Yesterday I wrote a few lines about
India’s decision to confine her citizens. It’s a 21 days lockdown for 1,3
billion people. Many, in my part of world, cannot understand the magnitude and
the complexity of such a decision. They do not know that hundreds of millions
in India have no regular job. They live in cities and struggle, every day, to
get some sort of casual work, that will give them enough rupees to buy the
daily food their families and themselves need. That is how the informal sector
operates, each day being a new beginning. And most of the people survive within
the informal, occasional economy. If the economy is brought to a standstill, as
it is now the case, that means no means of survival. It is just dramatic. Then,
the solution is to try to go back to their ancestral villages and do some very
basic farming. That’s what has happened in the last days or so. Millions have
travelled back, in crowded buses, lorries and on the few trains that are still
operating. As they moved back, one on top of the other, they might have caught
the virus from their fellow travellers. If so, that means the virus has been
passed on to an incalculable number of people and brought from the cities to
the rural areas. That would be mass contagion. We will see. But we can be at
the gate of a major public health problem in the largest country on earth. It
would give the pandemic crisis a new, terrifying dimension. I can only hope
this scenario is not going to happen.
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