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  • J&K: Anti-terror mechanism used to track people escaping corona quarantine

    Srinagar: Officials said the authorities roped in the state intelligence machinery who were tasked to track, identify and bring such people to quarantine facilities

    Human Intelligence, a weapon used for busting terror groups in Jammu and Kashmir, has come in handy to trace people who concealed their travel history, besides in retracing the steps of coronavirus positive patients, in an operation that led to tracking of over 1,000 people who have since been quarantined in various parts of the union territory.

    Fighting this new battle, officials said the authorities roped in the state intelligence machinery who were tasked to track, identify and bring such people to quarantine facilities.

    The intelligence personnel along with the regular police, which remain at the forefront in the fight against terror groups in the union territory, were now complementing the district administration in its efforts to ensure the success of the lockdown, besides tracking people who hid their travel history from the authorities.

    According to a report submitted to the Centre, over 1,000 people who had either traveled out of the state or abroad were brought to quarantine centres between March 15 and 31 and their identification and verification was going on, the officials said.

    Also, more than 28,000 people are under surveillance which included 10,600 who have been either quarantined at government facilities or in home-isolation, the officials said.

    There have been 92 positive cases so far in the union territory out of which two have died.

    A total of 34 hotspots have been identified in Jammu and Kashmir which include: seven in Pulwama, five in Srinagar, and four each in Bandipora and Budgam; two in Shopian, one each in Ganderbal and Baramulla in Kashmir division; and five in Rajouri, four in Jammu and one in Udhampur district of Jammu division.

    The process was intensified after the death of a COVID-19 positive Kashmiri businessman on March 26. The immediate need was to track people whom he had met since his arrival in Jammu from Delhi and Uttar Pradesh during which he had attended the Tablighi Jamaat function at Nizamuddin, the officials said.

    Upon his arrival in the Union Territory, the businessman held a congregation at Samba in Jammu before returning to Sopore in North Kashmir where he participated in a religious function.

    “We knew that it’s a chain reaction. He would have met one and the chain continues. So it was necessary to immediately break the chain,” said an official of the Jammu and Kashmir administration, spoking on condition of anonymity.

    During all this, intelligence officials had to move in their resources of human intelligence to track people he had met and the result was that some coronavirus positive cases were located in parts of Jammu as well as Kashmir, the official said.

    The information shared by the intelligence also helped in tracking people who had travelled in trains and flight, the official said.

    All field units were geared up to meet this new kind of challenge unlike an anti-terror operations where a militant was tracked and a crack team carried out an encounter, the official said.

    From early March, there were inputs that some people, who had gone on religious pilgrimages, started breaking their journeys upon their arrival in India and preferred to travel by train or road to various districts of Jammu and the valley, said an official on condition of anonymity.

    An immediate plan was drawn up and passports issued to residents of Jammu and Kashmir were scanned through immigration office in the national capital and ascertain who all have traveled abroad and did not go for health check-up which had become mandatory by the middle of March, the officials said.

    Police teams were fanned to homes of those who had traveled abroad and the persons were taken to quarantine centres, they said, adding at some places altercation took place while and others there was no resistance.

    The operation has also been able to identify and sent to quarantine as many as 139 people, who were either at Tablighi Jamaat headquarters at Nizamuddin in Delhi or had come in contact with its members who had traveled to Jammu and Kashmir (PTI)

  • Decision on reopening schools, colleges on Apr 14 after reviewing COVID-19 situation: HRD Minister.

    The government will take a decision on reopening of schools and colleges on April 14 after reviewing the coronavirus situation in the country, Union HRD Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal ‘Nishank’ said on Sunday.

    In an interview to PTI, he said the safety of students and teachers is of utmost importance to the government and his ministry is prepared to ensure there is no academic loss to students if schools and colleges needed to remain shut beyond April 14.

  • Coronavirus | This is going to be our 9/11 moment, says doctor as U.S. braces for ‘hardest’ week

    The number of COVID-19 cases in U.S. reach 335,000 with over 9,500 deaths.

    Reuters

    The United States on Sunday entered one of the most critical weeks so far in the coronavirus crisis, with government officials warning that the death toll in places such as New York, Michigan and Louisiana was a sign of trouble to come in other states.

    Still, governors of eight states resisted issuing stay-at-home orders aimed at slowing the spread of the respiratory disease, and some churches held large Palm Sunday services in defiance of such orders in their states.

