What's new

We'll die like cattle': Kashmiris fear coronavirus outbreak

Status
Not open for further replies.

Nilu Pule

BANNED
Joined
Mar 23, 2018
Messages
3,953
Reaction score
-22
Country
India
Location
India
Doctors say Kashmir, which has been under a security lockdown since August, is 'ill-equipped' to deal with the pandemic.

4 hours ago

317908aa3a024f4bb2ba6df6daaefaab_18.jpg

Empty roads in Srinagar after India launched a 14-hour long curfew to limit the spread of COVID-19 [Danish Ismail/Reuters]
Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir - As the world scrambles to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, fear and anxiety prevail in Indian-administered Kashmir after four COVID-19 cases were detected.




Hospitals in the disputed Himalayan region have an acute shortage of doctors and paramedics, while its healthcare facilities are insufficient to meet the crisis which has unsettled countries with world-class medical infrastructure.


Given the situation, residents of the valley fear the potentially disastrous consequences of the coronavirus pandemic after the first case of infection was reported on Thursday.

Apprehensions abound that this may be just the "tip of the iceberg" as several hundred people, most of whom had travelled to other countries, were placed under quarantine.


Advertisement

In nearby Ladakh, which until August was part of Kashmir before it was separated and turned into a federally-administered territory, 13 cases tested positive, most of whom had travelled to Iran.

The Muslim-majority region has been under a strict security and communication lockdown since August 5 when New Delhi stripped the disputed Himalayan region's of its special status. The internet was restored earlier this month, but it remains slow as 4G services are still not allowed.

8d162d9a94cf441998a2f7236adca6a7_18.jpg

Residents fear the potentially disastrous consequences of the coronavirus pandemic [Shuaib Bashir/Al Jazeera]
Series of measures
Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir's main city and home to a million people, turned into a ghost town this week as markets were shut, public transport banned and entry of travellers restricted.

"We aren't testing proactively and enough," Junaid Mattu, mayor of Srinagar, said. "We aren't preparing for the worst."

The valley's administration, which now reports to New Delhi, has taken a series of measures aimed at containing the spread of the virus, including a lockdown that has grown in recent days.

Schools, colleges and universities, which reopened last month after seven months of an earlier lockdown, have been shut again as people stock up on essential supplies in preparation for another lengthy period of isolation.

UN rights chief calls for inquiry over abuses in Kashmir (2:09)
The fear over the pandemic is compounded by a feeling among Kashmiris that the administration is not being transparent with them.

"Trust me, if I share a summary of daily events, no one in Kashmir will sleep," Shahid Chaudhary, head of the civil administration in Srinagar, wrote on Twitter.

"Let's keep our egos aside, work collectively and instead of raising panic and alarm help each other to improve. This (is) 3rd World War. Nothing less."

Hospitals ill-equipped
The real crisis, however, may well lie in Kashmir's hospitals, which remain understaffed and ill-equipped to fight the outbreak.

A veteran doctor, the former principal of Government Medical College (GMC) in Srinagar who is acquainted with the region's healthcare facilities, warned that a major disaster could occur. The college has seven major hospitals associated with it.

"We need lockdown for one month," he told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity. "If it [coronavirus pandemic] happens here, we will be devastated. We will die like cattle."

The doctor said Kashmir's healthcare system is "ill-equipped to deal with even normal things in normal times".

"It will crush us and devastate us, unless the community intervenes," he said.

Samia Rashid, current GMC principal, said the outpatient department and all elective surgeries have been suspended in the associate hospitals.

"Only emergencies will be examined and cancer surgeries performed. Patients who do not require immediate treatment are requested to not visit hospitals," she urged.

Rashid said the GMC administration has "more than 13,000 N95 masks, 3,300 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) kits," adding that they also procured 122,000 triple layered masks.

N95 respirator masks and surgical masks (face masks) are used by doctors and other health workers to protect them from infections while treating COVID-19 patients.

Rashid said that while there were enough ventilators "to contain the situation right now", there was a shortage of manpower. "Our manpower to run them all is not sufficient."

An official audit of healthcare facilities conducted in 2018 found that the existing manpower was "barely sufficient to run the health institutions in view of sustained increase of patient flow across the state".

"[Kashmir] is severely short of nursing staff. Against a requirement of 3,193 nurses … there are only 1,290 sanctioned posts of staff nurses in the [former] Jammu and Kashmir state with a deficit of 1,903 posts which need to be created," the audit found.

