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Indian cities go eerily quiet...

masterchief_mirza

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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-51942147

India is placing subcontinental lives at risk by virtue of underreporting positive cases and undertesting suspects. Even more shocking are claims that a supposed biotech and pharmaceutical hub is somehow experiencing a "shortage of testing kits".

151 cases out of 12000 tests conducted so far. That's around 1 positive diagnosis per 80 tests.

It comes as little surprise therefore that India has decided against a high volume test strategy.

South Korea has tested 286,000 and has 8400 positive cases. That's around 1 confirmed case per 34 tests.

If India - the world's second most populous nation - had hitherto tested as many people as the South Koreans, India would register around 3,500 positive cases, going by their own ratio. Many would argue though that based on population, India should have done ten times the number of tests that the Koreans have managed.

That leaves India with around 35,000 cases.

The WHO had a simple message this week - test, test, test!

No wonder it's fkin quiet in Indian cities.

https://fullfact.org/health/coronavirus-testing-numbers-UK/

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-51942147

Life in India has changed dramatically as the world's second-most populous country grapples with the coronavirus outbreak.

Otherwise crowded and chaotic cities have quietened down as people stay home, traffic slows and even weddings shrink in size and scale.

India has confirmed 151 active cases and three deaths - but public health experts fear that the low count is the result of limited testing and under-reporting. The country has only conducted about 12,000 tests so far, partly because of a shortage of testing kits.

So it's still unclear if and to what extent community transmission exists in India - community transmission means a patient had no known contact with another confirmed case or travelled from a country badly affected by the pandemic.

However, India's central government, several state governments and city administrations have already responded with drastic measures.

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The Indira Gandhi international airport in the national capital Delhi, is the country's busiest airport but it appears deserted nowadays.

India has barred entry to everyone, including citizens, flying from certain countries, including the UK and most European nations. It has also cancelled most entry visas to people (excluding citizens) flying in from other countries.

This has led to numerous flight cancellations.

Airlines are also struggling as fewer people are flying even within India, wary that new regulations could see them stranded away from their homes. Two of India's top airlines are reportedly considering grounding planes amid plummeting demand for flights.

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Popular Indian monuments - such as the 16th Century Red Fort in Delhi - have been shut to visitors to prevent large gatherings.

Taj Mahal, the country's most iconic monument, closed its doors on Tuesday, along with more than 140 other monuments and museums.

With fewer people visiting and closures of public places likely to go up, tourism is expected to take a huge hit across India - the Taj alone draws as many as 70,000 people a day.

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Bangalore, an IT hub in southern India, is among the major cities that has shut down its malls - such as the one above - and schools, colleges, cinema halls and other public places have been closed since late last week. Other major cities such as Delhi, the financial hub Mumbai and Hyderabad in the south, have done the same.

City officials have also imposed restrictions on large gatherings such as weddings, cricket matches or any public ticketed events.

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Some of Delhi's busiest spots, such as Connaught Place, are mostly empty.

There has also been a significant drop in the number of people using trains, which remain the most popular form of transport in India.

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The service from Mumbai to Pune city - which takes about three to four hours - has seen about a 30% fall in passenger traffic, according to some estimates.

The western state of Maharashtra, where both cities are located, has reported the highest number of cases in India so far. The central railways has already cancelled 23 long distance trains going to and from Mumbai - officials say the reason is both the virus and the lower number of passengers.

Overall, more than 150 trains have been cancelled across India. This number could increase in coming days.

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Many holy sites, including the Golden Temple - one of the holiest shrines in Sikhism - remain open, although the footfall is much lower. It's quite unusual to see such few people in what is one of India's busiest shrines.

Tirumala Tirupati, the richest Hindu temple, has cancelled many of its daily rituals and is restricting the number of pilgrims for the first time.

Some major Hindu temples, such as the Siddhivinayak temple in the heart of Mumbai, and the Vaishno Devi cave shrine, have closed.

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City officials in Delhi have begun sanitising auto rickshaws and taxis to contain the spread of the virus.

Public transport poses a major challenge to containing the outbreak. But it continues to be used regularly across India, even as governments encourage people to stay home as much as possible.

But not all offices have work from home options, and this is especially a challenge for the millions who work in India's informal sector - these include domestic help, street vendors and daily wage workers.

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Surprisingly, sit-in protests against India's controversial new citizenship law continue in some cities, including Delhi and Bangalore.

