#CoronaVirus In India
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Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) in India | Legality Check | MLM Lawyer in India | MLM Lawyer in Delhi NCR |
Multi-Level Marketing (MLM)Ā is a business model which has remained in a grey area and is yet to see a legislation or a law enacted clearing the air on the legitimacy of the Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) business and industry as a whole. Having said that, on Sept. 9, 2016 an office memorandum for advisory to all the State Government and Union Territories onĀ āModel Guidelines on Direct MarketingāĀ was issued by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution Department of Consumer Affairs under the Government of India.Ā The same can be termed as a first step taken forward by the Government of India to bring legitimacy on to the Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) business and Corporations in India. Read more
#CORONAVIRUS IN DELHI#CORONAVIRUS IN GURUGRAM#CORONAVIRUS IN INDIA#EXPERT LEGAL ADVICE ON CORONAVIRUS IN DELHI#EXPERT LEGAL ADVICE ON CORONAVIRUS IN GURUGRAM
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CoronaVirus In India | coronavirus cases in india | New Guidelines | COVID Guidelines | ICMR | COVID-19
CoronaVirus In India: Central government alert regarding increasing cases of the corona, new guidelines issued, know full details Corona has started spreading once again in India. In view of the increasing cases of Corona, the Central Government has issued new guidelines. ICMR has given guidelines regarding antibiotics. Know the full news- Image Source: FILE PHOTO Coronaās new guidelinesā¦
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Another great reason to keep masking: We don't even have a good treatment for long covid yet, and many doctors know simply nothing about the condition.
Global efforts to understand and manage long Covid post-pandemic, with varied symptoms and limited treatment guidelines worldwide
Doctors in India are grappling to diagnose and treat unexplained and persistent symptoms of long Covid patients due to limited guidelines, whereas researchers have flagged inadequate studies on the condition.
With the World Health Organization declaring an end to COVID-19 as a global health emergency in May last year, focused efforts are underway around the world to estimate the burden of long Covid among the population.
The condition refers to the set of lingering symptoms affecting varied body parts and persisting well beyond the acute Covid infection period, including cough, muscle and joint pain, fatigue, brain fog and difficulty in focusing. The viral disease is caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
While studies have suggested that about a third of those moderately or severely infected are likely to suffer from long Covid, region-wise though, incidence could vary.
A study by researchers, including those from Harvard Medical School, U.S., estimated that 31% of the once-infected people in North America, 44% in Europe, and 51% in Asia, have long Covid, which is āchallenging the healthcare system, but there are limited guidelines for its treatmentā. It was published in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases in September.
In India, however, studies on long Covid are few and far between.
One such study by Maulana Azad Medical College in New Delhi, conducted from May 2022 to March 2023 on 553 patients who had recovered from Covid, found that about 45% had lingering symptoms, persistent fatigue and dry cough being the most common.
āThere is limited exploratory research on the long Covid syndrome with scarce data on long-term outcomes,ā the authors wrote in the study published in the journal Cureus in May this year.
Understanding the long-term effects of the virus is important for developing management strategies, optimising healthcare delivery, and providing support to recovered Covid patients in the community, they said.
Dr Rajesh Sagar, Professor of Psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi, said, āLooking at the current state of long Covid studies in India, it is too premature to say that we understand the condition well enough to know how to diagnose or treat it.ā
Animesh Samanta, assistant professor at School of Natural Sciences in Shiv Nadar University, Greater Noida, said, āWhile studies in India highlight the growing recognition of neurological complications in long Covid patients, more focused research on neuroinflammation is needed.ā
Doctors, too, have reported a rise in patients complaining of symptoms that they did not have pre-Covid. āPeople who never had asthma in the past, post-Covid, with every viral infection, they get a long cough, shortness of breath and wheezing, which require the use of inhalers or nebuliser,ā senior consultant Dr. Neetu Jain, who runs a post-Covid care clinic at Pushpawati Singhania Hospital and Research Institute, New Delhi, said.
Dr. Arun Garg, chairman, Neurology and Neurosciences, Medanta-The Medicity, Gurugram, said that he was noticing a spike in stroke cases among young patients not suffering from known risk factors such as diabetes, hypertension and obesity.
āSimilarly, we are seeing more cases of encephalopathy (swelling of the brain) without reason and having a confused state of mind following one or two days of fever. Their MRI scans show no changes. These patients have increased significantly after Covid,ā he said.
In the absence of medical guidelines to diagnose long Covid, doctors are having to resort to broad, non-specific tests and questionnaires to gauge a patientās āquality of lifeā.
Studies have shown that the fatigue experienced in long Covid is similar to that in cancer patients, with a quality of life similar to patients of Parkinsonās disease.
āWe really do not have any test to diagnose long Covid, even though it is definitely a clinical diagnosis. We diagnose long Covid for people who had at least moderate to severe infection, following which they could never regain the quality-of-life pre-Covid. Checking for inflammatory markers like C-reactive proteins (CRP) can support the diagnosis,ā Dr. Jain said.
āOther than routine blood tests that measure inflammation, we do antibody tests to look for direct markers. In many of these patients, we are finding rare antibodies which are very new to us and were not there pre-Covid,ā Dr. Garg said.
Inflammation persisting despite recovery from acute Covid infection is thought to lie at the heart of long Covid. However, tests to measure this specific immune response are lacking, even as researchers have been working in this direction worldwide.
One such effort comes from Shiv Nadar University, where a team led by Mr. Samanta has developed a fluorescent probe capable of detecting inflammation in brain cells that can arise due to Covid infection.
The probe measures nitric oxide levels in brain cells, especially in human microglia cells, where increased NO levels are linked to the SARS-CoV-2 infection. Microglia are immune cells in the brain that fight disease and help maintain brain health.
