Category: National

  • COVID-19: Industries operating outside city limits allowed to reopen from April 20

    Wearing masks in public places mandatory, spitting a punishable offence, says Home Ministry

    PTI

    All industries operating in rural areas, outside city limits, will be allowed to reopen from April 20, provided they follow social distancing norms and other safeguards against COVID-19 infection, according to a new set of lockdown directives issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs on Wednesday.

    Also, the “wearing of face covers and masks is compulsory in public places and work places.” Spitting is a punishable offence and sale of liquor, gutkha and tobacco should be strictly prohibited.

    The revised guidelines permit relaxations in several sectors, to be implemented at the discretion of State and district authorities, in areas that have not been identified as infection hotspots.

    Apart from rural industries, the guidelines permit construction of roads, irrigation projects, buildings and industrial projects in rural areas. Construction of renewable energy projects will also be allowed. In urban areas, only in situ construction projects will be allowed, if workers are available on site. Brick kilns in rural areas can also resume work.

    Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) work will also be allowed with strict implementation of social distancing and face masks, with priority given to irrigation and water conservation works. Services provided by electricians, plumbers, IT repairs, motor mechanics and carpenters shall also be allowed.

    IT firms

    Manufacturing and other industrial activities in Special Economic Zones, Export Oriented Units and other industrial estates and townships can reopen, as long as arrangements are made for workers to stay within premises or in adjacent buildings. IT hardware manufacturing, food processing in rural areas and jute industries are among the other new exemptions to the lockdown. IT and IT-enabled services will also be permitted to function with 50% strength. Factories and office establishments that will be allowed to operate during the lockdown period must mandatorily provide medical insurance for workers, say the guidelines.

    The revised guidelines issued by MHA said that travel by air, rail, metro, public buses, taxis, cab aggregators will remain suspended. Cinema halls and malls to remain shut. All social /religious gatherings are prohibited till May 3 and all industrial and commercial units, unless exempted, will remain shut.

    The order issued by Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla said that States will decide the additional public activities to be allowed from April 20. MHA said the additional facilities will have to be based on strict compliance to the existing guidelines on lockdown measures.

    In another letter to States, the Union Home Secretary emphasised that the guidelines will be withdrawn immediately if any of the lockdown measures are violated risking the spread of COVID-19, asserting that restrictions cannot be diluted under any circumstances.

    The lockdown was extended till May 3 in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, and to “mitigate hardships” faced by people during the extended lockdown, certain additional activities are to be allowed from April 20.

    The first set of such guidelines to be followed by States for “containment of COVID-19 epidemic” in the country was issued on March 24 under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, invoked for the first time in the country.

  • Tablighi Jamaat meet: 46 foreigners jailed for violation of visa norms

    When their quarantine ended on Monday, they were arrested in the respective districts for violation of Foreigners Act 1946 and produced before local courts which sent them to judicial custody for 14 days on Tuesday

    PTI

    As many as 46 foreign nationals from Malaysia, Kyrgyzstan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Kazakhstan have been arrested from three districts of Bihar and sent to jail for violation of visa norms.

    According to police officials 18 foreign nationals were arrested from Araria district, 17 from Patna, and 11 from Buxar district.

    Among them, 20 are from Malaysia, nine each from Bangladesh and Kyrgyzstan, seven from Indonesia and one from Kazakhstan.

    “All had come to Bihar after attending the Tablighi Jamaat congregation at Nizamuddin in New Delhi recently,” said a police official.

    Earlier, they all were kept in quarantine for two weeks after they were picked up by the police on the complaints lodged by local residents. However, their test results for novel coronavirus were found negative.

    When their quarantine ended on Monday, they were arrested in the respective districts for violation of Foreigners Act 1946 and produced before local courts which sent them to judicial custody for 14 days on Tuesday.

    “They are kept in separate wards of jail in Patna, Araria and Buxar jails,” the official said.