The most prominent of these, pictured above, is happening in Delhi's Shaheen Bagh neighbourhood. Thousands of protesters, mostly Muslim women, have been demonstrating against the law, which critics say is anti-Muslim, since December.

But Delhi has shut down schools, colleges, gyms, night clubs, spas and swimming pools - and Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has said all social, political and religious gatherings with more than 50 people would be stopped.

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Temperature checks have become a common feature across cities - here, people are being screened before they enter the high court in the eastern city of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta).

This practice has been adopted at airports, corporate offices and several other places that remain open despite the restrictions.

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In the southern city of Hyderabad, students appeared for their school-leaving exams, but they came armed with masks.

Delhi, however, has postponed all school examinations.

Experts say India could impose more sweeping lockdowns as the toll climbs further.

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Indian amateurishness will cost the whole subcontinent dearly yet again.
As if there are open borders between all countries in the subcontinent for the virus to spread. The only amateurish behavior is shown by Pakistan who brought hordes of people from Iran causing a rapid spread in Pakistan. Cases have reached close to 500 in a matter of days. With Tents as quarantine facilities. No lockdown yet in any place, including the worst-hit Sindh. And eery quiet cities are good to avoid community spread.
 
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Indians always do that , untill such time they are caught pants down. A country that lives and thrives on propaganda, is destined to face yet another crisis due to incompetence of Hinduvata driven extremist government, while the poors die of Corona , rich are bathing in urine and cow dung. May God have mercy on Indians.
 
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As if there are open borders between all countries in the subcontinent for the virus to spread. The only amateurish behavior is shown by Pakistan who brought hordes of people from Iran causing a rapid spread in Pakistan. Cases have reached close to 500 in a matter of days. With Tents as quarantine facilities. No lockdown yet in any place, including the worst-hit Sindh. And eery quiet cities are good to avoid community spread.
You ideally remind one of a village donkey grazing in the jungle....suddenly a Tiger appears so the Donkey closes it's eyes hoping the Tiger will not see it.
Now it's BBC reporting on India but you drag in Pakistan as if your troubles will go away.

Coronavirus: Indian cities go eerily quiet as cases rise
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-51942147
 
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As if there are open borders between all countries in the subcontinent for the virus to spread. The only amateurish behavior is shown by Pakistan who brought hordes of people from Iran causing a rapid spread in Pakistan. Cases have reached close to 500 in a matter of days. With Tents as quarantine facilities. No lockdown yet in any place, including the worst-hit Sindh. And eery quiet cities are good to avoid community spread.

True. Mature behavior is like Indian behavior

ETYfAjKUMAAQDjU.png
 
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they can hide or alter the test results but they cant hide the deaths due to the disease. if the death rate increases in india due to this disease like in italy or spain they wont be able to hide it for long and their own public will rise against their government. but lets hope their population remains safe from the disease. they are no doubt our enemies i cant wish the general indian public to die of disease.
 
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As if there are open borders between all countries in the subcontinent for the virus to spread. The only amateurish behavior is shown by Pakistan who brought hordes of people from Iran causing a rapid spread in Pakistan. Cases have reached close to 500 in a matter of days. With Tents as quarantine facilities. No lockdown yet in any place, including the worst-hit Sindh. And eery quiet cities are good to avoid community spread.

You don't seem to realise that there is no point trying to stop the spread now. You're at least two weeks too late. Instead of testing lots of people early, which would have permitted contact tracing and targeted isolation, Hindustan played its usual 56 inch chest game...., "let's label all infections as tourist driven and pretend we're magically immune if we're Hindustan natives...silent carriers don't exist, false negatives at screening don't exist and community transmission hasn't occurred" (because hey, we haven't tested for it, therefore it never happened!!). Now India's true infection number will be at least 10,000 (conservative estimate). It's spreading like wildfire among household contacts. The figures stated and the comparison with high volume testers (south Korea in particular, where the true indices of this disease are revealed openly) tell you it's too late for superpower India. Hiding numbers and fudging stats was more important than transparent reporting, extra vigilance against a novel disease, and proper testing rates.

What's the point of eerily quiet lockdown now after your heads have been in the sand for a month??

Now is the time to mobilise every health worker and facility and gear up for thousands of patients. Maybe India will consider this step a month late also.

You're right....
Is n't time to go "eerily quiet" ?? What is BBC expecting ? People are staying inside, working from home, preventing potential spread, what does BBC even want ?