Lysosomes within microglia, which help clear foreign disease-causing agents like the SARS-CoV-2 virus, produce nitric oxide as part of an immune response to infection. The probe detects nitric oxide produced in lysosomes in response to infection and thereby allows for a measurement of inflammation levels.
This examination method can provide āqualitative information on infection statusā, said Mr. Samanta, corresponding author on the study published in the journal Analytical Chemistry in American Chemical Society.
He explained that patients with pre-existing conditions such as Alzheimerās disease, Parkinsonās disease or multiple sclerosis (an autoimmune disorder) could exhibit prolonged neuroinflammation and loss of brain cells following Covid infection.
While the probe has shown efficacy in cell cultures, animal studies would need to be done, before testing it in humans, Mr. Samanta said.
Looking at the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, the study by Harvard Medical School had found that 587 clinical studies were conducted on long Covid, of which about 53% (312) were testing potential treatments.
Most of these were found to be conducted in the U.S. (58), followed by India (55) and Spain (20). The trials looked at interventions including physical exercise, psychotherapy, and pharmacological ones such as paxlovid and fluvoxamine.
However, āto date, only 11 of these 312 studies have published their results that were not confirmative,ā the researchers wrote.
The team called for studies to look into sleep disorders which were rarely included in the registered clinical studies. Further, interventions targeting the biological processes responsible for long Covid are needed but currently lacking, they said.
#mask up#covid#pandemic#public health#wear a mask#covid 19#wear a respirator#still coviding#coronavirus#sars cov 2#long covid#india
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Indian Navy as a net security guarantor in the South Asian region
By N. C. Bipindra With the changing sea line of communication and the economyās eastward shift, maritime security has become one of the most substantial economic and human security pillars. Since the 2004 tsunami, the Indian Navy has consistently proven itself as the first responder to any crisis in the Indian Ocean region, showcasing its readiness and reliability in suchā¦
#Africa#Andaman & Nicobar#Andaman and Nicobar#Andaman and Nicobar Command#Andaman and Nicobar Islands#Andaman Sea#Anti-Piracy#Arabian Sea#Coronavirus#COVID#COVID-19#Defence#Defence Ministry#Defense#Defense Ministry#DG Shipping#Economy#External Affairs Ministry#Gulf of Aden#Gulf of Guinea#Gulf of Oman#Gulf Region#Hamas#Horn of Africa#Houthis#India#Indian Navy#Indian Ocean#Indian Ocean Region#Industry
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Corona Alone a Diary Revisited: An Americanās Experience of the Covid Lockdown in MumbaiĀ
Lockdown In Retrospect
Mediocre Graces: In any case, by the end of the Pandemic, I had somewhat been restored to good graces, not that I was ever greeted in Anand Nagar(8) at least with theĀ Atithi Devo Bhava(11)Ā spirit,Ā I got on the good side of the local gang and befriended a Muslim woman who sells fish in a roadside stall, but it was too late, lonesomeness and faithlessness in humanity had grabbed a hold of me. Sadly, I am no longer able to speak to the fish merchant. She married, her husband is conservative and doesnāt allow her to speak to men.
On Lonesomeness:Ā Itās worth noting that many endured the Corona epidemic in complete isolation. According toĀ The Wall Street Journal, 35.7 million Americans, including myself, lived alone (Byron) around the time of writing the first journal entry. However, not just did I live alone, I was an expat, I lived alone in Mumbai, India. Regardless of the negative stigma that goes along with living alone, solitude never bothered me, in fact, ever since I was divorced, in 2012, Iāve preferred to be alone. Besides, I could always grab a cup of coffee and talk to strangers, I have the gift of gab when needed, but the double-whammy of isolation and becoming a pariah had pushed me to the brink of insanity. Iāve come to believe that those things that donāt kill us make us weaker and since the Covid outbreak Iāve become impatient, nervous and have lost faith in humanity, as Iāve already said.
Too Much Fluff: In all, the NPR article is woefully misguided and simply tried to make a buck off of Covid lockdowns, like so many other news outlets were doing at the time. A better story wouldāve been on those who live alone before the Pandemic, whether for reason of mental health, a willful solitude or social ineptitude, that chronicled each personsā descent into madness; I despise fluff journalism, maybe because it reminds me of the way that Bollywood paints India as an endless serene landscape of humorous follies in love that can easily be overcome when itās something else all together, not easily, or that I would like to, put into words. This isnāt just fluff, thereās comedy for sure, thereās humor in all tragedy but thereās a reason for sharing the gritty details of lockdown in India, I feel itās important to share these stories lest we live them again! In the past year, Iāve filled 6 volumes with recollections of lockdown, I hoped to get them published by a newspaper, that failed.
Diary Excerpts and Commentary
A Note to the Reader: The following excerpts are from the journal of an expat living in Mumbai (recorded between Feb 2019 and Feb 2021), during Covid lockdown(1). Dates have been replaced with titles because, unless indicated in commentary or prose, theyāre irrelevant:
It Begins: Thereās a few cases of Covid in China and other places but Iām not too worried, this will have as much effect on me as the 2003 SARS outbreak(6), thereāve been many such scares in my lifetime. Besides, I caught the virus from a wedding party in Sri Lanka, it was like the Flu, high fever, mild delirium and a little trouble breathing. Interesting thing about Sri Lanka, all of the land and wealth seems to be in the handsā of the Nords, the locals have very little and the price of food is like that of America or Europe. Also, airport authorities took a childās Queen Conch shell away right before boarding, she was clearly enamored by her seemingly magical wave machine. After they took it from her, she cried all the way back to Mumbai.
