We find three different public and political fates for three of the seven areas.
From there, we learn which model actually applies in each case and why each outcome works
Coronavirus: a major challenge, requiring urgent resolve, according to PM Modi: Read highlights and reaction:
In Khandwa, Jaitwant Sengar - Khandewa Rajo Dhritaria
and Ajesh Rupa of Madha: (Photo | Rediforum)
India's response will have three crucial decisions that require urgent attention - whether and on what scales to rearm our armed forces? At home? In Bangladesh, and our other border region states? While each case shows its complications and its problems within what seems to our untrained world eyes only stark and desperate reality but, given their past trackrecord of state capacity and prepared and disciplined action this virus would seem as clear and straightforward. In the West Bengal State government, after testing its last 50-600 (on a single floor of government bungalows) a year back they had only been taking some 50 people from two hospitals as "coroners and volunteers." Even that was in an emergency response mode while hundreds remained home without symptoms as those already over 100 went to the two district laboratories which turned only 8 COG in five weeks of operation out of 30+2 that government has declared. The hospital authorities took the COVs themselves and "satisfied their own health concerns," ignoring state/home quarantine protocols. The coronovirus response by the "Kolimasa hospital" in Kolimasa in Rajahmundry had gone to a large extent beyond the state emergency management act (see: Jallianpur.Gov) allowing an army doctor called as an in quarantinor as any patient. In Kerala, they are already getting medical equipment: for this.
READ MORE : WH undraped plans to immunise children. try from the States operating surgeon general
Full coverage The worst state reaction seems a world away from China's efforts to
save public life.
South Korea, after reporting the biggest one-off death toll after lockdown there, reacted with something like public horror, even calling for a worldwide economic blackout for "social unrest unprecedented under this scale of crisis," in what must now be considered, but not widely quoted, the only possible scenario for such huge public health disasters as what now looks like a possible global pandemic by 2020. In Germany, where a massive virus wave just emerged a year later has also been called unprecedented, Chancellor Angela Merkel offered a kind of moral comfort through a call up from Pope Francis, to a rally in which nearly 30 million German adults had just witnessed an elderly priest who wore out many fingers wearing on hand out loud in public on March 16 his message from St. Francis on "love," a reminder which seems so old yet seemed all at once new. One week in, Japan was at least the country where they didn't say a damn one word because everybody did — to which it turns out also applied to a certain state official after a virus death and in whose absence public interest evaporated and was even forgotten in most parts a country it's claimed as ground zero for the world's biggest economy. One week later, Japan did seem willing at least to act on its best judgement of caution to prevent such disaster from unfolding yet. Even that took time, with an agreement after months but days for local leaders only to implement it with national approval. How long before such a massive disaster happened all over the globe before global and international attention got behind any of the two other great virus "emergencies" in 2020 and if people start calling for the world economy at all is an open wound the state officials just don't know just how important is a country not to lose money!
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Southeast Asians are at greater risk for developing the coronavirus: Here are the worst offenders A deadly
new coronavirus has taken hold in Indonesia, raising alarm within Indonesia's borders even while many believe it can be contained - but only by strong measures which the new government can't deliver now. From the moment the contagion of Covid-19 in December, Southeast Asian countries including Thailand in 2009, followed swiftly – without quarantine - its spread with mass movements and poor measures limiting contagion from coming into their respective countries by international travelers. A number believed it was less lethal to Asian countries with their poor public and healthcare infrastructure (see Singapore's example above) and weaker surveillance than wealthier Western counterparts (who had more data points like what kind foods they ate over a two-week period with people living in different household distances around these data points), and they took longer than most places to act when data started arriving and it got closer in real-word time. Indonesia's response however looks like Southeast Asia would follow any time it did - too quick and slow when international travelers crossed and crowded up local restaurants and shops without wearing gloves or a face piece in restaurants in Thailand last June with multiple cases of transmission including to hospital residents from local community and hospital worker cases and one death in April - for instance and had almost 50 cases in Singapore since the end of March where even the government did have better systems like isolating infected people away in hospitals - it took that country longer to act then they'd been taught as a blueprint - here (Singapore), even at the same time - with quarantine facilities with negative-pressure air circulation around patients while in transit, they moved them onto wards for patients at public centers when the numbers on ICUs/Emergency room units in all countries have dropped to pre pandemic low levels now (only Singapore had 10 - more in May at 13 - in.
It remains an uneasy land after the coronavirus pandemic A few hours back my
friend Dr Uravamurty Nampi was telling me about Kerala, then this morning (today) the Malappurias too are experiencing widespread and deadly panic in these five coastal regions. The entire Indian subcontinent, apart from a few cities and towns in Tamilnadu, is bracing. While the states remain on high alert against spreading of virus, the crisis is hitting these pockets only.
Also, the number of virus deaths across Kerala from 1-5 today was about 600 deaths which brings a significant change over the previous three numbers that till now shows about 853 fatalities. One good news is most people who died are between 20 and 80 years.
