Covid lockdown – India Legal https://www.indialegallive.com Your legal news destination! Wed, 17 Nov 2021 13:13:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://d2r2ijn7njrktv.cloudfront.net/IL/uploads/2020/12/16123527/cropped-IL_Logo-1-32x32.jpg Covid lockdown – India Legal https://www.indialegallive.com 32 32 183211854 Covid curfew to be lifted in all districts of Uttar Pradesh except Meerut, Saharanpur and Gorakhpur https://www.indialegallive.com/top-news-of-the-day/news/covid-curfew-to-be-lifted-in-all-districts-of-uttar-pradesh-except-meerut-saharanpur-and-gorakhpur/ Sun, 06 Jun 2021 07:11:43 +0000 https://www.indialegallive.com/?p=173767 uplockdownMeanwhile, the recovery rate in Uttar Pradesh has also improved to 97.6 percent as 16.56 lakh patients have recovered from the infection. Currently, the state has less than 20,000 active Covid-19 cases for the first time since its peak in April-end.]]> uplockdown

Uttar Pradesh on Sunday announced that Covid induced curfew in all the districts will be lifted except for Meerut, Saharanpur, and Gorakhpur, ACS Information Navneet Sehgal told the news agency ANI.

The decision came after the number of active cases of Covid-19 goes below the 600 marks in all the districts except for the three districts. However, the lockdown will continue in these districts as they continue to report a high number of Covid infections daily.

Last week, the Uttar Pradesh government had decided to ease restrictions in 55 districts where active cases have dropped below 600. It had imposed stricter curfew regulations in another 20 districts including state capital Lucknow, Noida, and Greater Noida that fall under the Gautam Buddha Nagar district, as well as in Ghaziabad as they continue to report a high number of Covid infections daily.

The educational institutions like schools, colleges, coaching centers as well as markets in these districts will continue to remain closed. 

However, restaurants, cafes, and eateries will also remain shut for dining. Home delivery is permitted to function. Notably, night curfew will continue across the state for the time being. During the night curfew, the lockdown restrictions will be placed from 8 PM to 5 AM.

The authorities also revealed that even though the restrictions are being eased in the other districts of the state, which reported less than 600 Covid-19 cases, night and weekend curfews will continue to be in effect. The night curfew will commence from 8 pm and will remain in place till 5 am. 

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The Uttar Pradesh authorities had said entry to Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) protected monuments will remain shut till June 15. 

However, the number of active Covid-19 cases in Uttar Pradesh has gone below 20,000 for the first time since its second wave started in April.

Meanwhile, the recovery rate in Uttar Pradesh has also improved to 97.6 percent as 16.56 lakh patients have recovered from the infection. Currently, the state has less than 20,000 active Covid-19 cases for the first time since its peak in April-end. It is at 19,438, of which, 11,178 are in home isolation, the health department said.

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Covid lockdown fears: Harsh Mander moves Supreme Court for urgent listing https://www.indialegallive.com/constitutional-law-news/supreme-court-news/covid-lockdown-fears-harsh-mander-moves-supreme-court-for-urgent-listing/ Thu, 29 Apr 2021 14:17:53 +0000 https://www.indialegallive.com/?p=161007 Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in IndiaThe applicants has filed an intervention application in the suo motu matter relating to migrant workers.]]> Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in India

An application has been filed in the Supreme Court by applicants Harsh Mander and others through Senior Advocate Prashant Bhushan so that the Petition is urgently listed before the Court in view of disturbing facts that have emerged due to the second wave of the COVID-19 and the subsequent lockdowns and restrictions and its impact on the poor especially the migrant workers.

The applicants has filed an intervention application in the suo motu matter relating to migrant workers.

The applicants have filed this urgent application for directions seeking measures to ensure food security by way of provision of dry rations and free cooked food, cash transfers to all migrant workers for the period that economic activity is adversely affected, transport facilities at nominal fares for those migrants desirous of returning to their hometowns and villages etc, the petition said.

The applicants submitted that the problems and miseries faced by migrant workers during the lockdown in 2020 have persisted over the past year due to the continued economic distress and now have got aggravated on account of fresh restrictions, curfews and lockdowns being imposed in many States to control the spread of COVID. Migrant workers are again bearing the brunt of these policies and urgent intervention is required to address the following issues:‐

(i) Loss of livelihood and means of income on account of the restrictions and lockdowns resulting in people being unable to pay for basic needs like food, rent, etc.

(ii) Lack of proper arrangement for safe and free travel back to their hometowns and villages when lockdowns are announced

The applicants seek to bring to the notice of the Court the continuing hardship being faced by migrant workers in light of the new restrictions and curfews/lockdowns imposed by state governments to curb the spread of the second wave of COVID-19 in India.

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The applicants said that the the new restrictions and curfews/lockdowns has caused immense distress in the lives of the economically vulnerable sections of society, especially migrant workers. Across several states, migrant workers, having lost their means of livelihood on account of the restrictions imposed, are unable to sustain themselves and there is large scale distress migration back to their hometowns. No proper relief measures to mitigate the economic hardships being faced by migrant workers have been announced when the lockdowns were put in place leading to a precarious situation. The loss of livelihood and means of income is causing food insecurity among migrant workers and their families.

