COVID-19: Lockdown in south India; focus shifts to combating spread

With 45 coronavirus cases and one death in south India, the five Indian states in the region have gone into a near lockdown to contain the spread of the pandemic.

Update: 2020-03-18 13:29 GMT
A view of a closed theatre in the wake of coronavirus pandemic in Bengaluru. Photo: PTI

With 45 coronavirus cases and one death in south India, the five Indian states in the region have gone into a near lockdown to contain the spread of the pandemic.

As of March 18, the virus has affected 147 people and claimed the lives of three across the country.

Monitoring and surveillance have been increased in Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. The respective state governments have even asked their citizens to avoid mass gatherings, thus seeking to bring into effect the much-needed social distancing, a key to stem the spread of the virus.

Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Telangana have announced a lockdown of educational institutions, malls and other places that attract people in large numbers, even as some of them have been reporting an increase in positive cases.

Kerala takes the lead in the fight

Kerala, which was the first state to contract COVID-19 in the country, has been on a war footing to fight the disease. It had reported that the first three cases have been discharged.

With 24 confirmed patients, the CPI(M)-ruled state took the early lead in going for preventive measures to check the spread of the virus, which has dealt a crucial blow to its tourism-dependent economy.

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The positive cases include two foreigners and the state government has decided to strengthen surveillance by monitoring people entering the state. Besides, those coming from foreign countries as well as domestic travellers would also be checked at airports.

People have been asked not to throng places of worship — mosques, churches and temples and the state government has also held talks with religious leaders to implement the move. Schools — under state, CBSE and ICSE boards — colleges, including professional ones, have been shut and restrictions have been imposed on the entry of visitors to malls, gyms and beaches.

Kerala State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) has decided to disinfect all its buses before they start their service every day and railways are carrying out thermal checks in trains at various places in the state.

After first death, Karnataka locks down

Karnataka, the only southern state to report the death of a COVID-19-affected 76-year-old man, initiated a lockdown immediately after the fatality, the first in the country, last
week.

On Wednesday, the Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa said the Karnataka cabinet decided to earmark ₹200 crore to combat the spread of coronavirus in the state, even as two more persons tested positive for coronavirus taking the total number of cases in Karnataka to 13.

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The restrictions that have been imposed in the state for a week from March 14 have been extended till March 31, he announced in the Legislative Assembly after a special cabinet meeting to discuss the impact of COVID-19.

The cabinet also decided to constitute a task force consisting of Medical Education Minister Sudhakar K, Deputy Chief Minister Ashwath Narayan CN, Home Minister Basavaraj Bommai, and Health Minister B Sriramulu.

Chief Secretary TM Vijay Bhaskar would serve as a member of the task force, which would be headed by Sriramulu. The Chief Minister said passengers coming by international flights would be tested and placed under quarantine for 15-16 days.

Tamil Nadu, with one positive case, has stepped up monitoring and is implementing strict surveillance measures in borders, besides railway stations.

Chief Minister Edapaddi Palaniswami had announced a lockdown, ordering closure of all educational institutions and places thronged by public in large numbers such as liquor bars, theatres, malls and resorts till March 31. Amusement parks, swimming pools, gymnasiums, zoos and museums should be closed, he had ordered.

The government has directed marriage halls not to rent them out for weddings. Temples under the control of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) in Tamil Nadu, including the famous Brihadeeswarar Temple in Thanjavur, have also been closed, according to ASI officials.

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While airports are under strict monitoring, screening would be intensified in railway stations and trains, the government has announced. More testing centres are also planned in certain districts other than Chennai. Lots of measures have been also proposed for the transport sector, where nearly 32,000 buses ferry around 2.5 crore passengers every day.

These include spraying disinfectants on the vehicles and suspending issuance of new driving licences till March 31 to prevent crowding at transport offices.

An 18-member Chief Secretary-headed task force has been constituted to coordinate measures against coronavirus.

In neighbouring Puducherry, public parks, botanical garden, Aurobindo Ashram, museum, boat houses have been ordered to be closed. A 68-year-old woman had on Tuesday tested positive in Mahe, an enclave of the union territory in Kerala, and hercondition was stable in the government general hospital there. It was the first positive case reported in the former French colony.

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In Andhra Pradesh, which reported one positve case from Nellore, the state government has been enforcing Sections 2, 3 and 4 of the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897 to check the spread of coronavirus.

An eight-member inter-department coordination committee, with Special Chief Secretary (Health) as the member-convenor, has been constituted for taking up concerted measures to contain COVID-19.

Telangana has also ordered closure of all types of educational institutions, coaching centres and summer camps till March 31. Restrictions on attendance in marriages, no permissions for public meetings, seminars, workshops, celebrations, rallies, exhibitions, trade fairs and cultural events are the other measures.

Cinema halls, bars, pubs and clubs with memberships would remain closed through the week. The Medical and Health Department has taken up surveillance in the international airport in Hyderabad, while sanitation work would be carried out continuously in buses and trains.

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