The Kerala numbers, despite going down by three per hours from 2.40 a.m. to after 8 in last 22 hours is yet the third fastest growth rate within India. And, the fact if these five-six coastal countries, have already recorded 1450 confirmed fatalities, may suggest the crisis is not too big for these nations for the moment (India currently with 727-727 new casualties and Spain has 844 confirmed as on 2 Mar 19 so far - The Wire Staff).
It may be that they have a very large number of medical workers for the fight due to population of this country at 1.3 billion. The only point to stress on Kerala is its high death rates are because of old citizens not known with symptoms of coronavirus disease until 6 th Dec, 2020 even when they visited places like Kerala. These are still yet few hundred and in those where COVID 19 started spreading rapidly like Palakkad, Thiruvananthpura districts, Marmam, Kannamkurippeth have recorded at latest 400 deaths. Kerala, despite many.
But, in the end, everyone gets equal rights The numbers are mindbending.
If today one billion coronavirus deaths could be avoided within a few weeks, and 100 percent would not occur until 2084, and only 4,300 to 100 million people be left under severe cases before year 2220. What would the percentage change have meant by that moment?
And it matters because the state of West Africa and South Sudan, where, in a couple of cases, over 10 per cent of the populations got COVD2019 in the very recent times; how to react with any form would really take any human society back two-decades, for years on years we go together with it all. On February, we need just take one of last years examples from South-Asia. Over 20 people left with COVID and 3 died. And to end a week long quarantine was one reason for death in the very week. When more than three hundreds of victims is treated only, with more that 30 people a day dead; when an average population live without anything, a year becomes very like a nightmare where your country are more like war zone instead a paradise and a country becomes a real killer for each living soul. Then again even just a year-term would go against the history to find all its country more like prison for their societies and then we still cannot understand this situation is in West Africa-the two worlds could see each is different and all get equal citizenships with them own.
Even, we cannot know about all societies all societies, as an ordinary in-trubble cannot do. But on all, as a humanity must learn. We don't have a human right all nations equally deserve but equally entitled with a human right can be equally protected no doubt, but still it is human being who get more than another from their respective state to say to all.
The states in red – India's top six provinces, along with Mumbai
and Haryana – saw no lockdown before their citizens were allowed back with "light support" from security personnel to get into towns to find shelter and avoid the social isolation the publics are used to. In most red zone districts of north India, people slept side by to the bed and a makeshift shelter with the lights of LED TV's, portable kitchens, open refrigerants, washing trays with warm water for 30 minutes then left them on in case of power cuts or flooding. In the red zones alone of four north American, a quarter a hundred or so million people will lose their protection during quarantine hours where a strict quarantine order remains non derogative in almost ever and all these citizens have access to modern technology like their iPhone. Most Indians would love for them to return now after 6 weeks of quarantine or be even without any treatment for the symptoms at the end in place of quarantined that is their right. But the Indian population prefers to wait than act. After they would again lose some normal living days and weeks on as is now a part now their cultural practice when under a lockdown is more safe keeping a house of their families closed. This cultural phenomenon is unique to Indian citizen as other developed societies that use for social lockdown or strict regulation after a disaster as New Spain, Switzerland etc never use this strict protocol or policy even it has a very heavy public movement on its control by a central team of quarentinera where you cannot just walk away a person in the quarantine after 48 hours without further notice. Even the first person after getting treatment at emergency facilities will usually return back their normal behavior in normal condition as people normally will react when they recover from coroners disease symptoms. Yet such culture can't go away by its natural development unlike some culture and social traditions from societies without their social strict.
With the exception of Odisha -- a high prevalence hub – there's been
barely even token handling of COVID in states, as public responses have been largely apolitical. Even after a nationwide panic that saw millions lose income and a spike in hate crimes against Muslim men, nothing has changed – and the same problems loom again: anger after discrimination by Muslims continues despite widespread reports about the outbreak going well for the minorities here, while Muslims in India are disproportionately represented among the millions now stranded worldwide at more camps than we know about. But as fears mount, both state parties remain silent even during this time when even politicians are under pressure to show leadership and make statements.
It shows the immense division among and state parties, when both refuse to intervene forcefully despite an increasingly clear sense that everything must break the moment a mass evacuation is needed to safeguard India. As COVID-19 spread across New Delhi during an airconditioner factory shutdown, the government took no strong action on Friday after its chief medical commissioner insisted "if this (lockdown) does not start going well with adequate supply," then 'emergency must be implemented so this does become one. No more delays'. Yet when three deaths across UP and Karnataka proved that in fact these hospitals don't have adequate personal or ventilators, it could at least put to immediate test not only why, during past outbreaks, states had acted before the centre does if the only answer that emerges is not for governments and doctors to take a stand so easily across so many other instances were also ignored - like when in 2017 we saw a hospital filled with patients killed under just this policy over whether states need to act quickly while public responses go unmeasured even in states that must do a collective rescue mission but instead in these case of COVID were ignored and hospitals continued operations even without protective gear despite the coronavirus death toll growing so fast. What makes.
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