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‘Please forgive me’: PM Modi’s apology to the poor hit by national lockdown

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday sought forgiveness for putting people in trouble by ordering a complete lockdown in the country but said the fight against coronavirus is one of life and death.

“My conscience tells me that you will definitely forgive me as I had to take certain decisions which have put you in a lot difficulty,” he said on his radio programme Mann ki Baat.

“Especially, when I look at my poor brothers and sisters, I definitely feel that they must be thinking what kind of a Prime minister is this who has placed us in this situation,” he added.

“The lockdown is for you to protect you and your family. You have to show this patience for many more days,” he added.

Modi has already addressed the nation on the issue of the coronavirus outbreak twice in the last few days.

The Prime Minister had announced a 21-day nationwide lockdown in his address on March 24 as part of the government’s stringent efforts to tackle the spread of Covid-19 that has infected nearly 1000 people and killed 25 in India so far.

Before that, he had called for a Janta Curfew on March 22, which was in place for 14 hours as people stayed off the roads and public places during this period.

He announced a new fund for citizens on Saturday, PM-CARES or Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund, in an emergency situation as the magnitude of the crisis due to the outbreak of coronavirus unfolds.

“People from all walks of life expressed their desire to donate to India’s war against COVID-19. Respecting that spirit, the Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund has been constituted. This will go a long way in creating a healthier India,” Prime Minister has tweeted.

The Prime Minister’s Mann ki Baat radio programme is aired on the last Sunday of every month.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...ann-ki-baat/story-Qz66DWHXSMQUXMfak9DMaP.html
 
It was our Prime Minister who took this decision but every tom, dick and harry is going after Kejriwal as if he was the one who put us under lockdown. Not saying lockdown is a bad thing but once again it was implemented without any proper planning. They say there is no shortage of ration and basic things but when you actually go to buy them, you come back empty handed. :inti
 
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday sought forgiveness for putting people in trouble by ordering a complete lockdown in the country but said the fight against coronavirus is one of life and death.

“My conscience tells me that you will definitely forgive me as I had to take certain decisions which have put you in a lot difficulty,” he said on his radio programme Mann ki Baat.

“Especially, when I look at my poor brothers and sisters, I definitely feel that they must be thinking what kind of a Prime minister is this who has placed us in this situation,” he added.

“The lockdown is for you to protect you and your family. You have to show this patience for many more days,” he added.

Modi has already addressed the nation on the issue of the coronavirus outbreak twice in the last few days.

The Prime Minister had announced a 21-day nationwide lockdown in his address on March 24 as part of the government’s stringent efforts to tackle the spread of Covid-19 that has infected nearly 1000 people and killed 25 in India so far.

Before that, he had called for a Janta Curfew on March 22, which was in place for 14 hours as people stayed off the roads and public places during this period.

He announced a new fund for citizens on Saturday, PM-CARES or Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund, in an emergency situation as the magnitude of the crisis due to the outbreak of coronavirus unfolds.

“People from all walks of life expressed their desire to donate to India’s war against COVID-19. Respecting that spirit, the Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund has been constituted. This will go a long way in creating a healthier India,” Prime Minister has tweeted.

The Prime Minister’s Mann ki Baat radio programme is aired on the last Sunday of every month.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...ann-ki-baat/story-Qz66DWHXSMQUXMfak9DMaP.html

PM Modi Absolutely did the right thing. India has over a billion people, you cant prepare for this as per instructions in a user manual. No solution will be perfect when you are dealing with such a huge population.
 
Good article from India's premier think tank (ORF) on the brain-dead manner in which this lockdown was imposed. It was an illogical and dumb move by Modi.


Covid-19 total lockdown: An economic and humanitarian disaster

RUPA SUBRAMANYA


India has launched what by any standard is the most draconian and complete nation-wide lockdown of any country affected by novel Coronavirus or Covid-19. This is unusual for several reasons. First, reported infections in India as of March 27, 2020 are 747 out of a total population of 1.3 billion. Of these, 20 have died, and 66 have recovered. What is more, of all the active cases, each and every one of them has shown only mild symptoms. By any metric, India has a far less serious COVID-19 crisis than many advanced and emerging countries.

It has been suggested, including by me, that the low reported infection rate might reflect a very low testing rate in India. So far, India has tested a little more than 27,000 samples or a testing rate of about 20 per million. Compare this to testing rates of more than 6000 in South Korea and more than 600 in Spain.

It is theoretically possible therefore that the infection rate in India is much higher; but if this is true, then it raises another puzzle, why isn’t an already ill prepared public health system overwhelmed with people showing up with COVID-19 like symptoms? Why aren’t thousands of people on ventilators? Given India’s large elderly population and many a kind of respiratory problems due to pollution and other reasons, why aren’t thousands of people on ventilators and in overcrowded hospitals? If any of this has happened, it’s a well-guarded secret. This might just be possible in a totalitarian state like China but it’s impossible in open and democratic India. Despite its well-known flaws, Indian media, to say nothing of foreign media in India, would have jumped on such a story of alleged cover up.

The other noteworthy feature of the Indian situation is a very low fatality rate when computed as a percentage of all reported cases, as low as 2.6 percent. Contrast this with fatality rates as staggeringly high as 10 percent in Italy and in the US of 1.5 percent, just a little lower than India. Apart from outliers such as Italy, most countries have fatality rates around 1-2 percent give or take.

The other noteworthy feature of the Indian situation is a very low fatality rate when computed as a percentage of all reported cases, as low as 2.6 percent. Contrast this with fatality rates as staggeringly high as 10 percent in Italy and in the US of 1.5 percent, just a little lower than India

On the face of it, the Indian data suggest no reason for panic, especially given India’s early and aggressive action in closing international borders to travellers from affected regions — much before such action was undertaken in places like the US and Europe. The panic in India and elsewhere emanates from statistical and epidemiological models which predict massive fatality rates if draconian action is not taken to curb the spread of COVID-19. It turns out that these models are very likely wrong and have overstated the probable number of deaths from the virus.

