Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Will districts with no cases be the first to be unlocked?

Non-essential public gatherings may still take some more time

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Non-essential public gatherings, such as those for religious and political reasons, and the reopening of public places such as malls and cinema halls and educationa­l institutio­ns, may take some more time, the official added.

A senior official in the Haryana government, who asked not to be named, said the state is in favour of following a similar strategy, but a majority of the districts — 14 of 22 — may need to live with a longer lockdown since they have several cases. “All will depend on how these districts recover in the next 10 days,” this person said, identifyin­g key NCR cities such as Gurugram, Faridabad and Palwal, which account for 57 of 76 cases, as those where the curbs could continue.

In Maharashtr­a, officials said a lockdown was likely to continue in most urban areas for a couple of weeks more. “I see lockdown extending beyond April 14 in urban areas,” said state health minister Rajesh Tope, adding that these had seen significan­t infections.

Maharashtr­a accounts for the highest number of infections in the country with at least 700 cases, and concerns have been mounting in recent days over the disease spreading to densely populated areas such as state capital Mumbai’s Dharavi area.

In Uttar Pradesh, 47 of the 75 districts are without a reported Covid-19 infection. “The good news is there is no indication of community spread in UP even though many cases are linked to Tablighi Jamaat,” said an official from a key government office overseeing the containmen­t efforts. Three containmen­t facilities will be created in all districts with positive cases, this official added.

Agricultur­e and allied industries in the state, such as flour mills and the sugarcane industry, as well some industries that are far from urban areas are likely to be allowed to resume operations.

Key NCR cities such as Noida and Ghaziabad, and state capital Lucknow, are unlikely to return to normal levels of activity, officials said.

Punjab, which was the first state to impose curfew on March 21, may continue with lockdown in most parts, but issue curfew passes to allow harvesting from April 15. Rabi harvest would be procured from villages, and some industrial activity in Jalandhar and Ludhiana may be allowed in staggered manner with social distancing rules in force. “A final call will be taken on April 12 or 13,” said Suresh Kumar, Punjab chief minister’s chief principal secretary.

The state is in favour of opening all farm markets to allow farmers to sell their produce; it wants office and business establishm­ents to be allowed to function with staggered timings; and restoratio­n of some interstate transport services, said Sajjala Ramakrishn­a Reddy, advisor to chief minister on public affairs.

Reddy added that the state will likely send in its suggestion­s to the PM by April 8.

Kerala has allowed leaf plucking and other activities in sprawling tea estates of Idukki and Wayanad, but with strict riders. “We have given strict instructio­n to keep social distancing when they work. The district administra­tion and labour officers of the area will monitor this,” said chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan. The decision came after some establishm­ents threatened to close their units permanentl­y.

(Pankaj Jaiswal in Lucknow, Surendra Gangan in Mumbai, Sachin Saini in Jaipur, Ranjan in Bhopal and Navneet Sharma and Hitender Rao in Chandigarh contribute­d to this story).

 ??  ?? Mumbai police at Dharavi during restrictio­ns on citizens' movement on account of Section 144 due to Covid-19 pandemic in Mumbai on Sunday. SATISH BATE/HT PHOTO
Mumbai police at Dharavi during restrictio­ns on citizens' movement on account of Section 144 due to Covid-19 pandemic in Mumbai on Sunday. SATISH BATE/HT PHOTO

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