    “All of them had come in India on tourist visa but indulged in promoting religious activities in violation of the Foreigners Act 1946,” he added.

    Passport, visa seized

    The police have seized their visa, passport and other related documents.

    The Superintendents of Police in Patna, Araria and Buxar districts said “they were arrested under Section 14(B) of Foreigners Act 1946”.

    “All 17 foreign nations were earlier picked up from Kurji area of Patna on March 23 and kept in quarantine…we’re also tracing people who had invited them to Patna,” said Patna SSP Upendra Sharma.

    The arrested foreigners may be sentenced to five-year jail term if found guilty under the provisions of Foreigners Act 1946 and convicted by the competent court.

  • MHA new guidelines on lockdown

    The Ministry of Home Affairs has issued a set of detailed guidelines for state governments and general public to follow during the lockdown till May 3.

    PTI

    State/UT govts shall not dilute lockdown guidelines in any manner; may impose stricter measures as per local requirements.

    Exemptions given from April 20 will not be applicable in COVID-19 hotspots or containment zones.

    Services provided by self-employed electricians, IT repairs, plumbers, motor mechanics, carpenters to be allowed from April 20.

    Grocery stores, fruit, vegetables shops or carts, milk booths, poultry, meat and fish shops to remain open during lockdown.
    Wearing of masks compulsory in public places across country in wake of COVID-19 situation.

    Highway ‘dhabas’, truck repairing shops, call centres for govt activities to remain open from April 20: MHA guidelines

    Manufacturing units of pharmaceuticals, medical devices, construction of medical infrastructure to remain open from Apr 20.

    Shops of farm machinery, its spare parts, supply chain, repairs, ‘Custom Hiring Centres’ related to machinery to remain open from Apr 20.

    From April 20 activities permitted include agricultural, horticultural, farming, procurement of agri products, ‘mandis’.

    All social, political, sports, religious functions, religious places, places of worship shall be closed for public till May 3.

    Cinema halls, malls, shopping complexes, gymnasiums, sports complexes, swimming pools, bars to remain closed till May 3.

    Educational institutions, coaching centres, domestic, international air travel, train services to remain suspended till May 3.

    Inter-state, inter-district movement of people, metro, bus services continue to be prohibited till May 3.

    Industries operating in rural areas to be permitted to run from April 30 with strict social distancing norms

  • Railways extends suspension of passenger services till May 3

    The decision was taken after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that the lockdown across the country will be extended till May 3

    PTI

    Following Prime Minister’s announcement of extending nationwide lockdown by almost three weeks, the Indian Railways on Tuesday said all passenger train services, including premium trains, mail/express trains, suburban trains and Kolkata metro rail, will continue to remain suspended till May 3.

    The Railways added that no advance reservation will be allowed “till further notice”. For all the cancelled trains, full refund will be given to the passengers.

    “Resumption of train services as may be warranted in consideration of public safety, keeping in view the emergent situation, shall be announced in due course,” it said, directing Zonal Railways to ensure strict adherence to the instructions.

    However, to ensure the essential supplies in various parts of the country, movement of goods and parcel trains will continue.

    “All counters for booking of rail journey tickets for reserved/unreserved travel at railway stations and outside railway station premises shall remain closed upto 2400 hrs of 3rd May 2020,” it added.

    The Indian Railways said full refund would automatically be provided to its online customers for trains cancelled up to May 3, while those who have booked at the counters can take refund till July 31.

    Customers will also get full refunds of their tickets if they are cancelling their advance bookings for trains not yet cancelled.

  • Coronavirus | Government asks for 15 million PPE kits from China

    Government asks China to fulfil orders amid concerns over newly tightened export regulations

    PTI

    Indian companies and government entities have placed orders for 15 million Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) kits, including gowns and masks, and 1.5 million rapid testing kits from China, officials said on Tuesday.

    The Indian government is calling on China to fulfil those orders, amid concerns over tightened regulations on exporting such equipment by Chinese authorities following criticism from several European countries over the quality of exports.

