THE TOP 10 DEVELOPMENT IN COVID-19 IN INDIA
1.
In its order, the home ministry asked states to appoint nodal
bodies and draw up protocols for the movement of stranded people. "The
moving person(s) would be screened and those found asymptomatic would be
allowed to proceed," the government said. After arriving at their
destination, they will have to stay in home quarantine for 14 days, unless
institutional quarantine is advised, the order said.
2. Buses will be
allowed for the interstate movement of the people and they should be sanitised
between trips, the order read. The rules of social distancing should be
maintained in the seating arrangements.
3. The order comes
less than a week before the lockdown is scheduled to end. On Monday, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi held a fourth video-conference with Chief Ministers of
around 10 states, where an exit plan from the lockdown was discussed.Several
states, including Punjab and Bengal, have however said they need to extend the
lockdown in view of the coronavirus situation.
4. On Monday, the
Centre told the Supreme Court that it was "very much concerned" about
migrant labourers. "The government is consulting with states on how many
have to be transported … We are taking all kind of steps," Solicitor
General Tushar Mehta had said.
5. Sources said the
decision to allow stranded people to go home came afer pressure from within the
BJP. There were concerns that the migrant crisis could damage the party
politically and feedback to this effect was given to paryy chief JP Nadda
during a virtual meeting with MPs and MLAs.
6. Uttar Pradesh
became the first state to take action, transferring more than 12,000 migrant
workers from Haryana over the weekend. Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said he
was also planning to bring back students who have been stranded in Rajasthan's
Kota, a city known for coaching centres catering to aspirants for all kinds of
competitive exams.
7. Yogi Adityanath's
move has upset neighbouring Bihar and Jharkhand. A BJP ally, Bihar Chief
Minister Nitish Kumar and his government maintain such largescale movement of
people is completely against the principles of social distancing and lockdown,
which alone can contain coronavirus at the moment. Many of his party's leaders
are also unhappy about what they call the "double standards" of the
central government.
8. The lockdown was
announced by PM Modi on March 25, leaving thousands of migrant labourers across
the country stranded and vulnerable. With jobs and in many cases, shelters
gone, many tried to make their way home on foot. Some did not make it,
collapsing hours away from home after the hard trek, often without enough food
or water.
9. As the movement
from cities to villages turned into an exodus, throwing to the wind all rules
of social distancing and raising concerns about the infection spreading, the
government asked the states to seal borders and keep those who broke lockdown
in 14-day compulsory quarantine.
10.The Centre had assured that migrant labourers will be looked after by
the states where they were located. But the situation on the ground indicated
otherwise, with reports of hunger coming in from various corners of the
country. In the national capital, people were seen queuing up for lunch since
dawn outside the relief centres. In Surat and Mumbai, the migrants held violent
protests, demanding that they be allowed to go home.
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