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A LITTLE SUNSHINE https://www.indialegallive.com/top-news-of-the-day/a-little-sunshine/ Sat, 02 May 2020 07:53:45 +0000 http://www.indialegallive.com/?p=98124 On the bank of the Yamuna, in the middle of an obscure biodiversity park opposite Delhi’s once bustling pre-Covid Sarai Kale Khan lies an Ayurvedic healing centre—Seva Dham Plus—run by Jains and monks of the charitable Manav Mandir Mission. It is an extraordinary institution, whose patients include scientists and physicians from AIIMS, combining therapeutic massages, […]]]>

On the bank of the Yamuna, in the middle of an obscure biodiversity park opposite Delhi’s once bustling pre-Covid Sarai Kale Khan lies an Ayurvedic healing centre—Seva Dham Plus—run by Jains and monks of the charitable Manav Mandir Mission.

It is an extraordinary institution, whose patients include scientists and physicians from AIIMS, combining therapeutic massages, and alternative and traditional treatments administered by licensed, trained practitioners, combined with yoga and pranayam.

The fees go entirely to the maintenance of the spotlessly sanitised facilities as well as the housing, feeding, upkeep of orphans under the keen scrutiny of nuns who arrange for their schooling right up to college, as well as job training. This island of sanity in this mad metropolis exudes an aura of peace and tranquility. Ask anybody, journalists, doctors, teachers, businessmen, who has been there. The poor are treated for free.

So it comes as no surprise that Seva Dham, in the midst of the Covid chaos with its collateral damage of hunger and hopelessness for the capital’s teeming poor, has emerged as a centre of hope, succour and nourishment. Already, with its own meagre resources as well as contributions from donors, the ashram is feeding three meals a day to some 2,000 people from surrounding slum clusters who have been rendered destitute by the Covid lockdown. If not from the virus, they may fall prey to death from hunger.

Selfless service is second nature to ashrams such as these. I choose to cite this particular example because I am personally familiar with its services. I am personally familiar, too, with the services of film-makers like award-winning environmentalist Arjun Pandey and his wife, Ambika, who live in Gurugram and have converted their Chinese cuisine carry-out kitchen, Shanghai Surprise, into a community kitchen where they now prepare free meals to feed hundreds of the wretched of the earth each day, teaching the needy social distancing, procuring, transporting and delivering the supplies on their own.

Unlike the government which boasts of and trumpets its “achievements” over paid propaganda even as the hungry hoards stand out in incongruous contrast to the godowns bursting at the seams with bulging sacks of stocked surplus food grains, these humanitarians seek no publicity, ask for no recognition. Which is precisely why magazines like India Legal should seek them out, salute their work and tell the world about them so that their support systems can thrive and become examples for wider emulation and contributions.

In a story that Senior Managing Editor Dilip Bobb has stitched together for this week’s cover for India Legal, he calls these caregivers “Samaritans”. Actually, in a tribute to this ancient land’s innate humanism, they have mushroomed all over in this hour of crisis. Writes Bobb: “A range of individuals and groups has come together across the country in an extraordinary and uplifting show of humanity to help those in desperate need during the lockdown and pandemic spread. They are the unsung heroes of this seemingly unending battle. As a special tribute to these good Samaritans who are risking their lives to bring succour to those in need, we detail their stories of sacrifice and service.”

Reporting from the field for this remarkable story were veterans Rakesh Dixit and Asif Ullah Khan. A recent Facebook post from a Delhi university teacher carried this account: “A school principal friend told me she had a bunch of face masks stitched and would I know where they might be used. I put this information out on a relief network and immediately got a request from someone working with the poor near Turkman Gate. They needed face masks desperately. The question was how to get the masks across to the relief workers… I searched through my phone book and found the number of a university student who had taken urgently needed diabetes medication across to a friend. This young lady’s name is Anushka and she is an undergraduate who studies at Delhi University. Anushka sets out early from home every morning—sometimes as early as 4 am—to distribute food, rations and medicines all over the city…..Every day. On a Scooty. That evening, I met her outside my residential complex to give her the face masks. It was late, almost 9:30 pm. I asked her how long she had been out. ‘Since 3:30 am,’ she said….I ask Anushka when she ate last. Her answer is what I thought it would be. ‘In the morning,’ she said. She is not much older than those I teach. I try to tell her to please not be out so late. She smiles from behind her mask, that ‘Yeah, sure’ kind of smile that young people often give you…I am overwhelmed by her selflessness. I say a prayer for her protection and safety, and I thank God for her courage.”

Courage is at a premium in these destructive and scary times, writes Bobb, but across India, hundreds of individuals and citizen groups are risking their own lives in relief efforts, whether distributing food to stranded migrants or helping senior citizens obtain life-saving medicines.

These are dark days, and when you come across stories about the widespread misery cutting an unrelenting swath across the land, you read and weep. But as you go through this issue’s cover story, we hope you will be able to read and smile.

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