    “We are in the process of, or have already completed, contracting for 15 million PPE kits, consisting of gowns, masks, gloves, goggles, etc. and nearly 1.5 million rapid testing kits of all kinds, some of which have already been delivered,” India’s Ambassador to China Vikram Misri said at an online press briefing from Beijing on Tuesday.

    A substantial amount of India’s national PPE supply is coming from China. These orders, both from government and private sector, were placed on a commercial basis. China had separately donated 170,000 PPE coveralls, the Health Ministry said on April 6, which would add to the 387,473 PPEs available in the country as of that date.

    More than 500,000 testing kits from China have already been delivered to various entities, while a further 1 to 1.5 million test kits are at different stages of procurement and production.

    India has since tried to ramp up production and supply from imports, including from China, which is a major producer of both PPEs and testing kits.

    Mr. Misri called on China to ensure that supply chains remained open and for all placed orders to be fulfilled. While India “appreciate[d] efforts by China to ensure the quality of goods exported”, it also called on Beijing to fulfil previously placed orders with companies that were licensed by Indian authorities to export to the Indian market. China imposed new regulations to tighten checks on April 10, following concerns over quality of exports expressed in several countries.

    “In some cases, some of the orders placed recently were placed before regulations came into effect that limited and restricted the number of companies from China that can export to India,” Mr. Misri said. “ Given that the products are licensed for import to India, it will be a welcome step for Chinese authorities to expedite the registration of these products. Our expectation is that these well-established companies will fulfil their contractual obligations.”

    Mr. Misri said there were “more than half a dozen” orders in different stages of processing, and India’s current understanding was delivery schedules remained on course. “We have a schedule that stretches from deliveries starting tomorrow [April 15] until the end of the month, when half a dozen consignments ordered by different entities in India will be delivered,” he said. “Our understanding is the registration process has been initiated and we have requested the Chinese government to expedite the registration process of companies so that export orders already processed and ready to ship can be sent on their way to India. We hope this request can be facilitated by the Chinese government.”

    There have also been concerns over some orders being diverted. The Tamil Nadu government said this week that 50,000 testing kits it had ordered from China were diverted to the U.S. “We have seen media reports but not come across authoritative reports of supplies intended for India having been diverted,” Mr. Misri said.

    Mr. Misri said maintaining open supply-chains and agreed timelines of orders would be “the best possible signal to send” about the state of the India-China relationship. He cited the example of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), which India imports in large quantities from China, and some Chinese companies also source from India.

    The Indian Ambassador said there was “considerable space for India and China to cooperate” in dealing with COVID-19, from both the short-term and long-term perspective. “The immediate aspect is for us to cooperate in procurement of much needed medical equipment and products in India as our healthcare community on the frontlines of this challenge battles this outbreak. When China was at the height of dealing with this outbreak, we had offered and provided medical assistance. Now we are in the process of commercially procuring a large number of these supplies. China happens to be one of the largest producers of a number of these products.”

    “We are identifying bonafide suppliers and entering into agreements,” he said. “What is important is quality material continues to be available at reasonable and stable prices, and we are able to establish or re-establish freight and cargo lines disrupted by the initial impact of the crisis.”

    There was also scope for working together when it came to research on COVID-19, Mr. Misri said, noting that various Indian agencies had already taken part in video conferencing calls with the Chinese government in sharing experiences in tackling the pandemic.

    India and China are marking the 70th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations in 2020 and had planned 70 events to be held. “We might not be able to undertake every activity,” Mr. Misri said, “but it remains our intention to do as much as is possible in the time that is available and in as befitting a manner as possible.”

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • COVID-19 | Flight ban to stay till May 3

    Decision follows PM Modi’s announcement on extension of lockdown

    PTI

    All domestic and international flights will remain suspended until the midnight of May 3, according to the Ministry of Civil Aviation.