    New York, the hardest-hit state, reported on Sunday that for the first time in a week, deaths had fallen slightly from the day before, but there were still nearly 600 new fatalities and more than 7,300 new cases. Places such as Pennsylvania, Colorado and Washington, D.C., are starting to see rising deaths.

    “This is going to be the hardest and the saddest week of most Americans’ lives, quite frankly. This is going to be our Pearl Harbor moment, our 9/11 moment, only it’s not going to be localised,” U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams warned on Fox News on Sunday. “It’s going to be happening all over the country. And I want America to understand that.”

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Sunday that new hospitalizations had fallen by 50% over the previous 24 hours. He cautioned that it was not yet clear whether the crisis was reaching a plateau in the state, which has a total of 4,159 deaths and more than 122,000 cases.

    Once the peak of the epidemic passes, Mr. Cuomo said a mass rollout of rapid testing would be critical to help the nation ”return to normalcy.”

    No ‘stay home’ orders in eight states

    Most states have ordered residents to stay home except for essential trips to slow the spread of the virus in the United States, where more than 3,35,000 people have tested positive and over 9,500 have died, according to a Reuters tally.

    But eight states, all of them with Republican governors, have yet to order residents to stay home: Arkansas, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming. Georgia, which has recorded 6,600 cases and more than 200 deaths, ordered residents to stay home but then allowed some beaches to reopen.

    Republican Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson defended his refusal to order statewide restrictions, saying the situation was being watched closely and that his more “targeted approach” was still slowing the spread of the virus.

    Mr. Adams, the surgeon general, said governors who had not issued month-long stay-at-home orders should at least consider one for the upcoming week.

    President Donald Trump expressed hope on Sunday the United States was seeing a leveling-off of the coronavirus crisis in some hot spots, citing the drop in deaths from Saturday in New York.

    “We see light at the end of the tunnel. Things are happening,” Mr. Trump told reporters.

    Church buses in parishioners

    A few churches were holding large gatherings on Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week in Christian churches.

    Pastor Tony Spell, who was arrested last week for holding services, summoned his faithful again, three weeks after Louisiana banned gatherings of 10 people or more.

    Louisiana has become a hot spot for the virus, reporting a jump in deaths to nearly 500 and more than 13,000 cases. The governor predicted the state would run out of ventilators by Thursday.

    New York Mayor Bill De Blasio said the city had enough ventilators to get through Tuesday or Wednesday, and he was seeking between 1,000 and 1,500 more from federal and state stockpiles, which he estimated had 10,000 and 2,800, respectively.

    Oregon, which has reported around 1,000 cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, said it was sending New York 140 ventilators, machines that help people breathe after the virus attacks their lungs. Washington is returning over 400 of the machines to the Strategic National Stockpile for hard-hit states like New York.

    White House medical experts have forecast that between 100,000 to 240,000 Americans could be killed in the pandemic, even if sweeping orders to stay home are followed.

    Still, members of Trump’s coronavirus task force saw signs of progress in their fight against the virus.

    “We’re very hopeful that over the next week, although we’ll see rising number of cases and people who lose their lives to this illness, we’re also hopeful to see a stabilization of cases across these large metro areas where the outbreak began several weeks ago,” task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx told reporters.

  • Summer temperature won’t help contain coronavirus: WHO

    New Delhi: Though many experts have expressed optimism towards the onset of summer in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic, the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Sunday said high temperature would not finish the virus.
    The WHO, in a series of tweets, busted several myths about coronavirus, especially regarding rise in temperature.
    “Exposing yourself to sun or to temperatures higher than 25 degree Celsius doesn”t prevent Covid-19. You can catch Covid-19, no matter how sunny or hot the weather is,” the WHO said.
    Stating that countries having higher temperature didn’t remain unaffected, it said the only way to be safe was to ensure hygiene. “Countries with hot weather have also reported Covid-19 cases. To protect yourself, make sure you clean your hands frequently and thoroughly, and avoid touching your eyes, mouth and nose,” the WHO said.
    The WHO said drinking methanol, ethanol or bleach wouldn’t prevent or cure Covid-19 and could be extremely dangerous, as these were used in cleaning products to kill the virus on surfaces. “If consumed, they will not kill the virus in the body, but will harm internal organs,” it said.
    Also drinking alcohol was no protection against coronavirus, it said and added, frequent or excessive liquor consumption could increase risk of health problems.
    On myth around holding breath for a few minutes to check coronavirus, the WHO said, “Being able to hold your breath for 10 seconds or more without coughing or feeling discomfort doesn’t mean you are free from the coronavirus or any other lung disease.”
    The best way to confirm about the disease was laboratory test. “You can’t confirm it with this breathing exercise, which can even be dangerous,” said the WHO. (IANS)

  • Tiger at New York zoo tests positive for coronavirus

    The tiger is believed to have contracted the infection from a caretaker who was asymptomatic at that time.