The audit noted that the doctor to patient ratio in the Kashmir region is one of the lowest in India. "Compared to the doctor-patient ratio of 1:2,000 in India, Jammu and Kashmir has one allopathic doctor for 3,866 people against the WHO norm of one doctor for 1,000 population," it said.

0034bd20377044a0bfcf3e7657169f81_18.jpg

At the region's two major hospitals two doctors have been put in quarantine after they developed symptoms of COVID-19 [Shuaib Bashir/Al Jazeera]
Doctors fear going home
Ahmad, a doctor at Srinagar's Shri Maharaja Hari Singh Hospital, told Al Jazeera doctors fear going home after work.

"We do not have the required protective equipment. We just wear a surgical mask, normal gloves and surgical gown and a cap. We cannot tell a patient to maintain distance," he said.

"It is the first place where people come with symptoms and their first contact with a doctor".

Ahmad said doctors like him are at risk of being exposed to coronavirus infection and "do not want to be the carrier of the virus".

"If we get infected, the whole hospital staff would have to be quarantined. We need proper equipment so that the health system keeps going," he told Al Jazeera.

The Resident Doctors Association at the hospital, in a statement, this week said "every patient visiting the hospital should be viewed as a potential COVID-19 case" and rued the dearth of protective infrastructure and sanitisers at the hospital.

"Welfare of public depends on doctors, and if doctors themselves are sick, how can they provide healthcare to general public."

At the region's two major hospitals, which see thousands of patients daily from across Kashmir, two doctors have been put in quarantine after they developed symptoms of COVID-19.

b1b4dc53a2fd409dafc2fa897eea07a8_18.jpg

Amnesty International has condemned the continuous suspension of high-speed internet in the region [Shuaib Bashir/Al Jazeera]
Internet shutdown
Amid the alarming threat of the spread of COVID-19, Kashmir also faces a crippling blockade of high-speed internet which has effectively hampered an effective awareness campaign among the people as well as among doctors.

High-speed internet services in the region have been blocked since August to prevent protests against the abrogation of the region's autonomy.

Iqbal Saleem, a professor of surgery at GMC, said he could not download a COVID-19 manual for doctors.

"This is so frustrating. Trying to download the guidelines for intensive care management as proposed by doctors in England. 24 Mbs and one hour. Still not able to do so," he said on Twitter referring to using the low-speed mobile internet that is the only thing available in the region.

Coronavirus: Worldwide applause for frontline medical staff
Another doctor working at a hospital in north Kashmir said the low-speed internet was handicapping them when it came to getting updated information from around the globe. "We don't know anything, and we are not able to download research papers etc, it's very hard," he said.

The ban of high-speed internet has also made it impossible for many in Kashmir to work from home, one of the important precautionary measures taken in many countries to contain the spread of the disease.

"We don't have the option to work from home as there is not enough mobile internet speed to connect our laptops," Arshad, an IT employee, said.

Amnesty International has condemned the continuous suspension of high-speed internet in the region and asked the Indian authorities to fully restore it.

"In wake of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the Government of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir must restore full access to internet services in the region of Jammu and Kashmir and ensure that people have full access to health and safety related information," said Avinash Kumar, Executive Director of Amnesty International India, in a statement.

Kumar said restricting the internet speed makes it difficult for people to "navigate their way through a difficult time further undermining their trust in the authorities".

"The Government of India needs to adopt a rights-respecting approach to protect public health and restore access to 4G speed internet."

When asked about the restoration of high-speed internet, Jammu and Kashmir government spokesperson Rohit Kansal's response was: "Whenever there is some information, we will update you."

Amid the growing concerns, more than 170 academics from around the world have written a letter to the World Health Organization and UN special rapporteurs about the restoration of high-speed internet in Kashmir.

"Despite the region reporting multiple positive cases of COVID-19, the Indian government has, criminally, barred residents from accessing reliable, high-speed internet. Only recently, through an administrative diktat, the Indian authorities extended the ban on high-speed internet until 26th of March," the letter said.

Reporting by Srinagar-based journalist whom we are not naming due to security concerns


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ear-coronavirus-outbreak-200322151405218.html
 
.
""We need lockdown for one month," he told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity. "If it [coronavirus pandemic] happens here, we will be devastated. We will die like cattle."

Here are actual Kashmiris asking for lockdown to continue while people outside Kashmir asking for lockdown to be lifted.
 
.
That is exactly what the BJP government and RSS want.
 
.
""We need lockdown for one month," he told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity. "If it [coronavirus pandemic] happens here, we will be devastated. We will die like cattle."