    This means that international flights would have been barred for a total of 42 days and domestic flights for 40 days by May 3. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation banned international flights from March 23 and the ban for domestic flights came into effect two days later, i.e. March 25.

    The decision follows Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s announcement on extension of the nationwide lockdown amid the COVID-19 threat.

    However, there is no restriction on cargo flights. The government has taken the help of passenger airlines like Air India, IndiGo and SpiceJet, apart from BlueDart, for transportation of essential medical supplies within the country as well as to Shanghai, Hong Kong and Colombo.

    Several international airlines as well as Air India have been operating special chartered flights to help foreign citizens in India return to their countries.

  • Coronavirus | Indian newborn babies named Sanitizer, Corona Kumar and Kumari

    A couple in Uttar Pradesh has named their newborn baby boy Sanitizer.

    PTI

    newborn baby boy in Saharanpur district, Uttar Pradesh has been named Sanitizer by his parents.

    The father of the baby boy, Omveer, spoke to India Today Television and said, “Using hand sanitiser is very important to keep ourselves safe from the Covid-19 pandemic. The government in this time of crisis is ensuring an adequate supply of sanitizers, so that people can use them to remain safe. Free sanitisers are also being distributed to the needy across the nation.”

    “My wife and I are highly impressed by the effective measures taken by both Prime Minister Narendra Modi and UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath to battle the novel coronavirus. We have named our baby Sanitiser because it is being used by everyone at present to deter the spread of germs on our hands,” he added.

    The baby was born on Sunday at a private hospital in Saharanpur district.

    Amid the nationwide lockdown due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, quite a few cases of parents naming their newborns after the new virus have come to light. Two newborn babies born to two couples on April 8 were named Corona Kumar and Corona Kumari in Andhra Pradesh.

    Corona Kumar and Kumari: 2 Andhra Pradesh couples name newborn babies born during lockdown

    PTI

    In Andhra Pradesh’s Kadapa district, two couples named their newborn babies born during the lockdown after the novel coronavirus.

    Two newborn babies have been named after the novel coronavirus by their parents in Andhra Pradesh’s Kadapa. Sasikala of Tallapalli village and Ramadevi of Alireddypalli village were pregnant and were admitted to the SF Basha Hospital in Vempalli town in the Kadapa district.

    Sasikala was admitted on March 29 while Ramadevi was hospitalised on April 5. Both delivered babies on their respective dates of admission itself. While Sasikala delivered a baby girl, Ramadevi delivered a baby boy.

    Upon the suggestion of a doctor, the parents named the infants after the novel coronavirus.

    “One woman from Tallapalli came to us on March 29. She was in labour pain. As it was an emergency, we had to operate. A baby girl was born. The woman was happy. That couple agreed to name the girl as Corona Kumari,” Dr SF Basha told news agency ANI.

    “My wife was suffering from labour pain. We brought her to the hospital. It is corona time but we had no option. She was operated upon and the girl was born at 9am on Sunday. We named her Corona Kumari, as the doctor advised,” the baby girl’s father said.

    The baby girl’s mother Sasikala said that she agreed to the doctor’s idea of naming her daughter Corona Kumari.

    “My baby was delivered during this time. So, the doctor advised naming the baby Corona Kumari. We agreed to it,” Sasikala said.

    Speaking of the second delivery, Dr SF Basha said, “Similarly, Ramadevi came to our hospital on April 5. Hers was also an emergency case. There was no time to send her anywhere else. As they requested, we did the operation. That couple also happily agreed to name their baby boy Corona Kumar.”

    The grandfather of the baby boy said that he agreed to the doctor’s suggestion of naming the child Corona Kumar.

    “My daughter had pains during this corona outbreak time. We admitted her to the hospital. There, she delivered a baby boy. The doctor suggested the name Corona Kumar. We accepted it,” he said.

