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WORLD, Coronavirus

Indian migrant workers crowd trains, defying virus curfew

NEW DELHI, March 22: Indian migrant workers attempting to reach their home villages crowded a railway station in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh on Sunday, defying a 14-hour “people’s curfew” that Prime Minister Narendra Modi called to stem a surge in coronavirus cases in the world’s second-most populous country.
By Associated Press

NEW DELHI, March 22: Indian migrant workers attempting to reach their home villages crowded a railway station in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh on Sunday, defying a 14-hour “people’s curfew” that Prime Minister Narendra Modi called to stem a surge in coronavirus cases in the world’s second-most populous country.


At least 324 people have been infected in India by the new coronavirus, including the first case in the largely impoverished eastern state of Bihar, according to health officials. Five people have died in the country from COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus.


On Sunday, thousands of people from Mumbai and elsewhere in the western state of Maharashtra, which has confirmed the highest number of cases in India, jostled at a railway station in the city of Prayagraj in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state. Police struggled from a distance to control the crowds, who were waiting to be taken to their villages by buses and taxis that appeared unlikely to come.


“We are playing with our health by crowding railway stations and bus stands,” Modi said in a tweet.


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Later Sunday, Indian Railways suspended all passenger train services until March 31, although freight services will continue. It was unclear what this would mean for people stranded at railway stations.


In recent days, migrant workers hauling backpacks have swarmed overcrowded trains across many Indian cities, an exodus among panic-stricken day laborers that has sparked fears the virus could spread to the countryside.


The typical bustle of India’s capital, meanwhile, fell silent, with nearly empty buses and taxis plying New Delhi’s lightly trafficked roads, gates to public gardens, temples and churches locked, and building guards with scarves tied around their faces seated outside on plastic chairs watching empty streets.


A road in New Delhi near a Sufi shrine where hundreds of pilgrims often camp was empty except for an occasional passing car.


In a speech last week, Modi asked Indians to stay home but go out on their balconies at 5 p.m. Sunday with pots and pans to cheer front-line health care workers. Most businesses were expected to be closed Sunday except for essential services like hospitals.


While some Indian states — including Maharashtra — had already issued stay-in-place orders and closed borders, Sunday marked the first nationwide effort at social isolation practices that the World Health Organization believes are critical to flattening the infection curve worldwide.


No commercial airplanes from abroad are allowed to land in India for a week starting Sunday.


Officials said 23 people have recovered from COVID-19, and have not documented any community spread in India.


While the coronavirus can be deadly, particularly for the elderly and people with other health problems, for most people it causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. Some feel no symptoms at all and the vast majority of people recover.


India’s government has made fervent appeals to the public to practice social distancing and good hand hygiene. India also was one of the first countries to essentially shut its borders and deny entry to all but a select few foreigners.


However, experts have said indigenous spread of the disease in a country of 1.3 billion people, where tens of millions live in dense urban areas with irregular access to clean water, is inevitable.

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