    Reuters

    A tiger at the Bronx Zoo in New York has tested positive for coronavirus, AFP quoted authorities as saying on Sunday.

    The tiger is believed to have contracted the infection from a caretaker who was asymptomatic at that time.

    Nadia, the four-year-old Malayan tiger, and her sister Azul, two Amur tigers and three African lions had all developed dry cough and are expected to fully recover, the Wildlife Conservation Society running the city’s zoo said in a statement.

    “We tested the cat out of an abundance of caution and will ensure any knowledge we gain about COVID-19 will contribute to the world’s continuing understanding of this novel coronavirus,” the statement further said.

    The cats at the Bronx Zoo are doing well under veterinary care and are bright, alert and interactive with their keepers, even though they have experienced some loss in appetite. “It is not known how this disease will develop in big cats since different species can react differently to novel infections, but we will continue to monitor them closely and anticipate full recoveries,” the statement read.

    The death toll due to coronavirus has surpassed 4,000 in New York, where all four zoos and aquariums have been closed since March 16.

    The zoo said that there is “no evidence that animals play a role in the transmission of COVID-19 to people rather than the initial event in the Wuhan market, and no evidence that any person has been infected with COVID-19 in the US by animals, including by pet dogs or cats.”

    Chinese disease control officials attributed wild animals sold in a Wuhan market as the possible source of the coronavirus which has affected over one million people across the world.

    There had been no reports of pets or other animals in the US falling ill with coronavirus prior to that of tiger Nadia, according to the US department of Agriculture website.

    “It is still recommended that people sick with COVID-19 limit contact with animals until more information is known about the virus, the website said.

    A pet cat was infected with coronavirus in Belgium in late March, and similar cases of dogs testing positive for the infection were reported from Hong Kong also. All these animals are believed to have contracted the disease from the people they live with.

    Bronx Zoo authorities said preventive measure had been put in place for caretakers and all cats in the city’s zoos.

    With inputs from AFP

  • Coronavirus | CRPF DG, 14 senior officers test negative

    K. Vijay Kumar, Senior Security Advisor in Home Ministry, goes into quarantine.

    PTI

    Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) Director General A.P Maheshwari and 14 senior officers who had gone into self-quarantine have tested negative for COVID-19.

    They had gone into self quarantine a day ago after it was found that they came in indirect contact with the Chief Medical Officer of the CRPF who had tested positive for virus symptoms on April 2. The CMO reportedly contracted the virus at a transit guest house in Saket while he was on leave. It was this guest house that an officer who met Mr. Maheshwari had visited. The said officer, who was the primary contact, has also tested negative.

    On Sunday, Mr. Maheshwari tweeted, “Intermediate and linked personnel including self have tested negative as per reports flowing today. However, further protocols will be followed as per medical advice.”

    The CRPF is one of the largest central armed police forces (CAPF) deployed for internal security in the Maoist-affected areas, Jammu and Kashmir, northeast and other parts of the country.

    He had earlier said as a precautionary measure he had restricted his movements as part of “responsibility to break the chain” adding that he was working from home till further clarity.

    K. Vijay Kumar, Senior Security Advisor in the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) who had met Mr. Maheshwari, has also gone into quarantine.

    Both the officers had met Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla at Mr. Shah’s residence on March 29 to hand over a cheque of ₹116 crore as a contribution from all paramilitary forces to the PM-CARES fund.

    Mr. Shah has not gone into a quarantine and an officer clarified that the meeting took place much before.

  • “Look At New York”: Imran Khan Warns Pakistan As Coronavirus Cases Rise

    Coronavirus Pakistan Cases: Imran Khan’s remarks came as he visited Lahore to oversee the measures taken by the Punjab government as the number of coronavirus patients in the largest province of the country crossed 1,000.

    Press Trust of India

    Islamabad: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday warned Pakistanis that they are not immune to the threat posed by the coronavirus, but exuded confidence that Pakistan would emerge stronger from the challenge, as the number of cases in the country rose to 2,818.
    Imran Khan’s remarks came as he visited Lahore to oversee the measures taken by the Punjab government as the number of coronavirus patients in the largest province of the country crossed 1,000.