  • Congress says PM Modi’s address ‘hollow’, no mention of financial package

    PTI

    “There is money, there is food, but the government will not release either money or food. Cry, my beloved country,” senior Congress leader P. Chidambaram said on Twitter.

    The Congress on Tuesday termed as “rhetoric” and “hollow on specifics” the Prime Minister’s address to the nation, saying there was no mention of a financial package or concrete steps to revive the economy.

    Senior Congress leader P. Chidambaram said, “The poor have been left to fend for themselves for 21+19 days, including practically soliciting food. There is money, there is food, but the government will not release either money or food. Cry, my beloved country,” he said on Twitter.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday announced that the lockdown across the country will be extended till May 3 to fight the coronavirus pandemic, saying the measure has produced a significant outcome in containing the infection.

    Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi said the PM’s address was like Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark.

    Also read: ‘Economic package must precede lifting of lockdown’

    “Amazing PM address. Exhortation, rhetoric, inspiration…..yet hollow on specifics! No financial package, no details, no concrete item. Neither for poor nor middle class nor industry nor businesses. Lockdown is good but cannot be end in itself! Where is single livelihood issue,” he asked.

    He said the PM should be assured that all stakeholders will do their duties and will strictly observe lockdown.

    “After this: should we pray? We want concrete palliatives for these deprived classes and even for middle india and MSMEs,” he said.

  • PM Modi’s address to the nation live updates | Lockdown extended till May 3

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi is addressing the nation at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, the last day of the 21-day lockdown, amid indications that the shutdown could be extended.

    PTI

    At least seven States — Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, West Bengal, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Telangana — have already announced extension of the lockdown till April 30.

    This is Mr. Modi’s third address to the nation in the last one month in view of COVID-19 pandemic. On March 19, the Prime Minister proposed a day-long Janata Curfew on March 22, saying no citizen, barring those in essential services, should get out of house. He had urged the nation to applaud at 5 pm that day the selfless work of essential services personnel.

    On March 24, Mr. Modi again addressed the nation — this time he announced a 21-day lockdown, which ends today. On April 3, he sent out a video message to urge all citizens to switch off all lights for nine minutes and light up lamps or torch or cellphone flashlights.

    Here are the live updates:

    India’s combat with the Coronavirus pandemic is going ahead with full force, says Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    He credits the People of India for the “discipline and sacrifice” of the people because of which we were able to withstand the full force of the pandemic.

    “I know there have been many difficulties of people stuck away from home but you have persisted in this fights. I bow to you,” he says.

    Your efforts exemplify what is meant by the phrase “We the People of India” in our Constitution, Mr. Modi says invoking B.R. Ambedkar on his birth anniversary.

    “This is true homage to the framer of the Constitution Babhasaheb Ambedkar. I on behalf of all bow to him on his birth anniversary, as we take on the lessons of his life of prevailing despite hardship,” he says.

    He also reminds it is the New Year for several people. “In many states today also marks the beginning of the new year,” he says.  The way people are maintaining discipline and celebrating these festivals with simplicity is something to be inspired by and appreciated, he adds.

    Today, the situation with regard to this pandemic is familiar to all, Mr. Modi says highlighting the nation’s efforts to combat the pandemic. He recalls how India started screening people returning from abroad even before the disease was detected in the country.

    We declared lockdown when there were as many as 550 cases, he says. “We did not procrastinate but tried to address crisis as and when they did.”

    It may not be correct to compare our efforts with other nations, but India is better positioned than many developed nations, he says. In several countries, the fatality rate and the number of cases is much higher than India, Mr. Modi says.

    We managed to contain the epidemic by effectively following social distancing and lockdown, Prime Minister Narendra Modi says. Yes, we have paid a big price due to lockdown, but this nothing in front of the lives of the Indian citizens, Mr. Modi says.

    Despite all these efforts, coronavirus is spreading at an astonishing rate, Mr. Modi notes.

    We had lengthy discussion with states and experts. While several states have already extended the lockdown, the nationwide lockdown will be extended till May 3, Mr. Modi says.