Especially egregious is a recent New York Times op-ed by Ramanan Laxminarayan, an economist and epidemiologist who praised India’s lockdown as necessary to save millions of lives because in his apparently model based judgement 500 million Indians could be infected and the consequences would be dire in the absence of draconian measures. The author claims to have a model but the https://cddep.org/covid-19/ he provides has a barebones verbal description of what the model purports to do with no presentation of either the mathematical model or statistical methodology and jumping directly to his alarmist conclusions. Yet, this dubious piece of research which cannot be replicated has dominated thinking about the spread of COVID-19 and ways to respond to it.

On March 26, the United Kingdom downgraded COVID-19 and said it is no longer a High Consequence Infectious Disease (HCID). In particular, low mortality rates were cited as a reason for the downgrade. Reacting to the UK announcement, Deborah Birx, the White House Response Coordinator for COVID-19, went so far as to say that the doomsday fatality scenarios predicted by widely publicized models are very likely wrong. Specifically, she argued that either infection rates, especially of those asymptomatic, are much higher than we thought, or the transmission mechanism is not correctly understood. Even more extraordinary, she stated bluntly: "The predictions of the models don't match the reality on the ground either in China, South Korea or Italy.”

This is the crux of the matter. As argued by Stanford medicine professors Eran Bendavid and Jay Bhattacharya in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal on March 24, a few days prior to the UK decision, there’s a serious methodological error in the way that fatality rates are being computed. Following conventional practice, as we did above, the fatality rate is computed as the number of deaths out of total confirmed cases, converted into a percentage. They correctly argue that this is an upward biased estimate as it commits the fallacy of selection. In other words, confirmed cases are those who’ve obviously shown symptoms and been admitted for treatment. However, the correct denominator is not confirmed cases but the actual total number of infections, a number which is obviously much larger.

In the event that there are many infected people who’re asymptomatic, the number infected will be much larger than the number of confirmed cases, and the correct mortality rate therefore will be much lower by several orders of magnitude. According to their estimates, the true mortality rate is not what we reported above for the US, 1.5 percent, but more like 0.01 percent. If we assume that their calculation would hold true for India as well, the actual mortality rate in India would be an almost unmeasurably small 0.017 percent.

In the event that there are many infected people who’re asymptomatic, the number infected will be much larger than the number of confirmed cases, and the correct mortality rate therefore will be much lower by several orders of magnitude

The public policy implications are very clear.

A disease which has a high infection rate that produces mostly mild symptoms and a mortality rate lower than the common flu is not a non-issue, but it’s not a cause for the levels of panic and paranoia that we’re witnessing around the world, including in India. The obvious issue is that a disease with high infection rates requiring people with even mild symptoms to seek medical help will be a huge burden on the public health system. At some point, as is already happening in some places including the US, hospital beds and ventilators may have to be rationed. There is thus a strong case to ensure testing, screening and enforced self-isolation for those exhibiting COVID-19 like symptoms for the recommended 14 day quarantine period. However, there is no valid argument for a draconian total lockdown of the type that has been imposed in India. For an uncertain and relatively small gain in reduced infections, there is a huge economic, social, and human cost which has already begun to manifest itself.

Good public policy is always based on the best science and most recent and reliable evidence.

Unfortunately, it is not at all clear that science or evidence were the basis of India’s lockdown. The good news is that there is still time to recalibrate in light of new research, as the UK and the US are doing. At a minimum, the government must undertake a cost-benefit analysis to measure the likely gain of a lockdown versus the burgeoning economic costs of basically shutting the economy down, in a country with many poor people already reeling from an economic downturn.

The total lockdown perhaps makes sense in a world in which COVID-19 carries extremely high mortality rates. We now know that this is very likely incorrect. The Narendra Modi government needs to re-think its policy before the lockdown produces an economic and humanitarian disaster.


https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/covid-19-total-lockdown-63799/
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Out of work & facing an uncertain future, millions of our brothers & sisters across India are struggling to find their way back home. It’s shameful that we’ve allowed any Indian citizen to be treated this way & that the Govt had no contingency plans in place for this exodus. <a href="https://t.co/sjHBFqyVZk">pic.twitter.com/sjHBFqyVZk</a></p>— Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) <a href="https://twitter.com/RahulGandhi/status/1243896498963673090?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Man modi’s decision really do backfire big time on occasions
 
It was our Prime Minister who took this decision but every tom, dick and harry is going after Kejriwal as if he was the one who put us under lockdown. Not saying lockdown is a bad thing but once again it was implemented without any proper planning. They say there is no shortage of ration and basic things but when you actually go to buy them, you come back empty handed. :inti

You cant plan this kind of lockdowns and we didn't get enough time to plan.
Shortage of ration and basic things will happen in country like India, it is not that easy to provide without interruption. State government and central government are doing their best.

Not everywhere people coming back with empty hands.
 
More people will die as a result of this lockdown than would have previously. The scenes of the poor crowded on bus stations and even walking 100s of miles home were just heartbreaking.
 
The irony "Modi has consience"... damn, i wonder what the poor/minorities/muslims/etc must be feeling...
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Out of work & facing an uncertain future, millions of our brothers & sisters across India are struggling to find their way back home. It’s shameful that we’ve allowed any Indian citizen to be treated this way & that the Govt had no contingency plans in place for this exodus. <a href="https://t.co/sjHBFqyVZk">pic.twitter.com/sjHBFqyVZk</a></p>— Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) <a href="https://twitter.com/RahulGandhi/status/1243896498963673090?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Awww, its little boy Rahul.. I am so proud of him, he is slowly growing into a teenager. :angel:
 
You cant plan this kind of lockdowns and we didn't get enough time to plan.
Shortage of ration and basic things will happen in country like India, it is not that easy to provide without interruption. State government and central government are doing their best.

Not everywhere people coming back with empty hands.

You cant coordinate something like this when you are dealing with over 1 billion ppl. There is no right or wrong way to this, had the lockdown not been imposed it could have potentially been catastrophic with people lying dead on the streets like Indonesia only much much worse off...
 
Good article from India's premier think tank (ORF) on the brain-dead manner in which this lockdown was imposed. It was an illogical and dumb move by Modi.

Good article.

I also think instead of a countrywide shutdown subcontinent countries need to come up with their own strategy to combat the disease. However the article highlights India's low cases but doesn't mention the most likely reason behind it. it's due to the nature of how the virus spread across the world.