    Imran Khan visited a 1,000-bed makeshift hospital set up by the provincial government at a short notice to accommodate the coronavirus patients. “Nobody should have the false notion that they will be safe from this (coronavirus)…Look at New York where most of the rich people live,” he said.

    As of Saturday, Pakistan has recorded 2,818 cases and 41 deaths.

    Imran Khan in a blunt warning said that nobody, himself included, knows when the pandemic will end and how much damage it will do.

    “It (virus) can remerge once settling down. So we don’t know what will happen,” he said.

    He said the government was making all possible efforts to save the people, especially the most vulnerable, and reduce the losses due to epidemic.

    “When we emerge from this challenge, we will be a totally different nation…Those who take such times as a test and face it head-on as a challenge, come out stronger,” he said.

    Punjab — the hotspot of the viral infection in Pakistan — reported a total of 1,131 cases, followed by Sindh at 839, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa 383, Balochistan 185, Gilgit-Baltistan 193, Islamabad 75 and 12 cases in Pakistan-administered Kashmir (PoK).

    The data showed that the number of patients in Punjab, which accounts for more than 50 per cent of Pakistan”s population, crossed 1,000.

    Imran Khan earlier in the day again rejected the possibility of total lockdown.

    Imran Khan tweeted that the government locked down educational institutions, malls, marriage halls, restaurants and other places where the public congregates.

    “But, to stop the devastation of the lockdown we have kept our Agri sector open and now we are opening up our construction sector.”

    The Punjab government announced that it will reopen more industries including textiles, sports goods, surgical goods, auto parts, leather and leather garments, meat and meat products, fruit and vegetables, and pharmaceuticals.

    Meanwhile, the Pakistan government on Saturday informed the Supreme Court that the number of coronavirus patients in the country could reach up to 50,000 by the last week of this month.

    It was stated in a report submitted by the government on its national action plan for combating the coronavirus epidemic in the country.

    Geo News reported that in its report, the government detailed the situation in the wake of the pandemic and the severity of suspected cases.

    “By April 25, the number of the coronavirus cases are feared to reach 50,000,” the report stated.

    According to the breakdown provided in the report, around 7,000 cases of the total are expected to be critical in nature while around 2,500 could be a cause of concern. The government estimates that a further 41,000 cases could be of a mild nature.

    The report noted that confirmed cases are expected to be lower than that of countries in Europe, and assured that the government is trying to maximize its testing capacity.

    The federal government said that it has put in place an emergency plan worth USD 366 million and guidelines have been prepared in consultation from the medical experts.

    “All the airports have special counters to monitor coronavirus,” it mentioned in the report, adding that around 222 suspected patients have been traced due to the entry and exit point checking at airports.

    The areas adjacent to Iran and along the Balochistan border have declared an emergency to cope with the incoming infected individuals, it said.

    “Preparations were made to place patients in 154 districts under quarantine,” the government added in the report.

  • Don’t come out of homes on Shab-e-Barat, urges Delhi Police

    New Delhi, April 5 (IANS) : The Delhi Police on Sunday advised people not to come out of their homes to celebrate Shab-e-Barat on April 8 and 9 in view of the nationwide lockdown due to cornavirus crisis and warned of stern action against lockdown violators.

    Shab-e-Barat is observed by the Muslim as a night when the fortunes of individuals for the coming year are decided.

    The police took to Twitter and said: “Attention young men and parents. This Shab-e-Barat, do not come out of homes. Support us in the fight against Covid-19. Lockdown is in force even on the sacred night.”

    It also urged people not to come out on bikes and create chaos on the streets of the national capital. “Unlawful behaviour will not be tolerated. Violators will face stern legal action.”

    Delhi Police also sought cooperation from religious leaders and residents welfare associations in maintaining the lockdown. “Observe the occasion solemnly. Stay home, stay safe.”

    The directions came in the backdrop of a congregation organized by Tablighi Jamaat in Nizamuddin area in mid-March, following which there has been a spoke in corona cases in the country.

    IANS

  • Chinese doctors advise Pakistan to ensure lockdown for at least 28 days

    Chinese health experts on Sunday underlined theneed of continuation of lockdown for at least twenty eight days to halt the spread of coronavirus.

    Agencies

    The remarks were made by a delegation of Chinese doctors, which is in Pakistan to help the local authorities fight the coronavirus pandemic met Chief Minister Usman Buzdar in Lahore today.

    “Social distancing is the key to stop the spread of the virus and authorities should ensure lockdown for 28 days,” the experts recommended CM Buzdar.

    They also appreciated the steps taken by the provincial government to curb the spread of the virus.