Only time will tell.
Eerily and POINTLESSLY quiet would have been the correct title from the BBC.
 
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Bigger, richer, more capable nations with much better infrastructure have been brought to their knees. What do you expect from the subcontinent ?

You don't seem to realise that there is no point trying to stop the spread now. You're at least two weeks too late. Instead of testing lots of people early, which would have permitted contact tracing and targeted isolation, Hindustan played its usual 56 inch chest game....,
and how's it going in the UK and Pakistan ?

Don't be smug about this, better hope we all make it out of this one relatively unscathed, and with our Ammis and Abbus still breathing.
 
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Of-course cities have less hustle and bustle, that's is what government's advisory is.

Adding pieces to the original write-up :lol::lol: Pakistan counting India's positive case ignoring their own :lol::lol:

"India is placing subcontinental lives at risk by virtue of underreporting positive cases and undertesting suspects. Even more shocking are claims that a supposed biotech and pharmaceutical hub is somehow experiencing a "shortage of testing kits"."
 
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Now it's BBC reporting on India but you drag in Pakistan as if your troubles will go away.
It's not us who claimed India is a threat to the subcontinent. So, damn right I dragged Pakistan who has shoddy quarantine measures.
You don't seem to realise that there is no point trying to stop the spread now.
Thanks for the tip genius.

"let's label all infections as tourist driven and pretend we're magically immune if we're Hindustan natives...silent carriers don't exist, false negatives at screening don't exist and community transmission hasn't occurred" (because hey, we haven't tested for it, therefore it never happened!!). Now India's true infection number will be at least 10,000 (conservative estimate). It's spreading like wildfire among household contacts. The figures stated and the comparison with high volume testers (south Korea in particular, where the true indices of this disease are revealed openly) tell you it's too late for superpower India. Hiding numbers and fudging stats was more important than transparent reporting, extra vigilance against a novel disease, and proper testing rates.
haha because it is tourist-driven. Given you don't receive much tourist doesn't mean others are in the same spot. Just yesterday, 12 Indonesians were quarantined, with 7 having Corona. They were traveling along the South West region, so there can be a lot of secondary spread too. There is no indication of 10000 infections as of now, instead of pulling estimates out of your arse, check the number of people under observation.

What's the point of eerily quiet lockdown now after your heads have been in the sand for a month??

Now is the time to mobilise every health worker and facility and gear up for thousands of patients. Maybe India will consider this step a month late also.

You're right....
What are you suggesting Virus expert? We open the gates and let everyone infect, so Pakistanis can cheer? Try again...
 
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It's not us who claimed India is a threat to the subcontinent. So, damn right I dragged Pakistan who has shoddy quarantine measures.

Thanks for the tip genius.


haha because it is tourist-driven. Given you don't receive much tourist doesn't mean others are in the same spot. Just yesterday, 12 Indonesians were quarantined, with 7 having Corona. They were traveling along the South West region, so there can be a lot of secondary spread too. There is no indication of 10000 infections as of now, instead of pulling estimates out of your arse, check the number of people under observation.


What are you suggesting Virus expert? We open the gates and let everyone infect, so Pakistanis can cheer? Try again...

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-51922204

I don't need to try again. Southik Biswas - an old pal of mine - has literally written 6 hours ago practically what I just wrote yesterday. Now it's not just biased Pakistanis who are accusing Hindustan of gross negligence.

The risks of "faking democracy" when in reality you idiots live in a totalitarian state where information and indeed truth itself are a rationable commodity are beginning to manifest in unthinkable ways.

Pakistanis told you these Hindutva fkers lies to you over many things.

This latest round of lies comes as no surprise to Pakistanis.

Of-course cities have less hustle and bustle, that's is what government's advisory is.

Adding pieces to the original write-up :lol::lol: Pakistan counting India's positive case ignoring their own :lol::lol:

"India is placing subcontinental lives at risk by virtue of underreporting positive cases and undertesting suspects. Even more shocking are claims that a supposed biotech and pharmaceutical hub is somehow experiencing a "shortage of testing kits"."
My piece isn't aimed at an evil islamofascist nation. It's aimed at yogaland of magic.

Bigger, richer, more capable nations with much better infrastructure have been brought to their knees. What do you expect from the subcontinent ?
This is closer to the truth we knew all along.
 
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Thank god we are eerily quite. We need to be eerily quite for another month.
 
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