This is a rough time line of how the virus spread

China > European countries
China > European countries > India
China > Iran & European countries > Pakistan

For Pakistan and India to have the virus it first had to spread in Iran and Europe.

India and Pakistan are in the early stage hence the lower rate. They can still curb this by quick testing and isolating. It is a difficult task no doubt.
 
Coronavirus: Centre delivers sharp warning to states after migrant exodus, says will hold officials responsible

The Union government on Sunday firmly reminded state governments that the onus to ensure that their boundaries are sealed was theirs and they should not allow the migrant workforce to cross borders and break the protocol for the nationwide lockdown across the country.

The Centre also decided to isolate the tens of thousands of people who travelled during the lockdown imposed from Tuesday midnight and place them in state-run government quarantine facilities for the next 14 days.

The Centre’s efforts to stop the coronavirus disease from spreading, which appeared to be blindsided by the heavy rush of migrant workforce wanting to reach home on foot, has now made it incumbent on the local administration and the states to ensure wages and food for them at their place of residence.

Thousands of people, men, women and children have been making their way home on foot across several states, despite government orders to stay indoors to break the chain of coronavirus spread.

Following an uproar over the humanitarian crisis that has emerged and led to the death of one worker who was travelling on foot to his hometown in Madhya Pradesh; the Centre has now moved in quickly to halt the movement of people.

Following meetings led by Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba and Home Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla with chief secretaries and state police chiefs on Saturday evening and on Sunday morning, the government reminded states that there were instructions against allowing movement of people across cities or on highways. Only movement of goods will be allowed.

In a statement after the meetings, the Centre warned state officials that District Magistrates and Superintendents of Police will now be held “personally responsible” for implementation of the directions under the Disaster Management Act.

To meet the financial and food security needs of this large workforce, states have been asked to make “adequate arrangements for food and shelter of poor and needy people including migrant labourers at the place of their work.”

States have also been ordered to release wages during the period of the lockdown.

In light of reports that many migrants had cited their inability to pay the rent for their accommodation in and around Delhi for their decision to go back home, the Centre also instructed states to take action against those forcing labourers or students to vacate premises; and not demand house rent from the labourers for the lockdown period.

Yesterday, the Noida administration had issued a similar order to bar landlords from arm twisting their poor tenants to pay the rent or evict them for non-payment.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...responsible/story-WPVPuDzJFsd0LNTREUfd4J.html

a8117b3b-5384-4099-b791-8d83d82d430a.jpg
 
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PM Modi Absolutely did the right thing. India has over a billion people, you cant prepare for this as per instructions in a user manual. No solution will be perfect when you are dealing with such a huge population.

No planning when you have as much as resources as he has at his disposal shows incompetence.
 
Coronavirus: Centre delivers sharp warning to states after migrant exodus, says will hold officials responsible

The Union government on Sunday firmly reminded state governments that the onus to ensure that their boundaries are sealed was theirs and they should not allow the migrant workforce to cross borders and break the protocol for the nationwide lockdown across the country.

The Centre also decided to isolate the tens of thousands of people who travelled during the lockdown imposed from Tuesday midnight and place them in state-run government quarantine facilities for the next 14 days.

The Centre’s efforts to stop the coronavirus disease from spreading, which appeared to be blindsided by the heavy rush of migrant workforce wanting to reach home on foot, has now made it incumbent on the local administration and the states to ensure wages and food for them at their place of residence.

Thousands of people, men, women and children have been making their way home on foot across several states, despite government orders to stay indoors to break the chain of coronavirus spread.

Following an uproar over the humanitarian crisis that has emerged and led to the death of one worker who was travelling on foot to his hometown in Madhya Pradesh; the Centre has now moved in quickly to halt the movement of people.

Following meetings led by Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba and Home Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla with chief secretaries and state police chiefs on Saturday evening and on Sunday morning, the government reminded states that there were instructions against allowing movement of people across cities or on highways. Only movement of goods will be allowed.

In a statement after the meetings, the Centre warned state officials that District Magistrates and Superintendents of Police will now be held “personally responsible” for implementation of the directions under the Disaster Management Act.

To meet the financial and food security needs of this large workforce, states have been asked to make “adequate arrangements for food and shelter of poor and needy people including migrant labourers at the place of their work.”

States have also been ordered to release wages during the period of the lockdown.

In light of reports that many migrants had cited their inability to pay the rent for their accommodation in and around Delhi for their decision to go back home, the Centre also instructed states to take action against those forcing labourers or students to vacate premises; and not demand house rent from the labourers for the lockdown period.

Yesterday, the Noida administration had issued a similar order to bar landlords from arm twisting their poor tenants to pay the rent or evict them for non-payment.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...responsible/story-WPVPuDzJFsd0LNTREUfd4J.html

View attachment 100241

The last thing you want is for the virus to spread. They should have forced people to stay where they are and compensate them with money and food.
 
Entire nation is with NaMo on the decision of locking down the country for 21 days. And by entire nation, I am excluding liberals because their agenda is known to all. You cant plan such lockdown in advance because there will be a stampede, especially in a country like India with 1.5 billion people. Imagine PM said, India is going on a lockdown 3 days from now....there would have been mass panic buying, millions of people on road, millions boarding the train or bus to travel to their native place etc. Chances of coronavirus spread would have been huge incase of a planned lockdown. So looking at the conditions, this was the best step PM could have taken and even WHO praised this move.

I totally agree...many poor migrant workers are suffering due to this sudden lockdown but there was no other choice. PM rightfully apologized to these suffering people but this step was needed to save millions of lives. Even countries like UK, Italy, Spain, Ireland etc. they locked down the country without any prior notice.

In an epic pandemic like this you cant cater to everyone's needs. You have to sacrifice lives of few....to save majority.
 
To the posters on this thread saying you can’t plan for such situations let me remind you of what the government was stating a couple of days ago before the reality came and bite them in the backside:
“Our planning is pre-emptive, pro-active, graded”
 
This guy is still doing his siasat in times of crisis.
 
