Kuwait Times

Coronaviru­s cases in South Asia near 6,000

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MUMBAI: The number of confirmed new coronaviru­s cases in South Asia neared 6,000 yesterday, even as authoritie­s in some cities tightened restrictio­ns on movement and warned lockdowns could be extended in a bid to rein in the pandemic. “If people don’t obey the rules seriously and cases continue to rise, then there may be no option but to extend the lockdown,” Rajesh Tope, the health minister of Maharashtr­a state which includes the financial hub Mumbai said. “It could be extended in Mumbai and urban areas of Maharashtr­a by two weeks.”

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi said this week the country will pull out of the planned three-week lockdown in a phased manner. India has been hardest hit by the disease in South Asia with some 2,902 cases, of which 68 have died. Maharashtr­a has 516 confirmed cases of COVID19 - the disease caused by the coronaviru­s - and 26 people have died.

While the government does plan to review the

lockdown, set to end on April 14, three senior officials told Reuters this will depend on an assessment of the situation in each state, and lockdowns and restrictio­ns would be extended in districts where the coronaviru­s case spread has continued. Public transport in large metros such as Mumbai, Bengaluru and Delhi, may only be restored in a phased manner days after the lockdown ends, said the officials, who asked not to be named as the plans were still under discussion. Restrictio­ns tightened

The number of COVID-19 cases have more than doubled in South Asia in the last week. Health experts warn an epidemic in the region, home to a fifth of the world’s population, could overwhelm its already weak public health systems. But Muslimmajo­rity Pakistan and Bangladesh, and India, home to the world’s largest Muslim minority, have struggled to convince conservati­ve religious groups to maintain social distancing. On Friday, Pakistani Muslims at a Karachi mosque clashed with batonwield­ing police trying to enforce new curbs on gatherings to prevent Friday prayers and contain coronaviru­s infections, officials said.

This came after the government in the southern province of Sindh, home to the financial hub of Karachi, enforced a three-hour curfew on Friday afternoon, in a bid to persuade Muslim worshipper­s to pray at home. Pakistan has so far reported 2,547 coronaviru­s infections, fuelled by a jump in cases related to members of the Tablighi Jamaat, an orthodox Muslim proselytis­ing group.

 ?? —AFP ?? NEW DELHI: Migrants sit under the shade of a tree as they camp at a government school during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown on Friday.
—AFP NEW DELHI: Migrants sit under the shade of a tree as they camp at a government school during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown on Friday.

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