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Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Seven more patients test positive for COVID-19 in Karnataka, tally now at 33

All seven new coronavirus patients have been isolated at hospitals and are currently undergoing treatment.
Seven more people in Karnataka tested positive for coronavirus on Monday, taking the state’s total tally of positive cases to 33.  Earlier on Monday, Karnataka health department officials had stated that a 46-year-old man, who is a native of Kerala with travel history to Bengaluru and arrived in Bengaluru on March 22, tested positive for coronavirus. He has been isolated in a hospital in Mysuru. The other new cases include a 38-year-old man, who has a travel history to Dubai and arrived in the city on March 17,  a 41-year-old man who came from London to Bengaluru on March 13; a 30-year-old woman, who is the wife of a Bengaluru resident who had earlier tested positive for coronavirus; a 24-year-old man, with travel history to UK and Dubai; a 60-year-old man with travel history to Germany who arrived in the city on March 17; and a 22-year-old man, who is a resident of Kannur in Kerala and arrived in Bengaluru from Dubai on March 22.   All these patients have been isolated at hospitals and are currently undergoing treatment.  Meanwhile, the Karnataka Health Department also said that a man who has tested positive for coronavirus in Kerala had landed at Mangaluru airport and then gone to Kerala. The 54-year-old patient from Kerala’s Kasaragod had landed at the Mangalore International Airport on March 10 at 5.30 pm via an Air India Express flight. From the airport, he travelled by his own vehicle from Mangaluru to Kasargod. He had coffee near Kasaragod and reached home by 7.30 pm.  On March 11, he visited a local fish market and returned home at 10 pm. He consulted a doctor in Karasgod on March 18 and later visited Kasturba Medical College in Attavar at around 3 pm on the same day. He went to the reception area of KMC and had tea at the KMC canteen. He took an auto and went to Medicity and bought medicines and returned to Kasaragod by a Karnataka road transport bus. He came back to Mangaluru on March 20 in a private vehicle and visited a doctor. He returned to Kasargod in the private vehicle. He is not one of the 33 cases in Karnataka. The government has asked passengers who travelled in the said flight and the KSRTC bus to self-report by dialling 104 or the other helpline numbers. The state government has announced a lockdown and sealed its borders as the number of coronavirus cases in Karnataka witnessed a rise. The state government has increased restrictions imposed on nine sensitive districts including Bengaluru. The other eight districts which have come under this lockdown are Bengaluru Rural, Dakshina Kannada, Mysuru, Kalaburagi, Dharwad, Chikkaballapura, Kodagu and Belagavi. In an order issued on Monday, the government said all enterprises barring essential services like ration shops and those vendors selling milk, vegetables, groceries, meat, fish, fruit should be shut. Further, there have been curbs on the usage of private vehicles, cabs and rickshaws. Usage has been allowed only for procuring essential commodities or getting medical supplies. Public transport services have been discontinued in the state with buses, trains and metro rail off the roads until March 31. Interstate travel of passengers has also been disallowed.  
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Monday, March 23, 2020

Sec 144 imposed in Bengaluru till March 31, taxi services barred

Coronavirus
Bengaluru Commissioner Bhaskar Rao said that private vehicles can exit the city but restrictions will be placed on vehicles entering from outside the city.
Bengaluru Police Commissioner Bhaskar Rao on Monday stated that prohibitory orders under section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) will be imposed in the city till March 31. This means that more than 5 people cannot gather at a place.  He also said that the lockdown will be strictly enforced in Bengaluru. Ola and Uber services will be suspended in the city and they will not be allowed to operate despite the earlier government allowing it for essential services. He stated that vehicles coming in and going out of the city will be monitored. The Commissioner clarified that vehicles can go outside Bengaluru but restrictions will be placed on vehicles entering the city and only goods vehicles will be allowed. "Even though there is no law and order situation, these measures are needed to protect the health of people and to ensure this disease does not spread," Bengaluru Commissioner Bhaskar Rao told reporters. The Commissioner further said that takeaway will not be allowed from restaurants in the city. However, food delivery services will be functional. Provision stores and kirana stores will remain open. Some important points No takeaways, only food deliveries will be allowed.  All flyovers to remain shut in the city. Essential services to remain  open. Private vehicle movement will be monitored by police. Ola, Uber, bus, metro and train services shut. No vehicles will be allowed to enter city without permission. Important announcements from Bengaluru police commissioner (@CPBlr) Bhaskar Rao's briefing today. 1.Complete lockdown in Bengaluru till March 31 2. No vehicles will be allowed to enter or leave the city without permission 3. Takeaways at restaurants also barred. — Arun Dev (@ArunDev1) March 23, 2020
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Private vehicles, autos, Uber and Ola barred in 9 Karnataka districts; exceptions allowed

Coronavirus
Gatherings of more than five persons will be prohibited in public spaces.