It was state that botched up not centre, most of the state were already locked before national lockdown began, trains were stopped from sunday onwards ,inter city buses were also stopped and national lockdown began from Wednesday, so everything was stopped already, even then some state can't control it. Most of the government offices were closed or they were asked to work shift wise from Friday onwards just before lockdown.
I know they are facts which Modified haters don't want to see because they love to play politics in this time also.
I repeat it back no train was running, no intercity buses and in most states public transport were suspended, school were closed. Offices were closed already, but hey don't let fact to get in your petty politics.
 
To the posters on this thread saying you can’t plan for such situations let me remind you of what the government was stating a couple of days ago before the reality came and bite them in the backside:
“Our planning is pre-emptive, pro-active, graded”

lol This guy... Its not a failure by any means, it was the best thing the government could do with a nation of a billion people. Ofcourse there will be problems, Indian leadership never said it would be flawless prior to the lockdown taking place...
 
No planning when you have as much as resources as he has at his disposal shows incompetence.

As much resources ? India is a 3rd world country with over a BILLION people, India doesnt have trillions and trillions of $$$ resources to fall back on. Seriously are you Pakistanis just blind when it comes to Modi ? Like literally I feel some of you just speak on emotion and not with your brain....
 
As much resources ? India is a 3rd world country with over a BILLION people, India doesnt have trillions and trillions of $$$ resources to fall back on. Seriously are you Pakistanis just blind when it comes to Modi ? Like literally I feel some of you just speak on emotion and not with your brain....

No, Ind is not a 3rd a world country, its a super power. This is the problem when people begin to believe their own hype. Ind. Like us doesn't have the resources or organisation skills to be able to this like a Western country, who as we have seen are also failing in this respect. It would have better to isolate areas with known cases rather trying to lockdown a billion.
 
Delhi govt has emptied stadiums to shelter migrant workers: CM Kejriwal

Urging industrialists to not let workers go hungry, Keriwal told businessmen to take care of food and shelter for them. "Delhi govt has emptied stadiums, schools to shelter migrant workers. Giving free food to 4 lakh people daily," he added. He also reiterated the health ministry's statement and appealed to all landlords not to force tenants to pay rent and said if anyone is unable to pay, the government would pay for them.

PM requested to stay where you are, if not followed, lockdown will fail: Arvind Kejriwal

Addressing a virtual presser, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal highlighted the issue of migrant workers traveling on foot and other modes of transport in large groups and appealed to them to stay wherever they are. "When PM imposed lockdown, he requested everybody to stay wherever they were. If you don't follow this, lockdown will fail," says Kejriwal. If one person in a huge crowd is infected with Covid-19, all can be affected; the virus can also reach villages, he warned.
 
The 2 most populous countries in the world, one savaged by the virus, one about to be, will remain a beacon of warnings to humanity.

With a population over a Billion, cases in India and China will not be disappearing anytime soon. The result? Many will think twice before visiting India (and China) for YEARS to come.

Then India will run another promotion akin to 'Incredible India' to attract visitors, only this time, the terrorist (according to Indians) is unseen, unknown, and unheard. This is when Modi will beg the world to visit India by apologising globally. Though I wouldnt put it past Modi to blame others.
 
The 2 most populous countries in the world, one savaged by the virus, one about to be, will remain a beacon of warnings to humanity.

With a population over a Billion, cases in India and China will not be disappearing anytime soon. The result? Many will think twice before visiting India (and China) for YEARS to come.

Then India will run another promotion akin to 'Incredible India' to attract visitors, only this time, the terrorist (according to Indians) is unseen, unknown, and unheard. This is when Modi will beg the world to visit India by apologising globally. Though I wouldnt put it past Modi to blame others.

You may very well be right but it seems Your post is more like a personal wishlist we’re you want a million indians drop dead than something written from a point of analysis and facts.
 
You may very well be right but it seems Your post is more like a personal wishlist we’re you want a million indians drop dead than something written from a point of analysis and facts.

Stop being insecure and be yourself.

I never once wished death upon innocent million indians, thats just YOU and your subconcisous thought of eliminating non hindus in India via your leader Modi.

Accept reality, India is not rich, and riddled with poverty.

You have no comeback other than attacking Pakistan.

Time you created a new user profile.
 
No country (including India) took this virus seriously before it was too late.

There was no planning whatsoever.
 
lol This guy... Its not a failure by any means, it was the best thing the government could do with a nation of a billion people. Ofcourse there will be problems, Indian leadership never said it would be flawless prior to the lockdown taking place...
How was it the “best thing” when everyone knew that the migrant workers were going to be the most vulnerable in a lockdown situation.
Despite “pre-emptive, pro-active and graded” preparations, the government failed to plan for the poorest in society.
Which ever way you want to dress this it is a major failure on the part of the central government.
 
How was it the “best thing” when everyone knew that the migrant workers were going to be the most vulnerable in a lockdown situation.
Despite “pre-emptive, pro-active and graded” preparations, the government failed to plan for the poorest in society.
Which ever way you want to dress this it is a major failure on the part of the central government.

It's "the best thing" because migrant workers catching the virus is probably seen as a positive by Modi fans.
 
Modi has time and again failed to lead the nation in moment of crisis. For someone who gets hyped by his money fanatics to level of mythological god like figures, his failures have been rather dramatic.

He's destroyed the economy.

He let Imran Khan (who himself has proven to be a very incapable leader) humiliate him when he tried to create ear hysteria

He couldn't help when anti muslim riots occured in national capital right under his nose.

Now he imposed a lockdown without any clue what's it gonna do to the masses.

What an absolute muppet.

For how long are we going to suffer because most of our countrymen are Islamophobic idiots who continue to vote for Modi just for the one thing he is very good at i.e., making life miserable for muslims in India.
 
India and Pakistan are doomed. On one side you have a clueless dumb playboy and on the other side you have an egoistic hindu fasict.

Why can't we have normal leaders who actually know their job?
 
How was it the “best thing” when everyone knew that the migrant workers were going to be the most vulnerable in a lockdown situation.
Despite “pre-emptive, pro-active and graded” preparations, the government failed to plan for the poorest in society.
Which ever way you want to dress this it is a major failure on the part of the central government.

And central government asked state government to do the works, Kerala did it, Gujarat d8d it, Bengal did it, it was Kejriwal who completely screwed up, may be he panicked or he never anticipated or whatsoever ever.
You can't lockdown after telling it, Italy was fu**ed up because people ran after the lockdown taking infection everywhere and Same thing happening in USA where people are leaving NY before lockdown.
 
