Times of Islamabad

India goes into lockdown as curfew imposed on Sunday

India goes into lockdown as curfew imposed on Sunday

NEW DELHI – Millions of Indians went into lockdown Sunday as the countrybrought most of its vast railway network to a halt in a bid to slow thespread of the deadly coronavirus.

Most domestic flights were grounded and shops shut their doors for the14-hour curfew that is designed to test the country’s ability to fight thepandemic.

Normally bustling streets in the capital New Delhi and financial hub ofMumbai were mostly deserted as the shutdown began at 7:00 am (0130 GMT).

Incoming international flights have also been banned.

While the lockdown was not mandatory, Prime Minister Narendra Modi urgedthe population of 1.3 billion to help prepare for the challenges ahead.

“Let us all be a part of this curfew, which will add tremendous strength tothe fight against COVID-19 menace,” Modi tweeted.

“Stay indoors and stay healthy.”

Health ministry official Lav Agarwal said the government is seeking “unityin isolation”.

Only a handful of people ventured into Delhi’s popular Lodhi Gardens parkwhich security guard Jaiveer Singh said was usually packed.

“If this helps stop the spread, then the government can think of extendingit for two to three more days,” Singh said.

The curfew — which some see as a rehearsal for a longer lockdown — comesas the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in India surges past 320, withfive deaths reported so far.

But experts say a lack of testing could be hiding the true scale of thehealth crisis in the country.

Testing for the virus has been expanded to private laboratories and willnow include asymptomatic people who have had contact with confirmed cases.

In a sign of growing anxiety, Indian Railways, one of the world’s biggestnetworks, cancelled all services except suburban and goods trains untilMarch 31.

The move will affect more than 20 million passengers a day and comes afterseveral people tested positive for the virus after trips.

Modi also urged Indians to thank medical workers and other emergencypersonnel by clapping or banging pots and pans for five minutes at 5:00 pm.

Residents in numerous cities held a practice session Saturday, generating adeafening cacophony as they stood on their balconies banging cookware.

This “is most likely a dry run for a more prolonged curfew when rather thanif the situation deteriorates,” Milan Vaishnav, a senior fellow at theCarnegie Endowment for International Peace think-tank, told AFP.

India has an overburdened public health system that suffers from a lack ofdoctors and hospitals and experts said the country would not escape thehighly infectious disease.

“We are in for a very long fight,” warned virologist Shahid Jameel ofbiomedical research charity Wellcome Trust/DBT India Alliance. – APP / AFP