Representational image
The Karnataka government has increased the number of restrictions placed as part of the lockdown announced in Bengaluru and eight other districts of the state. The lockdown will be in effect till March 31 in the wake of the outbreak of COVID-19 cases.  The state government issued a fresh notification on Monday barring the use of private vehicles except for procuring essential commodities and other exceptions laid out by the government.  "Uber, taxis, auto-rickshaws and other hired services shall not be permitted for passenger transport except for procuring essential commodities and medical emergencies," the notification issued by the government stated.  Gatherings of more than five persons will be prohibited in public spaces “except for the purpose of containing COVID-19 and statutory and regulatory functions,” the notification stated. The nine districts where the lockdown is in effect are Bengaluru Urban, Bengaluru Rural, Dakshina Kannada, Mysuru, Kalaburagi, Dharwad, Chikkaballapura, Kodagu and Belagavi.  Public transport run by state government corporations will be unavailable across the state.  Rail services including metro rail services are already suspended till March 31 as part of a nationwide lockdown plan applied to 75 districts in the country.  All industries and factories except those dealing with essential services like food, medical equipment, drugs, fuel and agricultural inputs, shall remain closed. The industries have been advised to not remove any worker and advised to sanction paid leave to them.  On Sunday, the state government issued a notification stating that all commercial establishments except for essential services will remain closed in nine districts. All government staff over the age of 50 years and having underlying conditions of diabetes and other conditions have been asked to remain in home quarantine. Essential services include ration shops, milk, vegetables, groceries, meat, fish, fruit, wholesale and retail markets, petrol stations, banks, ATMs, take away and home delivery from restaurants, and medical services. Government offices dealing with essential services as notified by the state government will be open.  All Information Technology and Bio-Technology units will work from home, except in cases where it is not feasible. Till date, the number of cases in the state stand at 27 with a second case from Mysuru detected on Monday. Further, police in Bengaluru along with health department officials have started a drive to stamp the returnees from foreign countries with indelible ink  in wake of reports of those in quaratning violating protocol. The state government has also further warned that stringent action under IPC (indian Penal Code) Section 271 (disobedience to quarantine rule) will be taken against those violating quarantine protocol, which states a punishment up to six months and fine.
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Petition against NPR filed in Karnataka HC, says it could risk health of enumerators

Coronavirus
Precinct Legal, a law firm in Bengaluru, along with four others, have asked for a stay on the start of the NPR process in the state.
Representational image/PTI
A Bengaluru law firm has filed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) petition in the Karnataka High Court asking the government to postpone the implementation of the contentious National Population Register (NPR). The firm cites the COVID-19 pandemic as reason for the postponement. The census and the NPR process is set to begin in Karnataka on April 15, with enumerators going door-to-door to collect details of residents.  The petition states that the COVID-19 pandemic “endangers the public around the world” and that “The orders issued by the Government of Karnataka to the enumerators, directing them to carry out the census and NPR updation exercise, infringes upon the right to health of the enumerators.”  Courts across the country, from district courts up to the Supreme Court, are currently operating on an emergency basis only, due to the imminent threat of coronavirus. However, this petition is being considered as it is an urgent matter, and will be heard on Wednesday, March 25. The petition is being backed by private citizens, and is being represented by Precinct Legal’s Shahbaaz Husain. The petition noted that the census and NPR enumerators would be going door-to-door to thousands of households, some of which are under quarantine. This would infringe upon the health rights of these enumerators, and put the public at large under risk.   The PIL also said that the civic body was violating its own orders against public gatherings in Bengaluru, to hold a training session for the enumerators. It said that the BBMP held a meeting with 350 Census and NPR enumerators in Bengaluru’s Town Hall on March 16, which was in contradiction of its own orders against public gatherings in the wake of the COVID-19 epidemic. The petition also claimed that the government would not incur any financial losses should the population enumeration exercise be pushed back by a few months. A report from TOI dated March 17 quoted BBMP official Anbu Kumar as saying that the training had been fixed a month ago, and had to be conducted as the date for NPR was drawing closer, and could not be postponed. The Chief Ministers of Kerala and Madhya Pradesh have declared that they will not implement it in their respective states. However, Chief Minister of Karnataka BS Yediyurappa has said that Karnataka will implement the NPR-linked CAA “one hundred percent.”