India and Pakistan are doomed. On one side you have a clueless dumb playboy and on the other side you have an egoistic hindu fasict.

Why can't we have normal leaders who actually know their job?

You know what stupid leadership is, look at your state (Punjab) CM who allowed people to jump quarantine and infect Evey damn person in villages.
Instead of locking down Punjab he was playing politics now whole Punjab has tickling time bombs.
 
How was it the “best thing” when everyone knew that the migrant workers were going to be the most vulnerable in a lockdown situation.
Despite “pre-emptive, pro-active and graded” preparations, the government failed to plan for the poorest in society.
Which ever way you want to dress this it is a major failure on the part of the central government.

I don't understand how can you even defend Delhi CM right now who used Dtc bus to leave migrant workers to die on UP border, it was really low
 
You know what stupid leadership is, look at your state (Punjab) CM who allowed people to jump quarantine and infect Evey damn person in villages.
Instead of locking down Punjab he was playing politics now whole Punjab has tickling time bombs.

Don't worry alcohol will save them from this virus. :inti
 
It's "the best thing" because migrant workers catching the virus is probably seen as a positive by Modi fans.
Don't go by what every body Modi haters are saying, Lockdown was done gradually, not in one day, first they stopped railways then inter states bus and at last plane. All was done with the the space of one or two day.
Friday before lockdown central government offices were closed but they were ordered not to leave city, Banks were asked to alternate their work, most state were asked to close down every public space till Friday, officially lockdowns started from Wednesday but 90 percent of country was already lockdown, states were asked to look after migrant workers to provide free food and shelter as these workers do not end up travelling to their village and if one of them is positive they will infect whole, if you don't believe me see Punjab and Kashmir where two travellers created a community transmission problems.
Worst of all Delhi allowed Dtc( which should not be running as whole city was locked 2 days before national lockdown) bus to leave workers to die on up border without food and shelter.
 
It was our Prime Minister who took this decision but every tom, dick and harry is going after Kejriwal as if he was the one who put us under lockdown. Not saying lockdown is a bad thing but once again it was implemented without any proper planning. They say there is no shortage of ration and basic things but when you actually go to buy them, you come back empty handed. :inti
PANIC don't think supply lines are affected but people just started buying a lot more causing artificial shortage
Don't worry hopefully in a couple of days this shortage won't be there fingre crossed
 
Dear Modi you don’t have to apologize at all. It’s not like you are going to learn from your mistakes or something.
 
I don't understand how can you even defend Delhi CM right now who used Dtc bus to leave migrant workers to die on UP border, it was really low
Images & news is available of migrants from Pune, Kerala, West Bengal, Jaipur etc also thronging in huge numbers at transport hubs. Is Kejriwal to blame for them all wanting to go home as well?
 
It was our Prime Minister who took this decision but every tom, dick and harry is going after Kejriwal as if he was the one who put us under lockdown. Not saying lockdown is a bad thing but once again it was implemented without any proper planning. They say there is no shortage of ration and basic things but when you actually go to buy them, you come back empty handed. :inti

should have planned to leave people stranded as nobody, in a alien environment by planning properly fixed :amir
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Out of work & facing an uncertain future, millions of our brothers & sisters across India are struggling to find their way back home. It’s shameful that we’ve allowed any Indian citizen to be treated this way & that the Govt had no contingency plans in place for this exodus. <a href="https://t.co/sjHBFqyVZk">pic.twitter.com/sjHBFqyVZk</a></p>— Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) <a href="https://twitter.com/RahulGandhi/status/1243896498963673090?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


would bet on my life if the Little Boy Rahul answer the question "how does hunger feel"

bet he would never know the answer by himself without asking others
 
would bet on my life if the Little Boy Rahul answer the question "how does hunger feel"

bet he would never know the answer by himself without asking others

But admit that he is right. Modi was trying to show that he is in charge and ended up chaos that IK had warned about in PK. Lockdowns need to be planned to the last detail, not done on a panic whim.
 
I bet the RSS working on a plan to use the virus to infect Muslim populated areas - let the virus do their dirty work.
 
Bhakts still trying to defend him? Always knew, all they care about him, to hell with India. And their nomenclature....

He has completely screwed. Proved for the umpteenth time, cometh the crisis, cometh his gross incompetence to the fore.
 
Ideally he should have been banished from public life after his role in '02 riots. If not, he should have been jailed after demonetization, which was another of his senseless and bigoted decision aimed to win UP assembly elections only and to prove to his blind bhakts that he is the only one incorruptible.
 
When will the citizens of Indian Occupied Kashmir get their apology, I wonder
 
We are getting so many Indians back home from abroad and taking so many foreigners to their countries through special flights.

However we don't have any plans whatsoever for our own hapless citizens who are forced to walk so many miles without food or water for so many days. Why couldn't we spare some budget for these people as well?
 
Images & news is available of migrants from Pune, Kerala, West Bengal, Jaipur etc also thronging in huge numbers at transport hubs. Is Kejriwal to blame for them all wanting to go home as well?
Despite this faux pas, this will still be considered as his great victory, an example of great leadership, so blind his bhakts are.
 
Most city dwellers are day to day working for a pittance. If they do not work even for a day, they cannot eat.
This complete lock down is causing lot of trouble for everyone in India. But is there a better solution for this? Its like getting caught between devil and deep sea.
 
When I spoke to him on the phone, he had just returned home to his village in the northern state of Rajasthan from neighbouring Gujarat, where he worked as a mason.

In the rising heat, Goutam Lal Meena had walked some 300km (186 miles) on macadam in his sandals in the rising heat. He said he had survived on water and biscuits.

In Gujarat, Mr Meena earned up to 400 rupees ($5.34; £4.29) a day and sent most of his earnings home. Work and wages dried up after India declared a 21-day lockdown with four hours notice on the midnight of 24 March to prevent the spread of coronavirus. (India has reported more than 1,000 Covid-19 cases and 27 deaths so far.) The shutting down of all transport meant that he was forced to travel on foot.