The Flasher: A few Covid cases have been confirmed and Iām beginning to feel like an unwelcome guest in a foreign land, an unusual notion in a land where the locals say āAtithi Devo Bhava(11).ā Typically, Indians are hospitable, on my travels to the South they were, of course, taxi drivers tried to scam me there, but cabbies the world over are a special breed of scum, you shouldāve seen the way they took me to the wringer in Hong Kong, hospitality is a source of national pride here. This afternoon, there was a knock on the door, it was my landlord. I found myself baffled by what he said. I opened the door and he began to speak, timidly and slowly in broken English: āthereās been a complaint,ā he said. āWhatās wrong?ā āA man is walking around outside naked.ā āOh, I see. Thanks for informing me,ā I said and shut the door, believing that he was telling me of a dangerous predator lurking among this slumās numerous tightly knit alleys at night. Later, I came to find that the landlord was attempting to tell me that the neighbors had accused me of going on moonlit strolls in the buff, I was the predator. I was shocked and enraged when I found that I was, according to gossip, a flasher, but consoled myself by telling myself that none of this is the landlordās fault, he just wants to prevent other tenants from rioting. People are scared and looking to point a finger at an invisible assailant. This will be forgotten quickly and my name restored, I guess itās not contradictory to be both hospitable and two-faced. Why do I care about my reputation in a slum? I donāt want any trouble.
Last Days of Freedom: Worry has set in, even chain restaurants no longer accept cash, not from me at least, I tried to buy something to eat with good olā paper money at McDonaldās and they refused to serve me. Worse luck, as the Chinese say. Iām working on a project here and Iām paid in cash, so credit isnāt something I have access to. This doesnāt just affect me, a large portion of the population is paid, untaxed of course, in cash and most likely doesnāt have a bank account. Also, everywhere I go my temperature is taken.
Days of Optimism: Lockdown began, I went to get groceries for the 2 days that we are told we must shelter in place and plan to go to bed early. There was hoarding and ransacking of shelves at the local grocer, but Iām sure that itās just hysteria and this whole thing will end soon. Another interesting thing happened at the store today, two women got in a fight over the last box of cookies, the first woman, a pudgy mother with a bad attitude towards everyone that I had had the bad luck of having a few encounters with before, used to admonish me saying āsmoking is a bad addiction,ā I wagged my finger and said āsugar is a bad addiction,ā laughing my way out of the store. It was the first time Iāve laughed in days, Iāve been in a daze, everything is quickly changing and feels so dire. The fowl woman, she lost the battle and the box of cookies. A word about change, Iām often told that nothing changes in this little hamlet and I believe it. Itās hyperbole, things change here, but slowly, thereās digital gadgets for sale, but there are also oxcarts that sell food and other remnants of the past. Itās not that nothing changes, Itās that time seems to go by slower here, like the locals heartbeat at a slower pace. I always feel rushed but they take as much time as the seasons.
Two Days In: The two days passed, but lockdown continues, the food I bought didnāt last. Even worse, I wasnāt informed that lockdown part 2 had begun without the first installment ending, I slept through the grocery shopping time, 6AM. I snuck out for an evening walk despite lockdown, 2 interesting things happened on my covert walk, I saw many others outside as well, they all spoke of the cow that wandered into the open air temple thatās adjacent to my apartment complex, some are feeding here, even the Muslims, having taken up many of the folk traditions of the Hindus they live among, agree that a sickly heifer wandering into the temple is a good omen, the other interesting thing, The Green Eyed Lady (an Indian with green eyes) made me some Khichdi(24). There were also Chinese in Haiden, Beijing, a district home to many Russians, who have green eyes. Isnāt genetic splendid? In any case, the woman asked me if I had eaten, usually more of a salutation than invitation here, I said āno,ā so she brought me a bite to eat. The food supposedly heals the sick.
Big Changes in a Little Town: Since implementation of theĀ Janata(5) Curfew, many continue to sit along alleys in large groups or participate in sports, not wearing masks(4). Yet, as I walk enroute to purchase groceries, these intrepid individuals say āhere comes Coronaā and cover their faces with theirĀ dupatta(7)Ā or a handkerchief. This change of attitude towards me is, although slight, Iāve always had my fans and detractors here, is palpable. Maybe itās just my nerves. Before lockdown, I sometimes played Teen Patti(19) with neighbors at least, never understood the rules though. Anyway, the shelter-in-place decree will be lifted on Passover, this must be a good omen, not that I sincerely believe in such things, I think to myself and reiterate my resolution to weather the storm in Mumbai. One concern about the transmission of Covid, Indians donāt have a sense of proximity, they always crowd.
One Good Deed: The endless bad news has left me exhausted. A few thoughts before bed, having lived in other parts of Asia and meeting many people from Europe, India is like America in one way, heterogeneity. Itās a type of melting pot, not a melting pot of strangers from far off lands but a mixture of old kingdoms, who have their own languages and cultures, forced under one, possibly too small, umbrella. Adding it up, Indian society, due to its long history, caste system and numerous religions is exceedingly complex, for example Muslims created the first free public institutes of higher learning, yet in some regards theyāre treated like would-be separatists (Khurshid). Thinking about the dayās event, I sit on the small broken cot thatās my bed, I have to get this fixed soon, itās interesting, the cost of handwork is very cheap here, in the US, anything that artisan might do is expensive and itās more cost effective just to throw the old away. Iām reminded of this Chinese woman I met in Beijing, she told me āIām not Han(23).ā āInteresting, which ethnic group do you belong to?ā āIām Miao.ā āIs there anything unique about the Miao?ā āWe donāt eat dogs. All Chinese people are the same, we are one people, the only difference between Han and Miao is that we donāt eat dogs.ā I was teaching adult English at the time for extra income. India is more like America than China or Europe, diversity is endless.
