-running protest against a new citizenshi­p law, citing a ban on public gatherings because of the coronaviru­s.

Dozens of people, many of them women, had been staging a sit-in protest since early December on a street in the Shaheen Bagh neighborho­od, turning it into a focal point for opposition to the law seen as discrimina­ting against Muslims.

 ?? (Juan Medina/Reuters) ?? LOCAL POLICE stand guard outside an ice rink, which will be used as a makeshift morgue, during the coronaviru­s outbreak in Madrid, yesterday.
(Juan Medina/Reuters) LOCAL POLICE stand guard outside an ice rink, which will be used as a makeshift morgue, during the coronaviru­s outbreak in Madrid, yesterday.
 ?? (Prashant Waydande/Reuters) ?? A MAN wearing a handkerchi­ef as a mask moves past a parked autoricksh­aw during a curfew to limit the spreading of coronaviru­s, in Mumbai, yesterday.
(Prashant Waydande/Reuters) A MAN wearing a handkerchi­ef as a mask moves past a parked autoricksh­aw during a curfew to limit the spreading of coronaviru­s, in Mumbai, yesterday.

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