"I walked through the day and I walked through the night. What option did I have? I had little money and almost no food," Mr Meena told me, his voice raspy and strained.

He was not alone. All over India, millions of migrant workers are fleeing its shuttered cities and trekking home to their villages.

These informal workers are the backbone of the big city economy, constructing houses, cooking food, serving in eateries, delivering takeaways, cutting hair in salons, making automobiles, plumbing toilets and delivering newspapers, among other things. Escaping poverty in their villages, most of the estimated 100 million of them live in squalid housing in congested urban ghettos and aspire for upward mobility.

Last week's lockdown turned them into refugees overnight. Their workplaces were shut, and most employees and contractors who paid them vanished.

Sprawled together, men, women and children began their journeys at all hours of the day last week. They carried their paltry belongings - usually food, water and clothes - in cheap rexine and cloth bags. The young men carried tatty backpacks. When the children were too tired to walk, their parents carried them on their shoulders.

They walked under the sun and they walked under the stars. Most said they had run out of money and were afraid they would starve. "India is walking home," headlined The Indian Express newspaper.

The staggering exodus was reminiscent of the flight of refugees during the bloody partition in 1947. Millions of bedraggled refugees had then trekked to east and west Pakistan, in a migration that displaced 15 million people.

This time, hundreds of thousands of migrant workers are desperately trying to return home in their own country. Battling hunger and fatigue, they are bound by a collective will to somehow get back to where they belong. Home in the village ensures food and the comfort of the family, they say.

Clearly, a lockdown to stave off a pandemic is turning into a humanitarian crisis.

Among the teeming refugees of the lockdown was a 90-year-old woman, whose family sold cheap toys at traffic lights in a suburb outside Delhi.

Kajodi was walking with her family to their native Rajasthan, some 100km (62 miles) away. They were eating biscuits and smoking beedis, - traditional hand-rolled cigarettes - to kill hunger. Leaning on a stick, she had been walking for three hours when journalist Salik Ahmed met her. The humiliating flight from the city had not robbed her off her pride. "She said she would have bought a ticket to go home if transport was available," Mr Ahmed told me.

Others on the road included a five-year-old boy who was on a 700km (434 miles) journey by foot with his father, a construction worker, from Delhi to their home in Madhya Pradesh state in central India. "When the sun sets we will stop and sleep," the father told journalist Barkha Dutt. Another woman walked with her husband and two-and-a-half year old daughter, her bag stuffed with food, clothes and water. "We had a place to stay but no money to buy food," she said.

Then there was Rajneesh, a 26-year-old automobile worker who walking 250km (155 miles) to his village in neighbouring Uttar Pradesh. It would take him four days, he reckoned. "We will die walking before coronavirus hits us," the man told Ms Dutt.

He was not exaggerating. Last week, a 39-year-old man on a 300km (186 miles) trek from Delhi to Madhya Pradesh complained of chest pain and exhaustion and died; and a 62-year-old man, returning from a hospital by foot in Gujarat, collapsed outside his house and died. Four other migrants, turned away at the borders on their way to Rajasthan from Gujarat, were mowed down by a truck on a dark highway.

As the crisis worsened, state governments scrambled to arrange transport, shelter and food.

But trying to transport them to their villages quickly turned into another nightmare. Hundreds of thousands of workers were pressed against each other at a major bus terminal in Delhi as buses rolled in to pick them up.

Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal implored the workers not to leave the capital. He asked them to "stay wherever you are, because in large gatherings, you are also at risk of being infected with the coronavirus." He said his government would pay their rent, and announced the opening of 568 food distribution centres in the capital. Prime Minister Narendra Modi apologised for the lockdown "which has caused difficulties in your lives, especially the poor people", adding these "tough measures were needed to win this battle."

Whatever the reason, Mr Modi and state governments appeared to have bungled in not anticipating this exodus.

Mr Modi has been extremely responsive to the plight of Indian migrant workers stranded abroad: hundreds of them have been brought back home in special flights. But the plight of workers at home stuck a jarring note.

"Wanting to go home in a crisis is natural. If Indian students, tourists, pilgrims stranded overseas want to return, so do labourers in big cities. They want to go home to their villages. We can't be sending planes to bring home one lot, but leave the other to walk back home," tweeted Shekhar Gupta, founder and editor of The Print.

The city, says Chinmay Tumbe, author of India Moving: A History of Migration, offers economic security to the poor migrant, but their social security lies in their villages, where they have assured food and accommodation. "With work coming to a halt and jobs gone, they are now looking for social security and trying to return home," he told me.

Also there's plenty of precedent for the flight of migrant workers during a crisis - the 2005 floods in Mumbai witnessed many workers fleeing the city. Half of the city's population, mostly migrants, had also fled the city - then Bombay - in the wake of the 1918 Spanish flu.

When plague broke out in western India in 1994 there was an "almost biblical exodus of hundreds of thousands of people from the industrial city of Surat [in Gujarat]", recounts historian Frank Snowden in his book Epidemics and Society.

Half of Bombay's population deserted the city, during a previous plague epidemic in 1896. The draconian anti-plague measures imposed by the British rulers, writes Dr Snowden, turned out to be a "blunt sledgehammer rather than a surgical instrument of precision". They had helped Bombay to survive the epidemic, but "the fleeing residents carried the disease with them, thereby spreading it."

More than a century later, that same fear haunts India today. Hundreds of thousands of the migrants will eventually reach home, either by foot, or in packed buses. There they will move into their joint family homes, often with ageing parents. Some 56 districts in nine Indian states account for half of inter-state migration of male workers, according to a government report. These could turn out to be potential hotspots as thousands of migrants return home.

Partha Mukhopadhyay, a senior fellow at Delhi's Centre for Policy Research, suggests that 35,000 village councils in these 56 potentially sensitive districts should be involved to test returning workers for the virus, and isolate infected people in local facilities.

In the end, India is facing daunting and predictable challenges in enforcing the lockdown and also making sure the poor and homeless are not fatally hurt. Much of it, Dr Snowden told me, will depend on whether the economic and living consequences of the lockdown strategy are carefully managed, and the consent of the people is won. "If not, there is a potential for very serious hardship, social tension and resistance." India has already announced a $22bn relief package for those affected by the lockdown.