Anand Nagar Has a New Song: The decree wasnāt lifted. Another day, thousands more Covid cases and locals have begun to shout āgo home Corona!ā Despite the taunts, Iām staying where I am. I donāt have much of a choice, there arenāt any flights anyway, the airports, in a panic, have shut down, everything, with a mere 2 day warning, has come to a grinding halt. I guess this isnāt merely more sensational media. Besides, the situation is becoming bleaker in the US and airports are havens for communicable diseases, they pack people in, from all over the world, like sardines. Have you ever seen the projected distribution of an epidemic? It all starts with airports. Resolute that this virus will blow over, I buckle down for the Summer of Corona in India.
Foreigners Have it Too: Nothing good has come from lockdowns so far, it has fostered hysteria, mob mentality, greed and anti-foreigner sentiment. This āCity of Dreams,ā has become a nightmare! The nation has fallen into the clutches of fear of contracting the virus from a foreign national. Hysteria, I tell you! I only hope that this all ends soon. Despite an anti-foreigner hysteria, according toĀ The World Health OrganizationĀ there are a total of 1637 people infected by Covid-19, a mere 49 of which are aliens(3) (The WHO). Yet, the locals blame it all onĀ Tablighi Jamaat(13)(BBC), why not? Trump is calling this outbreak āThe China Virus.ā The borders have closed, looks like Iām staying here for a while, I didnāt plan on leaving anyway. Besides, thereās talk of easing restrictions. Back to the human condition, I had always been considered an outsider here, I had always been greeted with mocking and mistrust, to some degree, but there were those who accepted me. The first day I arrived the children called me names and adults mimicked the way I speak with derisive tones and gestures, I guess imitation is the highest form of flattery? I despise epigrams, I really do.
Nostalgia for Slightly Better Days: Before lockdown, there was a woman with a fish tattoo on her arm who often invited me to play cards but I shied away from her after neighbors had told me that she āaccuses people of rape to blackmail them for money.ā I donāt usually listen to gossip but wanted to play it safe. Other than that, I was at least invited to weddings, funerals and dances during theĀ Graba(22) celebration. Funny story, the first year I refused to dance, a man jokingly told me that if I dance with a girl I have to marry her. I didnāt actually believe him, Iām not that gullible, Iām just not fond of Indian music. Back to the present, itās not the time for nostalgia, although I canāt think of a better pastime right now, maybe if foreigners in India practice social distancing, unlike the locals, they wonāt catch the virus and the stigma will dissolve. The other night I went for a walk just to break the monotony of watching time go by and hoping the world would heal. This morning, I was again accused of perverse behaviors by my landlord. I wasn't walking the alleyways naked, but I am being watched. On the walk, locals barred the alley and told me āno foreigners allowed.ā Yet, they daily gather to play Cricket while sentinels watch for cops so that they can quickly disperse.
Thereā Gestapos In This Movie Too: I guess I should mention something good too. Lockdown has caused a sort of hush here and now daily I can hear the sound of an infant being bathed through the one tiny window my studio apartment has. Through the 4 foot square aperture I can hear the infant laughing as warm water rushes over it. I now hope that things will return to the way they were before, just subpar not āholy crap the world is on fire and we are all going to die!ā A combination of police and concerned citizens, working with the police, now stand along the main road with bamboo canes in hand. They remind me of stories my grandfather told of the Gestapo. Both are poised for violence. The police, they resound the sentiment of the concerned citizens, ridicule the foreigner. Now, I usually get an escort, something that is only afforded to me, to stop āroamingā as I go to get essentials. There are now dots painted on the sidewalk, we are supposed to stand on them to ensure social distancing, the locals donāt obey this. If I do the same, Iām informed, thwack would go the cane. Iāve begun to see in black and white, not metaphorically but literally, I feel as though Iām watching a movie about a distant authoritarian time. The brutalist architecture(24) is reminiscent of Russia and North Korea, it doesnāt take much imagination for the arabesque attributes to obscure. I havenāt slept much.
Building a Wall: This hamlet is bluffed by a river by a river on one side with a small foot bridge for crossing into Neilam Nagar. The police have blockaded the entrance to the crossing and are building a wall to, I believe, keep the several hundred thousand impoverished residence of this hamlet trapped like mice on a sinking ship. I truly fear the wall, perhaps itās because of my education, having been forced to read the line āSomething there is that doesnāt love a wall(20),ā throughout school, itās almost a national anthem. Walls and golf courses have always seemed as despicable things to me. Neither the rich nor the influential politicians are suffering the same as we are in the slums. They play golf in their gated communitiesā¦
The First Stone Tossed: As the situation in India worsens, so do the jeering. Now, a few individuals throw rocks at me, a tactic usually reserved for thwarting the regionās menacing wild dogs, as I venture into the ever more dangerous streets at the permitted time, 6AM, to get essentials, in an attempt to diffuse their frustrations over the regionās spreading epidemic. Yet, returning to the political quagmire that is America keeps me hopeful that sheltering in Mumbai will become easier. Rocks tossed or not, Iām staying in place. Oddly, despite not eating much, Iām gaining weight, it must be stress. Supplies have run thin, some are hoarding and thereās talk of a 2 week prohibition on supply trucks entering Anand Nagar.
Insomnia: Depression has set in and money has mostly ran out. Immediately before lockdown, I was given a promotion but as of yesterday, the company I worked for has permanently shut their doors. Iāve just now realized that I havenāt left my house, let alone gotten out of the broken cot for days. I look at the clock, itās 5:50 AM, the allotted time for shopping. Getting groceries at dawn isnāt a matter of waking at dawn; I havenāt slept in days either, just sat on this cot watching time go by. Insomnia is starting to take a toll, Iām beginning to hallucinate, time has lost all meaning, at times days go by in minutes yet other times, minutes last for a small eternity. It has been days since Iāve had a face to face conversation with another human.
