Indians in Wuhan say strict lockdown, social distancing only ways to contain COVID-19

| | Beijing/Wuhan
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Indians in Wuhan say strict lockdown, social distancing only ways to contain COVID-19

Thursday, 09 April 2020 | PTI | Beijing/Wuhan

As the people in China’s Wuhan celebrated the end of the 11-week shutdown imposed to contain coronavirus, some Indians who stayed put in the city enduring the surge of the pandemic has a message for India — lockdown and self-isolation are the only ways to prevent COVID-19 from spreading.

The Indians in Wuhan are jubilant and happy that their over two-month long life-threatening ordeal came to an end on Wednesday. “For over 73 days, I stayed put in my room, stepped out to my lab close by with permission. Today I struggle to speak properly because I have not spoken much all these weeks as there is no one to speak because everyone stayed indoors,” Arunjith T Sathrajith, a hydrobiolgist working in Wuhan, told PTI over phone. India evacuated about 700 Indians and foreigners through two special Air India flights, but Arunjith, who hailed from Kerala, decided to stay put and brave it all because he felt “escaping” from a troubled place is not the ideal thing for “Indians to do”.

He is one of the few Indians who chose to stay back in Wuhan, a city of 11 million people and the epicentre of the pandemic.

He also thought his return to Kerala could endanger his parents and in-laws who are all over 50 years of age besides his wife and child.

A microbiologist-turned-hydrobiologist who is taking part in a research project in the central Chinese city, he said India has done the right thing to go for a nationwide lockdown but the major problem for the country could surface when the monsoon season arises as people’s immunity levels go down.

That is the time virus could turn virulent, Arunjith said. If there is any lesson Wuhan offers, it is the strict lockdown and people’s participation in self-isolation campaign, he said.

Another Indian scientist who also stayed put in Wuhan fully agreed with Arunjith.

“For about 72 days I have shut myself in my room. My neighbour has three very young children. I have not seen them coming out of their flat even once. “Today I am happy and relieved I survived but still not willing to venture out because I could run into virus carriers,” the scientist, who preferred to remain anonymous, said advising Indians to strictly follow the lockdown.

He said that lockdown of Wuhan few days before could have helped prevent the virus from spreading out like wildfire.  He preferred to remain in Wuhan and declined the Indian embassy’s offer because he was concerned about his family back home.

“Considering the hospitality I enjoyed, I was confident I would be taken care of by my employer and local friends and they did,” he said. Arunjith said he and his fellow researchers began hearing about the spread of a vicious virus in Wuhan from the second week of December and things progressively began deteriorating with fear spreading among people as they began wearing masks.

But even after the lifting of the lockdown in Wuhan, still not many people are stepping out as there is lingering fear about the asymptomatic cases. 

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