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B'luru cops are tracing foreign return passengers, putting quarantine stamps on them

Coronavirus
The Bengaluru police have already been stamped 5,000 people with indelible quarantine stamps on their hands.
In a move to curb the spread of coronavirus, the Karnataka state government has begun clamping down on the movements of people who have returned from abroad, dispatching teams to the homes of the foreign returnees. These teams are tasked with stamping the returnees with indelible ink and ensuring that they comply with quarantine orders. This is to stop the potential spread of the virus, in the event that the returnees are carriers. Some reports suggested that there were over 500 teams consisting of the police department and officials from the civic corporation body, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP). The police are tracking down people based on the self-reporting forms filled out by passengers coming into the Bengaluru International Airport, the Deccan Herald reported. Estimates suggest that there are over 43,000 people who need to be traced and stamped regarding staying in quarantine. The city is currently on lockdown, with Section 144 (unlawful assembly) in place to prevent the gathering of four or more people in public. This is because of the imminent risk of contact infection, which happens when people who are infected but have no symptoms go out in public and get in contact with lots of people. Bhaskar Rao, the Bengaluru Police Commissioner tweet that he had gotten some reports that this was happening, and such people would be picked up and taken to government quarantine centres. In a tweet, he said, “5000 Home quarantine stamping was carried to ensure they remain home in public interest. I have received calls some of those stamped are moving in BMTC buses and sitting in restaurants. Please call 100, these people will be picked up, arrested and sent to Government Quarantine.” 5000Home quarantine stamping was carried to ensure they remain home in public interest.I have received calls some of those stamped are moving in BMTC buses and sitting in restaurants. Please call 100,these people will be picked up, arrested and sent to Government Quarantine. — Bhaskar Rao IPS (@deepolice12) March 23, 2020 The Karnataka government has decided to stamp passengers with indelible ink and the last date of their quarantine, while international passengers were still being allowed to land in the airport. This will now extend to passengers who have already landed in the city.
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COVID-19: Karnataka govt to penalise those violating quarantine restrictions

Coronavirus
Till now there are 27 positive cases for COVID-19 in the state.
Representational image/PTI
The Karnataka government on Monday said anyone who violates quarantine restrictions can be booked under provisions of the Indian Penal Code, which provides for imprisonment up to six months and fine. "We will book a case against them. IPC Section 271 (Disobedience to quarantine rule) is a clear section, there is imprisonment for six months or a fine or both and is a non-cognisable (offence)," Home Minister Basavaraj Bommai said. Speaking to reporters In Bengaluru, he said: "Therefore, we will notify the quarantined, if it is violated, a case will be booked. Asked if the law applied to the quarantined if they are from other states, the Minister said, "whoever it is or from wherever they are once quarantined, they should not go out, only after quarantined days are over they should go.Once they come here and we have identified and stamped them they have to be quarantined here only, they cannot go." Earlier speaking to reporters, Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa said it has been decided to notify quarantined houses with public notice. According to officials, the home quarantine stamped people should remain at home, the default period being 14 days. Six new COVID-19 cases were confirmed in Karnataka on Sunday (the highest number of positive cases in a single day) and another case from Mysuru confirmed on Monday, taking the total number to 27 in the State. The Karnataka government has announced shutdown of all commercial activities barring essential services in nine districts, where COVID-19 cases have been reported, till March 31. They are: Bengaluru city, Bengaluru Rural, Mangaluru, Mysuru, Kalaburagi, Dharwad, Chikkaballapura, Kodagu and Belagavi, Home Minister Basavaraj Bommai said. In addition,  Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa said the government would take a decision on whether to shut down all commercial activities, barring essential services, in the entire state by this evening. In a stern warning to those violating the lockdown orders, Mysuru Superintendent of PoliceCB Rishyanth has said, “Anyone caught moving around without reason will be thrown in jail without bail under 270. People moving around even after such warnings mean its clear negligence and guaranteed they won't get bail,”
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COVID-19 stockpilers: Some Bengalureans are buying groceries for two months

Coronavirus
Despite official warnings to refrain from panic buying, city residents have been rushing to supermarkets and markets to hoard groceries for weeks on end.