Home Invaders: Somewhat dazed, I sit on my bed contemplating the meaninglessness of time when thereās nothing to do. Jolted from my daydream-like state, thereās a pounding sound on the door. The sound is getting louder. I hear shouting. The words come into focus, āforeigner, weāre coming in! Weāre breaking the door down,ā says the unfamiliar voices. I spring to my feet and bolt the door. The pounding becomes more and more rapid and fear takes a hold of me. But then I hear a familiar voice, the voice of my neighbor, she shouts something in Marathi and the marauders leave. I fall into a sleep and donāt wake for 2 days. Food was cut off for 2 weeks, I had to get a bite to eat from theĀ Hanuman Mandir(18). They handed out plates of rice and lentils.
Vigilantes: Days go by and panic worsens among residents of this MumbaiĀ chawl(8). Due to rising fears, vigilantes begin to safeguard the streets from āroaming.ā These sentinels attempt to impose restrictions of their own device on me: they inform me that I am not permitted to walk along certain roads because they are afraid that I carry the virus, this happened once before on a late night walk but now itās the norm, although Iām merely in search of a store to buy necessities and wearing a mask. In the end, these vigilantes wonāt cause a reduction in hanging out on the street, this I know, but a few of this slumās inhabitants get to feel empowered because they are the new sheriff in town. I guess we all need a whipping-post and thereās good among the wicked, a local temple and a few individuals are handing out grains to the needy. We are all needy here. At this point, the lockdown has gone on for months.
The New sheriffs in Town: Currently, thereās two police along Mumbaiās backstreets, those who were given authority by the Mumbai Municipal Corporation (MNC) and vigilantes. Feeling harassed and completely rejected by society, loneliness takes hold of me, I begin to search for a way out of this ācity of dreams,ā maybe returning home while a buffoonish leader (Trump) who makes a mockery of the US isnāt so bad, I think to myself. All things considered, itās nearly impossible to abide by laws set by both the government and a hysteric mob anyway.
No Payment Until April: At least I have a roof over my head, I think to myself, an article inĀ Aljazeera, Foreign Tourists Face Hostility in India Amid Coronavirus Panic informs that an Israeli woman was evicted from her home in Goa due to locals fear of contracting COVID-19 and others were forced out of their hotel (Purohit), I can go a day without milk, but not without a bed, not to mention, the police had recently found tourists living in a cave because they are trapped in India and have ran out of money (NBC). I havenāt yet been evicted, but am also out of funds and live under constant threat of eviction. Rent payment is suspended until April (Delhi High Court). I lay on my broken cot, I will try to get it fixed on the black market, and continue to doom-scroll taking note of the dayās death tally and searching for any sign of things getting better. Passover has passed but Covid hasnāt.
Nobody Goes Home for That Price: I do some research and come to find that theĀ US Department of StateĀ is offering ārepatriation flights,ā these flights carry a $2000 price tag (a promissory note for the aforementioned amount must be signed before boarding the plane) and a random port of arrival is where Iāll end up if I choose to return home through the ever so benevolent government, how can anyone pay this price during a Pandemic (this thing has been upgraded to a Pandemic, how lovely words are). Upon arriving at this port, the returning expat must find their way home through barricades and the threat of being infected by Corona (Genter). I harden my heart and again resolve to weather the storm in Mumbai. Besides, if the promissory note isnāt paid, I will be banned from international travel. Iām a Digital Nomad. I travel, work at an incredibly low rate and can only afford to survive in developing countries.
Augustās Heat: The death toll jets upward and 75 degree angle, itās updated daily. While bombarded with an endless stream of bad news, jeering has morphed into threats of violence, sleep is still a rare occurrence, heat rash has caused the parts of my body covered by clothing to become as freckled as Little Orphan Annie, Iām as poor to boot, my field of vision is filled sprawling geometric patterns and my temper is quick.
Worse Than the Daughters of Temperance: As the situation thickens, stores begin to deny me service. A shopkeeper refuses to sell me certain items that are in stock and we arenāt barred from sale, I have just been informed that liquor and tobacco have become contraband. The more than nagging need to satiate addictions during lockdown aside, this proprietor allows Indian nationals to purchase products, but denies me the same goods. Heād have me starve to death! I, like all outsiders, have become the face of a faceless virus that has ruined lives, in fact āMuslims were initially blamed for the spread of infection (Siddiqui),ā a group that is no less a part of India than Sikhs(10), yet, like Jews anywhere in the world, are perpetual outsiders. All things considered, this is mass hysteria! Nobody I know has died from Covid yet. A sampling error? Perhaps. Nonetheless, I sit in my room without a breeze (I donāt have A/C) and ponder what society has come to, Freudās mob mentality.
Theyāre Trying to Starve Me Out: That shopkeeper has changed his mind, I returned to him to buy groceries but he yelled āgo away foreigner white face.ā He then insisted that a clerk not give me an old box, although I was carrying a heavy load and had no tote. The hypocrisy of people here is an in the face classism, a rule for me and a rule for them. The Covid cases are increasing exponentially! So are my headaches. Theyāre not headaches as much as a feeling that every nerve ending in my body is being prodded with a needle and the inside of my brain shrinking. Now, I sit at home alone, the rats scurry across the floor, the heat comes in waves, time stands still and thereās nothing to laugh about, Covid cases are in the hundred thousands and the death toll is staggering as well.