The next few days will determine whether the states are able to transport the workers home or keep them in the cities and provide them with food and money. "People are forgetting the big stakes amid the drama of the consequences of the lockdown: the risk of millions of people dying," says Nitin Pai of Takshashila Institution, a prominent think tank.

"There too, likely the worst affected will be the poor."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52086274
 
Those blaming Kejri or any of the state CM's should just look at the situations before 21 days lockdown was announced. There was no such migration.

Also, the scenes which we see in Delhi are same in Gujrat, Mahrashtra, Gurgaon etc. Just that you dont see them in TV as we all know about news channels. Just local newspapers of all these states and you will see the problem.
 
Limited community transmission of the Covid-19 disease has begun in India, a Union health ministry document has said, admitting for the first time the country is entering that phase of the outbreak when the source of a patient’s infection cannot be traced and isolated.

India has reported 1,190 cases and 29 deaths due to the Sars-Cov-2 virus, which causes the deadly infection, till Monday morning.

A document detailing the standard operating procedure (SOP), released by the ministry of health and family welfare issued late on Sunday night, said:“This SOP is applicable to current phase of Covid-19 pandemic in India (local transmission and limited community transmission), wherein as per plan of action, all suspect cases are admitted to isolation facilities.”

There are four main stages of disease outbreak. Stage I is usually when cases are imported and are not of local origin. Stage II is when there is local transmission, which means a section of people testing positive have come in contact with a positive patient having a travel history. Stage III is community transmission. Stage IV is an epidemic, when there several clusters of the infection.

The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), tasked with containing the epidemic, has publicly maintained that India is still in Stage II, despite the number of cases of people with no known contact to an infected person or travel history rising over the past week.

Community transmission happens when the source of infection is untraced and the patient has no travel history or known contact with a confirmed Covid-19 case. It indicates that undiagnosed cases are infecting others, which is when infection clusters spiral out of control and turn into epidemics.

“We’ve had pockets of community transmission in several locations in half a dozen states, but now the number of people with untraceable infection is increasing, which is a sign that community transmission has begun. It is irreversible now,” said a senior public health expert, requesting anonymity.

Raman Gangakhedkar, head of epidemiology and communicable diseases, ICMR, said: “I cannot comment on this right now, this issue will be addressed in the ministry briefing.”

According to T Jacob John, head of the department of clinical virology and microbiology at Christian Medical College Vellore, community transmission in India began mid-February.

“Instead of splitting hair, the focus should be on preparing to be three steps ahead of the virus. It’s not a cops and robbers game, we should not be fooled into reacting to the virus but should be fooling the virus by anticipating the curve and proactively deciding what we need to do stop the spread,” said John, Emeritus Medical Scientist, ICMR.

The US Centers for Disease Control (USCDC) declared its first case of a person in California with no relevant travel history or exposure to another known patient as “possible instance of community spread of Covid-19 in the United States” on February 26.

“At this time, the patient’s exposure is unknown. It’s possible this could be an instance of community spread of COVID-19, which would be the first time this has happened in the United States. Community spread means spread of an illness for which the source of infection is unknown, ” said the USCDC in a statement.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...ry-document/story-apAvK1AdxCQLM1gGp4FLCM.html
 
I bet the RSS working on a plan to use the virus to infect Muslim populated areas - let the virus do their dirty work.

Stop nonsense if don't know anything about RSS.RSS is not ISIS.
- RSS sets up kitchens for migrant workers at Anand Vihar bus terminus.
- RSS distributing masks, provide meals and help authorities.
- RSS workers distributing sanitizers and protective masks
 
I bet the RSS working on a plan to use the virus to infect Muslim populated areas - let the virus do their dirty work.

You couldnt be more wrong dear sir. RSS, being a charitable organization, works relentlessly and selflessly whenever there is any natural disaster in India. Let it be floods in Kerala or earthquake in Delhi, RSS carders always there for help without discriminating about religion, caste or creed. They are biggest pillar of strength for this country. People who knows nothing about RSS spreads false propaganda on internet.

RSS gets ready to fight coronavirus with awareness campaign, masks, soaps & food packets

RSS has asked around 70,000 of its daily units and over three dozen affiliates to prioritise the fight against coronavirus.

https://theprint.in/india/rss-gets-...ess-campaign-masks-soaps-food-packets/386488/
 
RSS have been caught lying with their pants down. Whether lies on Indian GDP, or downing a fighter jet.

There is zero reason to believe the C19 numbers from the proven lying Indian goverment.

Where there is a debate on whether C19 is a cause for death with those with underlying illnesses, in India there is no debate, C19 didnt kill you but poverty, lack of sanitation and religious/caste intolerance will kill you. In otherwords, millions die every year in India, mostly the poor, C19 will not massage this reality in India, but act a catalyst.
 
Chaddis in full form, defending their fascist gang.

Do these creatures get paid for it?
 
Divided Delhi under lockdown: 'If coronavirus doesn't kill me, hunger will'

India’s shutdown is catastrophic for Muslims driven from their homes by sectarian carnage and now without food or shelter.

It wasn’t possible for Mohammed Idrish to watch Narendra Modi’s address to the nation last Tuesday exhorting 1.3 billion Indians to stay at home. His TV was looted along with everything else in his home in Delhi during the recent anti-Muslim riots in the Indian capital.

When Idrish, a carpenter, heard about Modi urging Indians to stay at home to stop coronavirus spreading, he shook his head again and again. “I don’t understand … I don’t understand. Doesn’t he know we have no home?”

On 25 February, his house in Shiv Vihar was among many reduced to a charred ruin by mobs. The ferocious violence that engulfed the north-east of the city for four days – mostly Hindu mobs killing Muslims and destroying property – left 53 dead and thousands injured.

Families ran with only the clothes they were wearing and mobile phones in their pockets. Hundreds were housed in the Eidgah relief camp, a collection of tents set up in the courtyard of a mosque in Mustafabad.

The camp was a temporary home for Idrish, his parents, wife and four children. It gave them shelter and safety while they waited for compensation to renovate their home. But on Monday the Delhi authorities ordered families to leave the crowded camp for fear it provided the ideal conditions for a perfect viral storm.

