Bangkok Post

India begins three-week lockdown

About 1.3bn people told to stay indoors

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NEW DELHI: Indians crowded grocery stores and chemists yesterday in a struggle for essential items after Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a total lockdown for three weeks to fight a coronaviru­s pandemic, one of the toughest such measures worldwide.

India’s tally of 536 cases and 10 deaths is dwarfed by China, Italy and Spain, but Mr Modi and health experts have warned that the nation of 1.3 billion people faces a tidal wave of infections if harsh steps are not taken.

People in the key cities of Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru rushed to stock up after Mr Modi decreed the shutdown in a speech televised nationwide, barely four hours before it took effect.

As states shut their borders, long queues of trucks carrying milk, fruits and vegetables snaked down highways, even though Mr Modi said essential services would be maintained countrywid­e.

“There are no clear instructio­ns, police are telling us to close down the shop,” said Ram Agarwal, a grocer in Delhi swamped by people looking to buy dry food supplies and milk.

Disruption­s to online services added to people’s woes.

Walmart Inc’s Flipkart has suspended services, the Indian e-commerce firm said in a notice on its website as the lockdown began. Amazon India’s pantry service, which delivers groceries, was also not available in several cities.

Anthony Thomas, a worker at a small online milk delivery service, who normally distribute­s 150 litres of milk and groceries in Delhi each morning, said his employer had told him to stay home.

“There is no informatio­n yet on tomorrow’s supplies,” he added.

Mr Modi’s sweeping action aims to rein in the spread of the virus in

India’s many small towns after a first wave of infections in Delhi, the capital, the commercial hub of Mumbai, and other big cities.

Cases reported from the remote parts of the western state of Maharashtr­a have fuelled concerns about the ability of the public health system, notoriousl­y starved of resources, to cope.

India has just 0.5 hospital beds for every 1,000 people, compared to 4.3 in China and 3.2 in Italy.

Nobody in the world’s biggest democracy will be allowed to leave home for the next three weeks, Mr Modi said.

“Every district, every lane, every village will be under lockdown,” he said, warning that India’s developmen­t would be set back decades if it did not shut down to fight the virus.

But shutting down a US$2.9-trillion (about 91.5 trillion baht) economy would cause widespread damage and especially hurt the poorest people, some experts said.

“The need of the hour is an economic package,” said Madhura Swaminatha­n, head of the economic analysis unit of the Indian Statistica­l Institute in the technology hub of Bengaluru.

“Asking people to stay at home is necessary, but that won’t be enough for the majority of the population who cannot afford to sit at home without work and pay.”

Authoritie­s are scrambling to throw up defences against the virus across South Asia, home to a quarter of the world’s population.

Four service members of the Nato mission in Afghanista­n tested positive for the virus shortly after arrival, becoming its first infections, Nato said on Tuesday.

 ?? AFP ?? A man walks on a deserted path leading to the Presidenti­al Palace during a government-imposed lockdown as a preventive measure against Covid-19 in New Delhi yesterday.
AFP A man walks on a deserted path leading to the Presidenti­al Palace during a government-imposed lockdown as a preventive measure against Covid-19 in New Delhi yesterday.
 ?? REUTERS ?? People gather at a Mumbai pharmacy to buy supplies after the lockdown was announced on Tuesday.
REUTERS People gather at a Mumbai pharmacy to buy supplies after the lockdown was announced on Tuesday.

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