Despite official warnings to refrain from panic buying, city residents have been rushing to supermarkets and markets to hoard groceries for weeks on end. Panic buying has begun in Bengaluru after it was announced that Karnataka will be under lock down till March 31 and that the state was closing its borders. Fearful of the repercussions of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bengaluru residents are flocking to supermarkets, smaller grocery stores, HOPCOMS and vegetable markets to stock up on monthly essentials.  Despite official warnings from the government, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, to refrain from panic buying, the fear of not being able to buy groceries has led to some of the city’s residents to hoard groceries that will likely last for several weeks. Some have even started learning how to cook, while others are placing orders to rent or buy new refrigerators. Further, several employees at supermarkets and grocery stores say that the increased sales is also because of the Ugadi festival on Wednesday. Stockpiling due to fear of unavailability Several residents in Mahadevapura and south Bengaluru told TNM that they have ordered groceries for two months on Sunday after the lockdown was announced. People fear that online orders would take too long to arrive and the local stores may run out of supplies.  “It is the fear of the virus spreading and also the fear that we won’t have any items to cook. Our apartment is not allowing delivery persons to come and we are avoiding ordering supplies online. When I checked on Big Basket, the delivery slot was for April 3 or 4. We have eight people in our family and we live in a duplex in Jayanagar. We have many mouths to feed and if we don’t have enough supplies it may get difficult,” said Prakash*, a 36-year-old resident who works as a project manager.  Prakash said that he and two of his brothers, who live with their families in the same duplex, have each ordered rice, dal of different varieties, whole wheat grains and 20 packets of dosa/idli batter. He has also bought baby food in abundance for his nephew.  “We also bought chips, biscuits and noodles. I know that panic buying is wrong but we have more people in our house. We generally buy more groceries every month than an average family. But we have small babies and children in our house. We have to think about them too,” he added.  Vedika*, another resident of the city’s Murphy Town, says that she and her brother, who share an apartment, have ordered twice as much this month fearing delay in delivery. “Going to supermarkets is a little scary. We wanted to remain at home and so we ordered supplies from Big Basket last night (Sunday). We generally only order supplies for breakfast. We have decided to start cooking at home now and we have ordered supplies that will last us for at least two months,” she added.  Supermarkets see higher sales Several employees at various supermarkets in Bengaluru told TNM that they witnessed more number of people walking in to buy essentials on Saturday and Monday compared to their average footfalls.  “A lot of people generally end up buying weekly supplies in our outlet. But now, with the festival and the lock down, we are witnessing more sales. On Saturday, the instant noodle section was sold out by 5 pm. This morning, rice, jaggery, sugar, atta got over in just fours hours since we opened,” an employee from a shop in Koramangala said.  Another employee at A-Mart in Indiranagar said that eggs, vegetables, instant noodles and ready-to-eat MTR packets were getting over quickly. “People are also buying sugar, oil, rice and atta in bulk. Maggi will take at least another day to arrive. The larger family packs are getting sold more. With no instant noodles, people are buying ready-to-eat meals,” he added.  The owner of the HOPCOMS near Puravankara Park in the Central Business District said that several residents of the area bought vegetables and fruits in bulk on Monday morning. “I open the store at 8 am every day. By noon, all vegetables and fruits were over. Vegetables are replenished once in two days and I have to get fresh supplies for tomorrow,” he said.  Learning to cook, buying new refrigerators Matthew Pierera is a 21-year-old resident of Bengaluru’s Koramangala. Matthew graduated from college in 2019 and began working in the city. He began working in an ad agency in the city as a copywriter and would eat out every day. Matthew has now bought groceries to last him for two months as he is scared of eating out.  “I don’t know how to cook but I have stocked up on groceries like instant noodles, pasta, rice, dal, milk cartons and cereal. I have also ordered frozen meats like bacon, sausages and prawns. They will be delivered by Thursday. I also rented a fridge from Rentomojo, which will arrive in a couple of days. I am watching YouTube videos and learning how to cook. My parents keep calling me and telling me not to eat out and since this is serious, I want to be careful too,” Mattew told TNM.  Matthew said that he has bought a lot of packets of chips, biscuits and snacks, that would last for longer if kept outside. “I live in a studio apartment and I have bought Lays packets of five each of different flavours. I also bought 10 packets of nachos and one carton full of snacks from a bakery in Frazer Town last week like cookies and bread. I will store it in the fridge once it comes,” he said.  Just like Matthew, a 24-year-old techie, Suyash, who moved to Bengaluru’s Electronic City two years ago, said that he has rented a new refrigerator to store groceries that he and his roommates have ordered. Suyash and four of his roommates live in a three-bedroom apartment near Electronic City.  “My roommates and I ordered groceries for a month. We ordered separately because Big Basket was allowing us to only order four of each item in one order. We rented the new fridge to keep the items once it arrives. We will receive the order only next Thursday (April 2). For now, we have stocked up on groceries for two weeks. We mostly ordered essentials like rice, dal, atta, sugar, maggi and snacks. We generally get 10 kg atta for a month. Now each of us has ordered 10 kg packets,” he said.  Markets witness huge footfalls With the Ugadi festival coming up on Wednesday in addition to the lockdown, many of the city’s residents flocked to various markets, such as KR Market, on Monday to stock up on vegetables, fruits and monthly essentials.  Vendors at the market, who did not want to be named, told TNM that hundreds of people were coming in to buy supplies as they are sold at cheaper rates at the wholesale market.  “Many people bought fruits and vegetables in bulk. Generally people buy 1 kilo of different vegetables that can last for a week. Today (Monday) people were asking for more quantity,” said Murthy*, a vendor at KR Market.  Rajesh*, who owns a wholesale supply store of ration in KR Market said that people were buying rice, dal, wheat grains in bulk. “People who do not own retail stores are also buying in bulk. We realised it much later and then we started asking the purpose of each customer buying so much in the afternoon. This is to make sure that our regular retail vendors are not out of stock,” he said.  In Shivajinagar, concerned vendors say that people have been milling about the markets and streets denying that the coronavirus pandemic would not affect them. “Residents are walking around on the roads, rushing to markets as usual. The markets are very crowded on an average day and yet people are not practising social distancing here. They think this won’t affect them. There are also some people who are overly cautious and are buying more items to cook at home,” the vendor added.  He also said that he is telling each person who walks into buy fruits at his store to stay at home. He has been giving his phone number to regulars, asking them to call and place orders instead. “I can’t force them not to come. I can only tell them everytime they walk in. If less people come, even we will be safe,” he added.  Awareness against panic buying Despite the city witnessing several residents rushing to stockpile supplies, some residents are also making efforts to create awareness and prevent panic buying. JP Nagar resident, Aleem, told TNM that he and several members of his apartment association have been sending regular messages to people to avoid stockpiling groceries. The association has formed a WhatsApp group, where fake messages about empty supermarkets being busted.  “There are so many messages which state that supplies will run out due to the lockdown and the social distancing. We have been repeatedly telling our residents to not stock up and indulge in panic buying. In my house, we have bought groceries that will last for two weeks and that is reasonable. Most people do that in their normal lives too. If people stock up then those who will need it more will not have it,” Aleem said.  Just like Aleem, Mavis Smith, a resident of Victoria Layout, has been educating people who live in the vicinity of her home, not to indulge in panic buying. Mavis and her neighbours have sent messages on several groups they are a part of.  “We are even telling the older people we know that we will help them buy vegetables and groceries. The shops near our house are not running out of supplies by midday. Even the supermarkets are telling people to stop panic buying in our area,” she added.  
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