Befriending the Gang: Augustās heat, insomnia, constant dread and lack of nutrition are getting to me, I donāt know how much longer I can go on. Even local pharmacists have begun to convey a fear of me and insist that I have a cough when I go in to ask for something for heat rash. Unlike the grocers, the pharmacists sell me goods, but with great hesitation and suspicion in regards to my presence in thisĀ chawl. Finding tobacco is now the chief task of every day. Itās sold on the black market, along with chocolate, alcohol and meat, at exorbitant prices. So, like a heroin addict, I slink up to a back alley leant-to and buy a pack of smokes. Itās just like buying illicit drugs: thereās an obligatory period of making small-talk, ambiguity over whether or not the man actually has tobacco, razzing, phone calls and scurrying about to find it. In the end, I walk away with cigarettes at European prices and a dirty feeling.
Suicide Among Death: Lockdown continues and most in thisĀ chawlĀ have lost morale. The neighbor sent her son over to tinker on my electric piano. She told me of what has been dubbed The Flower House Girl. A young woman hung herself from rafters due to endless confinement to her home and the bleak picture of tomorrow that the daily news paints. What a shame! I had wondered what the fire department was doing on the main street. They took her out of the third story window with the truckās ladder.
Another Year Another Onion: Did I mention itās a New Year? I didnāt even notice that the year had changed, the date passed unceremoniously and with festivities. Again, the police have rebuilt the wall that surrounds thisĀ chawl, tightening the perimeter, Iām not sure if itās to keep Covid out or us in. In any case, food has scarcely made it through the makeshift wall and news is that food supplies will be cut off for 2 weeks, again. In any case, that which makes it in is mostly sequestered by the gangs, anyhow. Itās that Iāve got the most onions mentality(12). Despite rarely eating, I continue to gain weight. Speaking of onions, there are now over nine million confirmed Covid cases and farmers are protesting the price gouging of seeds, stating that āWe are the ones who have provided food, milk, vegetables when the whole country was in lockdown, we were still toiling in the fields. It is the governmentā not gathering in New Delhi āthat has put us at risk by introducing these laws during Covid (Hollingsworth et al).ā My heart is with these brave men and women and if I had the strength I would be beside them. All things considered, despite the news and friendsā proclamations that a new year brings new hope, this may be an onion of a year too.
The Walls Close In: Yet again, the police have reduced the circumference of the wall. I feel claustrophobic or like Iām slowly, very slowly drowning. I go to bed, but sleep doesnāt come. I hear the rats fight over the last morsels of food in thisĀ chawl, when I wake, thereās inevitably a rodent corpse on the footpath in the ally that leads to my house. Food has been cut off for 2 weeks. I gave the last of my supplies to a family, in total it amounted to a pound of rice and a pound of lentils. Now, the cot is less of a fishing net with big holes and more of an empty frame. I lay on the floor instead, will I be able to get somebody to fix it, I donāt know. I have to get my family to send money first.
An Altercation: We are now allowed an evening walk, so I venture out to the usual chants, a ragtag team of would-be thugs follow me. A wave of exhaustion washes over me and my pace slows to a crawl in front of the BJP(14) Office. As I cross in front of the office, beneath the flag, a scrawny slum-bastard walk up and says āare you British?ā āIām American,ā I reply. āI hear they call you Hari(15).ā I can smell the alcohol on his breath as he speaks. āWhat of it?ā āMore like Harry Potter.ā āI guess thatās funny,ā I say and try to walk away, but he grabs me by the collar and takes a swing, he misses. I return the blow, my fist makes contact with his face. My heart is racing. I fear an all out retaliation when, like roaches from beneath rot-wood, members of the local gang emerge from the alleys and come to my aid. I had been buying tobacco from them, at highway robbery prices for weeks, and so itās in their interest to act as my vigilante guardians, in some regards, the gangs are better than the police, or at least their corruption and self service is laid out on the table for all to see, where the cops are supposed to protect and serve, protecting and serving often isnāt the case here, it comes down to ethnic and caste schisms.
Two Deaths and a Ghost: Itās another day and the death toll has spiked again. Feeling that I escaped death and death being the only thing the news reports on I begin to wonder, had I been killed by a mob, would my death have been reported as a Covid death? Is the death toll real? Thereās a little hospital in thisĀ chawl, itās certainly not inundated with the dying and morticians donāt walk the streets singing ābring out your dead,ā as they did during the Black Plague of 1665. In fact, of the 3 who purportedly died in Anand Nagar, one was an elderly with Emphysema, the other was a suicide and the last one, I saw him walking down the street the other day, risen from the grave as by some Covid era miracle. Truth be told, he had gone back to his family home and returned. Not an easy task, much like during the Holocaust, traveling papers are required to go anywhere, thereās not even any trains, minus a few for displaced workers. A combination of lack of food, a growing mistrust of the governmentās intention with regards to lockdown and dire times brings these lyrics to mind: My wife fixed up a tater stew/ We poured the kids full of it/ Mighty thin stew, though/ You could read a magazine right through it. Always have figured/ That if itād been just a little bit thinner, Some of these here politicians/ Coulda seen through it(21).
Are the politicians duped or am I? What about herd immunity? I feel like Iām living in the Dust Bowl, except thereās no storm of dust and the sky isnāt black. The enemy is invisible. Or, am I the enemy? So much for relativism.
Police and Indians: On another outing, again attempting to purchase essentials, those things that whether for sustenance or pleasure, an invisible hand has decided that I may indulge in, I find that even local authorities seem misinformed about the number of foreign nationals in India with Covid. Recently, police stopped me for questioning and informed me that āforeigners are the cause of Corona Virus.ā After looking for a quarantine stamp on my hands several times and not finding one they insisted that I run back home and followed me on motorcycles. This was witnessed by several locals who cheered the police on. As the police resounded sentiments of thisĀ chawlāsĀ inhabitants, it reinforced negative feelings. I didnāt eat that night. The days following the police harassment, locals continued jeering me by saying āthe police will come and hit you,ā while mimicking the thwack of a cane on their posterior. Not just are they misinformed, theyād like to see me hung.
