Southeast Asia Cast its
Corona Imprints on India
Syed Ali Mujtaba
Chennai/ Tamil Nadu/India: A 49-year-old man from
Thailand who had traveled to India on a religious tour died at the Coimbatore
Medical College Hospital in Tamil Nadu on March 17, 2020. He tested negative
for COVID-19 and his cause of death was renal failure and septicemia.
However inquiries
about him revealed he had traveled from Thailand in a group of seven people and
when two days later others were identified to be part of his group, two among
them tested positive for Covid-19.
This chance encounter with the Thailand national at the Coimbatore
airport in Tamil Nadu has now triggered a nationwide search for the Southeast
Asian nationals who had come to India to attend Islamic religious congregation
held at in New Delhi from March 13-15.
After the event many attendee went back to
their native places, some traveled inside India for religious preaching and
still many stayed back in the dormitory of the building after March 15, when
Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a three-week nationwide lock down, on
March 24.
Among the 3000 people who attended the Delhi congregation at least
10 attendees who had tested positive have died due to the Covid -19 infections.
Indian Home Ministry in a press release said, ‘as many as
2100 foreigners visited India for Tablighi activities since January 1, 2020.
While as on March21, approximately 824 of them were dispersed in
different parts of the country, 216 of them were staying in the building in New
Delhi.
The foreign nationals mostly belonged from several Southeast Asian
countries particularly; Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Myanmar besides other
countries and had come to India for Tabligh activities.
Among the foreign nationals there were 50 cases that were
tested COVID-19 positive, 16 cases among them belonged to nationals from
Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand.
Tablighi Jamaat is an Islamic evangelical organization that
has presence in several parts of India and countries in South Asia and South-East
Asia.
In the southern state of Tamil Nadu an official said there
were a total 167 foreign nationals who came to state for this purpose from New
Delhi, at a press briefing in Chennai.
“Seventy-eight of the 167 foreign nationals has gone back to their
respective countries. Eighty-nine are still in Tamil Nadu and have been quarantined,”
the official added.
Among them 14 Indonesia Islamic preachers were found to be
tested positive in in Salem district as on 25 March, the official said.
In related development in the nearby Telengana state, seven Indonesians
were tested positive for Coiv- 19 in Kurnool district as on March16.
In Jharkhand, the eastern state of India a young Malaysian woman
tested positive on March 30. The Malaysian woman was among the 24 persons,
18 foreign nationals and six Indian citizens, found staying in a mosque in the
state capital Ranchi.
According to news
reports appearing from Southeast Asian countries authorities in Indonesia and
Malaysia are investigating to determine how many of their citizens may have
been infected as part of a new of COVID-19 cluster emerging from the Muslim
congregation event held in New Delhi.
Indonesians and Malaysians reportedly were among the majority
of the foreign nationals those attending the event held in the Tablighi Jamaat
Markaz at Nizamudin in New Delhi.
It is reported that Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno
Marsudi, at a press conference in Jakarta had said, “There were 731 Tablighi
members from Indonesia who had gone to India but I am unaware of their status
who had attended the New Delhi event. “
Similar report from Malaysia
says its Health Director-General Noor Hisham Abdullah had said that he was
investigating about his countrymen who had attended the gathering in India.
"We are trying to get more information from our counterpart in India,” he
told reporters in Putrajaya.
In India there is a big debate going
on with the blame game going on in a circle between government and the organizers.
Both are accusing each other for negligence and irresponsible behavior towards this
human catastrophe.
The organizers say that it was the
responsibility of the government to screen the foreign national at the airport
before sending them to the conference. Secondly, even after their repeated
information, the government had not heeded to their predicaments.
The government on the other hand
blames the organizers for negligent and irresponsible behavior in not stopping
their activities when the Covid -19 monster loomed large and risking a large number
people towards fatalities.
It appears both the government and the organizers have valid points to score
some brownie points, the fact remains that it is because of the foreign nationals’
presence and a huge gathering being assembled that a cluster Covid-19 positive cases
has emerged from one place.
In sum there are two basic lesson
learnt from this controversy. One, at the outset the foreigner’s participants could
have been screened for health reasons before being allowed to participate in
the conference. Second, seeing the gravity of the situation the organizers
should have cancelled the conference and may have refrained from such event that
put such a larger of people to fatal health risks.
Syed Ali Mujtaba is a journalist based in Chennai. He can be contacted
at syedalimujtaba2007@gmail.com
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