    “Till May 3rd we must remain under lockdown and observe the same discipline,” Mr. Modi says.

    My request to all countrymen is that we must prevent the spread of Coronavirus to any place, Mr. Modi says. The number of hotspots should not be allowed to increase at any cost, the Prime Minister says.

    “We must now dilineate hotspots and observe diseases surveillance. The creation of new hotspots will be challenging to our efforts. In the next week therefore, the fight against Corona will be stricter,” Mr. Modi says.

    Till April 20 every district, thana and state will be minutely observed and a continuous assessment made on the efforts made and success of efforts, he explains.

  • Coronavirus conspiracy theories targeting Muslims spread in India

    Attacks and boycotts escalate amid false claims that Muslim group to blame for epidemic

    Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi and Shaikh Azizur Rahman in Kolkata | The Guardian

    The men who beat Mehboob Ali did so without mercy. Dragging him to a field in the village of Harewali, on the fringes of north-west Delhi, the group hit him with sticks and shoes until he bled from his nose and ears. Ali was a Muslim, recently returned home from a religious gathering, and the Hindu mob was quite certain he was part of a so-called Islamic conspiracy to spread coronavirus to Hindus nationwide. His attackers believed the devout 22-year-old must be punished before he carried out “corona jihad”.

    The allegations were entirely false, but according to video footage and his family, the men who beat Ali on 5 April were in little doubt of his guilt, demanding: “Tell us who else is behind this conspiracy.” Ali was then taken to a nearby Hindu temple and told to renounce Islam and convert to Hinduism before they would allow him to go to hospital.

    Five days after the attack Ali’s family was still in fear of also being accused of spreading the virus. “If we file a police case, the Hindus will not let us live in the village,” said one family member, who asked not to be named. Police confirmed that due to his attendance at a Muslim convention in Bhopal a few weeks back, Ali was being held in the isolation ward of Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Narayan hospital in Delhi as a “corona suspect”, though he had no symptoms.

    The attack on Ali is symptomatic of the growing demonisation of India’s Muslim community, who are being accused, without any basis, of conducting a malevolent campaign to spread Covid-19 to the Hindu majority.

    Already a minority under attack – it is just weeks since Hindu mobs attacked Muslims in religious riots in Delhi – Muslims have now seen their businesses across India boycotted, volunteers distributing rations called “coronavirus terrorists”, and others accused of spitting in food and infecting water supplies with the virus. Posters have appeared barring Muslims from entering certain neighbourhoods in states as far apart as Delhi, Karnataka, Telangana and Madhya Pradesh.

    The troubles began when the gathering of an Islamic missionary organisation, Tablighi Jamaat, held in mid-March in the south Delhi neighbourhood of Nizamuddin, was singled out by police and government as being responsible for the spread of coronavirus across India. The convention, which had been given the go-ahead by the Delhi authorities, was attended by about 8,000 people, including hundreds of foreigners. It soon became apparent that many at the convention had unknowingly picked up Covid-19 and brought it back to towns and villages across India.

    Across the country, police were ordered to round up anyone associated with the organisation. So far, more than 27,000 Tablighi Jamaat members and their contacts have been quarantined in about 15 states. In Uttar Pradesh, the police offered up to 10,000 rupees (£105) for information on anyone who had attended the gathering.

    In a statement this week, the Indian Scientists’ Response to Covid-19 group said “the available data does not support the speculation” that the blame for the coronavirus epidemic in India lies mainly with Tablighi Jamaat. The scientists emphasised that while testing for coronavirus is extremely low across India, a disproportionate number have been of members of Tablighi Jamaat, as per a government order, therefore heavily skewing the figures.

    Yet the test results were swiftly seized upon by members of the ruling ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), who claimed Tablighi Jamaat members had intended to infect millions as part of an Islamic conspiracy and were carrying out “corona terrorism”.