Read the Sign: In case you feel incredulous in regards to my claims about placing a stamp on the hands of foreigners and the policeās blindingly Orwellian allegiance to the BJP, the party who blamed Covid on Muslims and foreigners,Ā The National Library of MedicineĀ has this to say about it: tourists who arrived in India from affected countries were put in quarantine for 14 days in their port of arrival, their āleft hand was stamped with inkā to maintain the date and time of their home quarantine, āa move that could risk assault, due to stigma towards Covid suspects [foreigners].ā Individuals violating the quarantine can be penalized via Indian penal code Section 188, 269 and 270 (Siddiqui). The police, like the locals, are looking for a whipping-post and have a draconian view about foreign nationals in India during this crisis, what a hoot it would be to cane them. Bollywood is no āCity of Dreams,ā in fact, misinformation abounds here, signs, obviously posted by Conservative and nationalistic Hindu Vegans, reads as so: āWays to avoid Covid/ Donāt eat meat/ Donāt smoke/ Donāt talk to foreigners.ā I no longer see the good that I jotted down in an earlier journal entry. Also, tired of the word āmisinformation,ā not sure who gets to decide whatās misinformation, although I myself used it in this entry, just tired: days crawl by and the feeling of isolation causes a pressure on my cranium and a meaninglessness to all things.
Mending a Bed: Despite having become a pariah, I was able to get the cot fixed, for a small fee, a tailor was willing to come over, and work against the law, they despise me, but like money enough to look past it. The work doesnāt look great, itās rigged. Most everything here is rigged. Iām never sure if this is the ingenuity of a race of impoverished people or the result of an attitude that declares good enough is good. In the end, most everything is a hodgepodge of corrugated steel, broken bits of wood and rope with exposed electrical wires that run through water and the elements in general. Iāve always said, if the manpower here became a collected force and decided to stop pollution, get the rivers clean, enforce something like an ADA, demand fair housing they would be an unstoppable force. Instead, they divide themselves along ethnic schisms.
A Pickpocket: Food has returned to the stores and shopkeepers are serving me, but I was pickpocketed at the register. I took my wallet out to pay, right before my eyes a man reached in my wallet and took a 500 out, it was the last of the money I had. I came home empty handed. For the first time since my divorce, I broke down and cried. Now I sit wiping my eyes. Is all hope for humanity lost? I cannot answer. Besides Covid, thereās so much political turmoil! It looks as though there wonāt be a smooth transition of power this time.
What Iāve Learned From the Steppenwolf: Iām concerned for the nationās migrant workers, other visiting foreign nationals and those who descend from Mizoram and Assam, these individuals may be more prone to the psychological effects of loneliness than myself. Culturally, Indian life centers around an extended family, whereas Iām more akin to Herman Hesseās Steppenwolf. All in all, itās tough to live overseas in the best case scenario and down-right depressing when youāve become public enemy number one. But, as I said, I have a tough enough skin to survive this, but there are those whoāve been cannibalized by their own society. Anyway, lockdown should end in 3 weeks, the infection rate is on the decline. We are now aloud out in the evenings and I have taken to sitting with friends in front of the Rukhmini(16) Temple. Itās like the opening line of a joke, a Jew, a Muslim and a Hinduā¦ Among us, thereās a Muslim, a Jew, a Christian and a Hindu priest. All in all, I need them not, but itās nice to have some companionship, even if thereās little communication. I have returned to good graces.
Family Matters: Although I feel alone, Iām not jealous of Indiaās family structure. Locals often ask me about my family, casual things like āhow is your mother?ā āI donāt know. I donāt keep in touch with my family very much,ā I respond. Itās a matter of privacy and staying out of gossip. Here, grown men never grow up, they are fed and coddled by their mothers. I had recently met a man who canāt cook for himself, nor wash his own clothes and still occasionally sleeps in bed with his mother. Speaking of men, spouse abuse, along with drinking, is on the rise. Itās not uncommon to see and hear it. Too often, after dark, I witness, when I sneak out for a walk to break the munatiny, men hitting women by the open air temple that my house is adjacent to. Speaking of temples, Hanukkah recently passed. I lit a makeshift menorah, but even that gave me little joy. As for now, the best thing is drinking chai by the little Rukmini temple.
Down With the Wall: The wall has come down! Lockdown isnāt over, but the wall has come down. Alas, air travel has returned, the government has announced āair bubblesā and Iām returning to America. After everything, I was never again treated as more than a second-class citizen in thatĀ chawlĀ but it matters not, Iām leaving! In the end, the localsā reaction to me and the psychological impact of the loneliness, their words and actions heave upon me, have caused deep scars. On a more disappointing note, all local newspapers have declined to publish my recollections of lockdown. An earnest question, were we fed false dichotomies, ones that stated wear a mask or everyone dies and get the vaccine or everyone dies, just for some political experiment or agenda? Itās just odd that after the farmers protested the Covid number began to decrease.
Integrity Intact
No Amnesty for the Wicked: One might say, youāve survived the worst, why bring this up at all? Isnāt it time for amnesty? I feel the answers to this was best put into words in the video Pandemic Amnesty: Do you Forgive and Forget and so I will summarize what the author said, āthere were things that happened that there needs to be a recognition of, and there needs to be a public apology. There needs to be a promise that this never happens again. There needs to be people who actually pay for their behavior, potentially criminal behavior. [ā¦] Until the people who did harm admit that they did harm this kind of thing will just keep repeating itself. [ā¦] Some people were victims, other people were perpetrators, and then there [were] also enablers (Wand).ā For instance,Ā The Deccan HeraldĀ reports that there have been āattacks on people from Indiaās northeastern region [ā¦], suspecting them of being carriers of the virus.ā Assaulting your own people is like cannibalism, thatās all there is to it! As it was written in the newspaper, apart from being called āCoronaā or āChinki(9)ā Indiaās [Asiatic] people were spat on and forcibly quarantined, despite showing no Covid symptoms, all because of their looks and an ignorant fear that anyone who looks different are the root cause of the Pandemic. Also, they were denied entry into their apartment complexes, evicted, merely threatened with eviction or forced out of restaurants to make others comfortable and none wanted to share transport with them (Karmakar). Of all things, itās not time for amnesty.