The camp’s days were numbered even before Modi imposed an unprecedented nationwide lockdown last week, as Delhi had already banned any gathering of more than 30 people.

“From fire burning my home to a camp, I am now being thrown out of a tent because of the coronavirus. I don’t understand. They have told me to leave and go and rent a room but what do I pay the landlord?” said Idrish.

The Delhi government says it is giving all the families some rations and 3,000 rupees (£33 ), the minimum rent for a small room. This leaves no additional money for food. Most landlords also demand a month’s deposit. Some families have received rations, others have received money, some have received both, and others neither.

Idrish was given lentils, sugar and rice, and told to leave. After scouring the alleyways around the camp, he found a landlord who agreed to let the family stay in one room for two or three days. “I don’t know what I will do in a few days. He will want rent naturally but I don’t have anything. I lost everything. I am desperate to work to feed my family, I want to work, but with the lockdown, I can’t even work,” he said.

The lockdown is catastrophic for the poor in India who live from day to day. Drivers, maids, auto-rickshaw drivers, carpenters, electricians, plumbers, artisans and street vendors buy lentils or vegetables to feed their families from the day’s earnings. There are no reserves, well-stocked freezers, or anything saved for a rainy day. As one daily wage labourer said: “If the coronavirus doesn’t kill me, hunger will.”

For the Muslims whose lives have been devastated by the riots, all of this applies, but worse. With no homes, the Eidgah camp was their main sanctuary, unless they could depend on the charity of relatives who put them up. Many are grieving for loved ones who were beaten to death, lynched or set on fire. The pain of losing a home is still fresh. Now the coronavirus is battering them all over again.

“My wife snorted with anger when she heard Modi telling us all to stay at home. Our house was torched. Nothing, not even a clothes hook was left untouched by the fire. Only the walls are left. What home is Modi talking about?” said Abdul Satter, a welder.

He would like to return to start cleaning up his house in Purana Gaon, a village near Khajuri Khas, Delhi, but he and his wife, Mehtab, fear further violence from their Hindu neighbours. “All I have is the blanket I grabbed after my son called us saying a mob was coming and told us to run as fast as we could. I thought the blanket would at least cover my children if we had to sleep on the street,” said Mehtab.

Mehtab said she understood the need to take drastic measures to protect people. Delhi has had 30 coronavirus cases and one death. The Eidgah camp – packed with families in unsanitary conditions – is a potential disaster area, she concedes.

What she doesn’t understand, however, is where the government expects people like her to go. While some families have received compensation, many others are still waiting for their claims to be processed by the Delhi government.

“If we had got compensation, we could at least have started repairing our homes. I got 25,000 rupees (£257) for my family’s immediate needs but there are 18 of us who live together and that money is almost finished. You tell me, where should I go? Where?” said Mehtab.

By Wednesday, with the tents coming down, she and her family had divided themselves among four relatives in the city. With the lockdown in force, they will not be able to see each other for three weeks.

A short distance away, Chandu Nagar, Delhi, has become a refugee colony for riot victims. Some of the Muslim families here have opened their homes to complete strangers. Since a mob burned their two-storey home in Shiv Vihar, Mumtaz Taufir has lived in a rented room measuring 10 x 10ft with his parents, four brothers and their wives.

Taufir watched Modi’s address in his landlord’s living room. “I wanted to tell him we have become beggars overnight and don’t even know what the word home means. If we had a home, we’d be happy to stay in it. But it’s gone,” he said.

What’s equally worrying for him is that the Delhi government’s attention will be focused exclusively on fighting the coronavirus for some time. “It means it will take us even longer to get compensation,” he said.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-...own-if-coronavirus-doesnt-kill-me-hunger-will

Modi has done a sterling job it seems. It will be hard for some of the less important citizens to forgive him.
 
^ Disgraceful journalism by Gurdian. Even in this time of global emergency, they are peddling their agenda and playing the hindu - muslim card.

India’s shutdown is catastrophic for Muslims driven from their homes by sectarian carnage and now without food or shelter

What does the above statement even mean? Many poor people from all religion are suffering due to this shutdown and without food & shelter. But why bring the muslim card into it?

These left liberals cant live without agenda even for a day.

Where was gurdian when Shaheen Bagh protestors refused to vacate the spot even after coronavirus outbreak?
 
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:)))

Someone needs to remind Rajdeep we've found water on Mars. Water being H2O means there is oxygen on Mars.

Line up boys; Modi will be singing apologetics hymns, in English, at the UN when apologising to the world that India is the petri dish for Coronavirus.
 
Its time for PM Modi to ask for forgiveness to Kashmiris too for almost a year of lockdown so far.
 
^ Disgraceful journalism by Gurdian. Even in this time of global emergency, they are peddling their agenda and playing the hindu - muslim card.

India’s shutdown is catastrophic for Muslims driven from their homes by sectarian carnage and now without food or shelter

What does the above statement even mean? Many poor people from all religion are suffering due to this shutdown and without food & shelter. But why bring the muslim card into it?

These left liberals cant live without agenda even for a day.

Where was gurdian when Shaheen Bagh protestors refused to vacate the spot even after coronavirus outbreak?
Except for BBC, Economist most british papers are just utter diarrhea I personally don't take tham seriously but I think BBC and economist also said something about the plight of Indian Muslims recently but not related to covid 19 so not saying there is no problem but other british publications play dirty
 
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You couldnt be more wrong dear sir. RSS, being a charitable organization, works relentlessly and selflessly whenever there is any natural disaster in India. Let it be floods in Kerala or earthquake in Delhi, RSS carders always there for help without discriminating about religion, caste or creed. They are biggest pillar of strength for this country. People who knows nothing about RSS spreads false propaganda on internet.

RSS gets ready to fight coronavirus with awareness campaign, masks, soaps & food packets

RSS has asked around 70,000 of its daily units and over three dozen affiliates to prioritise the fight against coronavirus.

https://theprint.in/india/rss-gets-...ess-campaign-masks-soaps-food-packets/386488/
Can't believe you are defending RSS here just wow
 
Every world leader including usa Italy Spain China Iran should apologise to the world in the same way as prime minister of india
It’s a crime if they did not. A death toll of 40000 is failure of leadership around the world. Shame
 
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