    Senior BJP leaders accused Tablighi Jamaat of carrying out a “Talibani crime”, described their members as “human bombs, but in the guise of coronavirus patients”, and called for Tablighi Jamaat leaders to be both hanged and shot. Kapil Mishra, a local BJP leader notorious for hate speeches, tweeted: “Tablighi Jamaat people have begun spitting on the doctors and other health workers. It’s clear, their aim is to infect as many people as possible with coronavirus and kill them.”

    Though quickly debunked, the rumours of Tablighi Jamaat members refusing to go into quarantine, assaulting hospital staff and throwing bottles of urine at Hindus quickly spread.

    Hashtags such as “coronaJihad”, “CoronaTerrorism” and “CoronaBombsTablighi” began to trend on Twitter in India. Mainstream Indian media repeatedly asserted that Tablighi Jamaat members were coronavirus “superspreaders”.

    Dr Zafarul-Islam Khan, chairman of the Delhi Minorities Commission, said that while Tablighi Jamaat had been shortsighted in holding the convention, there were “dozens of examples of government, political parties and other religious groups who also flouted the coronavirus restrictions and gathered in large numbers”.

    He added: “But the whole focus is being directed only on Muslims. In the past few days, we have noted a new wave of attacks on Muslims across the country. There is talk of social boycott of Muslims, harassment of Muslims by Hindutva groups and Muslims are even being harassed by police in various areas.”

    There has been a concentration of attacks against Muslims in Karnataka, where a BJP MP, Anant Kumar Hegde, has denounced Tablighi Jamaat as terrorists. Shortly after, an audio clip began to be shared widely over WhatsApp, urging people not to allow Muslim fruit and vegetable sellers into their areas, claiming they were spreading the virus through their produce.

    Sayed Tabrez, 23, and his mother, Zareen Taj, 39, were among seven Muslim volunteers who were assaulted by a gang of local BJP members on 4 and 6 April, as they tried to distribute food to impoverished people in the Marathahalli and Dasarahalli districts of Karnataka.

    “Some 20 local BJP members came on motorbikes and started shouting at us, saying, ‘You are not allowed to give out rations – you are Muslims so you all are terrorists spreading the disease. We know you are spitting in the rations and have come from Tablighi Jamaat to spread the virus’,” said Tabrez. Two days later, about 25 local BJP members followed them in vehicles before attacking Tabrez, his mother and the other volunteers with bats. Police have since arrested two people.

    It is not an isolated incident. Manohar Elavarthy of the NGO Swaraj Abhiyan, which has been distributing lockdown rations, said dozens of attacks had been carried out against their Muslim volunteers in the past few days, including some by police.

    In Mangalore this week, posters started appearing that said Muslims were no longer allowed in certain neighbourhoods. “No Muslim trader will be allowed access to our hometown until the coronavirus is completely gone,” read a sign in Alape. In the Hindu-dominated village of Ankanahalli, a video seen by the Guardian shows Mahesh, the village panchayat president, issuing a warning that if any Hindu in the village is caught fraternising with a Muslim “you will be fined 500 to 1,000 rupees”.

    The hijacking of coronavirus as an excuse for discrimination comes after a growing state-sponsored campaign to turn Muslims into second-class citizens in India, as part of the BJP’s agenda of Hindu nationalism. Attacks on Muslims have become commonplace and the recent citizenship amendment act, passed by the BJP in December, prompted millions to take to the streets in protest, saying it discriminated against Muslims.

    The situation got so bad last week that it prompted Equality Labs, a US-based south Asian human rights organisation researching Islamophobic hate speech, to release a statement urging the World Health Organization to “issue further guidelines against Covid-19 hate speech and disconnect it to religious communities”.

    “Just weeks after the Delhi pogrom where hundreds of Muslim houses and shops were vandalised, an uptick in misinformation and harmful communal language are leading to violence,” said Equality Labs’ executive director, Thenmozhi Soundararajan. “The threat of another pogrom still looms.”

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)