    Currently, the province leads the nation-wide tally of confirmed cases with over 1,100 patients.

    Clarifying a myth that the virus does not survive in high temperatures, the doctors said there was no evidence that the virus would not spread in the summer.

    The experts, who have earlier worked in China’s epicentre Wuhan, told the officials to contain the virus as soon as possible.

    Coronavirus patient should be treated at quarantine centres or at hospitals rather than being kept at home,” they said,

    Briefing on the passive immunisation method for COVID-19 treatment, they said in critical circumstances plasma treatment is proved useful. “Three anti-viral drugs have also been used successfully.”

    The experts also endorsed the SOPs of the Punjab government to contain the virus and for the treatment of patients and also shared their experiences with the provincial authorities during their posting in Wuhan.

    CM BUzdar thanked the support and assistance provided by the Chinese government to Pakistan in time of need and said the friendship between the two countries have stood the test of time.

    The efficiency with which Chinese authorities have fought the battle against the epidemic is an example for the whole world and Pakistan would learn lesson your experiences, Buzdar said.

  • Pakistan worshippers clash with police trying to enforce coronavirus lockdown

    Karachi | Reuters – Pakistani Muslims at a Karachi mosque clashed with baton-wielding police trying to enforce new curbs on gatherings to prevent Friday prayers and contain coronavirus infections, officials said.

    TV footage showed dozens of people chasing two police vehicles and pelting them with stones as an officer fired in the air to disperse the crowd.

    Health experts have warned an epidemic in South Asia, home to a fifth of the world’s population, could easily overwhelm already weak public health systems in the region.

    But Muslim-majority Pakistan and Bangladesh, and India, home to the world’s largest Muslim minority, have struggled to persuade conservative religious groups to maintain social distancing.

    After failing to persuade worshippers to pray at home last week, the government in Pakistan’s southern province of Sindh, home to the financial hub of Karachi, enforced a lockdown for three hours beginning at noon on Friday, officials said.

    “In the greater interest of saving lives, a decision to ban the prayer congregations at mosques has been taken,” said Syed Nasir Hussain Shah, Sindh’s minister for local bodies and information.

    Pakistan has so far reported 2,458 coronavirus infections, fuelled by a jump in cases related to members of the Tablighi Jamaat, an orthodox Muslim proselytising group.

    In Bangladesh, some people attended prayers at mosques on Friday, despite appeals from the government for people to stay at home.

    Bangladesh’s top religious body, the Islamic Foundation, said elderly people and those with fever or cough should pray at home.

    Bangladesh, home to 160 million people and one of the world’s most densely populated countries, has had 61 cases, including six deaths.

    India is under a three-week lockdown.

    “We’re not alone,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a video message. “All 1.3 billion of us are in it together.”

    The shutdown, which ends on April 14, has helped stem a big outbreak for now, but it has brought India’s economy to a shuddering halt and left millions without work.

    Many are struggling for food and water and fleeing cities for their villages in the hinterland, triggering criticism that the government rushed through the shutdown without adequate planning, hurting the poor the hardest.

    Modi called on Indians to mark the fight against coronavirus with a show of lamps, candles and flashlights on Sunday night.

    India has had 2,547 confirmed infections, 62 of whom have died, low figures by comparison with the United States, China, and Italy. Some however contend that limited testing in India may be masking the extent of infections.

    The World Bank said on Thursday it had approved an initial $1.9 billion in emergency funds for coronavirus response operations in 25 developing countries, with more than half the aid earmarked for India.

    “The poorest and most vulnerable countries will likely be hit the hardest,” World Bank Group President David Malpas said in a statement.

    Late on Friday, Sri Lanka’s central bank cut its benchmark interest rates by a further 25 basis points, its second cut in three weeks, as it scrambled to support the economy.

    Following is data on the spread of the coronavirus in South Asia, according to government figures:

    • India has registered 2,547 cases, including 62 deaths.
    • Pakistan has registered 2,458 cases, including 35 deaths.
    • Sri Lanka has registered 152 cases, including 4 deaths.
    • Afghanistan has registered 273 cases, including 6 deaths.
    • Bangladesh has registered 61 cases, including six deaths.
    • Maldives has registered 31 cases and no deaths.
    • Nepal has registered six cases and no deaths.
    • Bhutan has registered five cases and no deaths.

    Additional reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee, Chandini Monappa in Bengaluru, Swati Bhat in Mumbai,; Writing by Gibran Peshimam and Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Euan Rocha, Raju Gopalakrishnan and Nick Macfie

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.