Ignorance isnāt an Excuse: There needs to be punishment for these wicked deeds! Thereāll be no retribution for foreigners who suffered in India, but locals, those from minority communities, who had just days before lockdown been upstanding citizens, deserve retribution and possibly reparations. There those who died from the virus and those who died at the selfishness and ignorance of mankind, for those who died by the hand of man have this to say: āTo forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time ( Elie Wiesel).ā Ignorance, for good reason, has never been, nor shall it be an excuse for breaking laws and committing atrocities.Ā The AtlanticĀ is wrong in their assertion that we should just forgive and forget (Oster). Perhaps, in the name of healing, itās time to forgive, but should never forget!
A Clear Conscience: During The Covid Outbreak, I may have lost my mind, found myself in complete isolation and on the brink of starvation at times, but at least I kept my dignity. I threw no stones and attempted to obey the laws, even those that actively brought hardship into my life. I defended myself when needed, I live by the adage āwalk gently and carry a big stick.ā As for the war of the ethnicities in India, I guess itās none of my business, alone, I canāt defend the minorities. And in regards to retribution for the wicked, my hands are also tied. However, I wonāt give amnesty, not in my heart. Forgetting and moving on, as Osterās article suggests (Oster) is, to reiterate, akin to allowing the cycle to repeat again. In the end, my travels have provided me with armor to protect against cabin fever, Iāve endured hardships and loneliness in remote villages of Nepal and have been āthe strangerā in the metropolitans of Hong Kong, Bangladeshā¦ But there are those among the Indians whose identity and self-worth come from a tightly knit family and friend structure, many of which took their own lives due to isolation. Others starved to death because of lack of income and others died due to the rejection of medical services. Luckily, I was not immune to the effects of isolation, but well insulated from the threat of Corona by aĀ chawlĀ that exists off the radar and societiesā fear of foreigners, local inhabitants keep me at armās length and so, I didnāt catch the virus during lockdown.
Notes
1: The views herein are not the of WTDA but the author. At WTDA we publish a variety of news, depending on what we deem to be an interesting story at the moment.
2: At the time of writing, Covid hadnāt yet been declared a Pandemic.
3: Citation no longer available at The World Health Organization.
4: The author of this journal wants it to be known that they donāt, nor did they ever, believe that masks are/were an effective way of preventing Covid-19 but were forced to wear a face covering by Indian law. At the time, they obeyed the law.
5: Public.
6: Hyped media, having no real effect on the life of the author.
7: A long scarf worn by Indian women.
8: The Marathi word for neighbourhood which is colloquially used to denote a slum.
9: North Indian slang for Indiaās Asiatic population.
10: A religion that combines attributes of Islam and Hinduism and originated in India.
11: Guests are G-D.
12: In 2019, due to flooding, there was an onion shortage. An entrepreneur had been hoarding onions. At the time, not only did he declare that āonions are the new goldā he purportedly sold the onions for 3 times the market value. To the author, it serves as a symbol of the selfish psychological state that caused some of the worst aspects of Covid lockdown.
13: A 3 day Islamic spiritual event in Indiaās capital hosted by a 100 years Islamic Missionary Movement. Due to the cases reaching over 300 after the event, the meme was coined: China is the āproducersā of the virus, and Muslims are the ādistributors.ā
14: A political party, of which Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the leader of. Every neighborhood has a BJP office.
15: A common male name in India and regional pronunciation of the Anglo name Harry.
16: The primary wife of the Hindu G-D Krishna.
17: The name of the slum in which the writer lived during lockdown.
18: A temple in the slum in which the foreigner lived during lockdown. The temple is dedicated to the monkey G-D, a deity who helped Rama in the Hindu epic, the Ramayana.
19: A poker-like card game in which the players make melds with three cards.
20: Mending Wall by Robert Frost.
21: Talkinā Dust Bowl Blues by Woodie Guthrie.
22: A dance form native to the west Indian state of Gujarat, performed in October to honour the Hindu Goddess Durga. It is also celebrated in Maharashtra. People gather on the streets, dancing in pairs of men and women where they rhythmically click sticks together.
23: The largest ethnic group in mainland China, about 91% of the population.
24: A South Indian dish made of rice and lentils. Itās a comfort food thatās supposed to aid in healing.
25: Brutalist architecture emerged during the 1950s in the United Kingdom, among the reconstruction projects of the post-war era.These buildings characterised by minimalism and bare building materials. They are commonly seen today in old Soviet Union countries and Central Asia, reminding many of totalitarianism.
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Covid Is Back But Hereās Why We Need Not Scare Ourselves Of The New Variant Thatās RavagingĀ China
Photo by Kate Trifo on Unsplash Cases in China are skyrocketing and although they have been doing so for months now, scaremongering in India has only begun recently. Let me not go into why that might be and instead stick to the virus and its shenanigans. Reports from China indicate BF.7 has the strongest infection ability out of the Omicron subvariants in the country, being quicker to transmitā¦
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India's COVID-19 Vaccination Success: A Global Leader
Indiaās COVID-19 vaccination journey is a testament to resilience and innovation, propelling it to the forefront of global healthcare. With over 2.2 billion doses administered as of 2024, Indiaās campaign stands among the largest and most complex vaccination efforts worldwide. Significant progress has been made. However, the road to achieving full immunization has been riddled with challenges.ā¦
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