Here are actual Kashmiris asking for lockdown to continue while people outside Kashmir asking for lockdown to be lifted.
So corona virus has been in kashmir since July/August ?
 
.
That is exactly what the BJP government and RSS want.
Actually this is the best position to be in for Kashmiri vs the people in the rest of India where it will spread like fire. Self isolation and cut off from the rest.

You guys are not seeing the bigger picture; by doing to RSS/BJB have done a favour.
 
.
Kashmir is midway in human development amongst states in India. Kashmir government medical college has a good reputation. Now is the time for the locals to take their welfare in their own hands and not just indulge in the blame game. Practice the precautions advised everywhere.
I roll my eyes everytime high speed internet is referred to as a human right.
 
.
So corona virus has been in kashmir since July/August ?

Doesn't matter, whatever happened is irrelevant. I didn't agree with the lockdown then, but now it is the need of the hour. Meanwhile, your govt was shedding fake tears asking for lockdown to be lifted and what not in the SAARC meeting.
 
. .
Doesn't matter, whatever happened is irrelevant. I didn't agree with the lockdown then, but now it is the need of the hour. Meanwhile, your govt was shedding fake tears asking for lockdown to be lifted and what not in the SAARC meeting.
Gov can go to Hell... They did what they could do best, Against a biased world, supporting a fascist regime’s brutal decision, Just to keep the weapons industry going on...

Kashmir was our problem and will ALWAYS BE OUR PROBLEM !!!

We will never let go off so easily after suffering due to this issue for 7 decades...
 
.
Gov can go to Hell... They did what they could do best, Against a biased world, supporting a fascist regime’s brutal decision, Just to keep the weapons industry going on...

Kashmir was our problem and will ALWAYS BE OUR PROBLEM !!!

We will never let go off so easily after suffering due to this issue for 7 decades...

True, they did what was best for them, not for the Kashmiris. It is apparent now all those were fake crocodile tears. Had they actually cared, wouldn't be calling for lockdown to be lifted in such a critical situation. Kashmir needs a lockdown, so does the rest of India. While the rest of the world is in a lockdown, you are calling for lockdown in Kashmir to be lifted to score brownie points .
 
.
True, they did what was best for them, not for the Kashmiris. It is apparent now all those were fake crocodile tears. Had they actually cared, wouldn't be calling for lockdown to be lifted in such a critical situation. Kashmir needs a lockdown, so does the rest of India. While the rest of the world is in a lockdown, you are calling for lockdown in Kashmir to be lifted to score brownie points .
Did I call for the uplifting of lockdown in this situation? Fell free to search for such post here...

And the “They did what they could do best” is what I said for the government, Governments can only do aggressive diplomacy, nothing more, And this government has done much for that, But then you can’t appreciate it rather you are applauding the ignorance of Indian Gov and Military to continue with their brutality....

Kashmir is a military solution, Not a government. Eventually Blood will be shed someday, in large, When two powers collide, Those in the shadow, Will be dusted...
 
. .
Oye Shahzade,

And all your goodee, goodee... posts.. I thought/feared that you have gone to the other side... Daisies, Butterflies and Rainbows...

But you remain one of us...

Be good... take care of yourself and family!

Mangus
Thanks to Allah,

This virus, An Awakening to the sleeping minds...

The Suppression has of Our Kashmiri Brethren and Our Designated land...

We lost hundreds of thousands in these 7 decades, Billions spent, Generations lost to illiteracy, Instability to the economy, Proxies inside our territory...

BUT

We are Muslims, World is a route to a Real destination... We have blood to spare, But Our Honor, Our Land, Our People, Mothers, Sisters, Children, Fathers Of Kashmir, Shall be AVENGED.

What is the purpose of Pakistan and a Mighty Muslim State with Mighty Military if someday Kashmir gets resolved on TABLE ?

More people will bully us if such happens. One day, We shall teach everyone a lesson, What a Mighty Pakistan and Mighty Pakistan Army is truly !!!
 
.
RSS Nazis have volunteered to be COVID19 infected and they have been sent to Kashmir to enjoy fair skinned Muslim women.

Government of Kashmir has asked the Government of Pakistan to announce Jihad against India for Kashmir.

Inshallah Kashmir will be liberated
 
.
""We need lockdown for one month," he told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity. "If it [coronavirus pandemic] happens here, we will be devastated. We will die like cattle."

Here are actual Kashmiris asking for lockdown to continue while people outside Kashmir asking for lockdown to be lifted.

that is true .
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom