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Prof K Nageshwar: Will rural India turn into hot spots? (Video)

         ఊరూరా 'తబ్లీగీ జమాత్ లను'  సృష్టిస్తున్న అసమర్థ నిర్వహణ||Will rural India turn into hot spots?

An exodus of migrant workers to their village homes has triggered a new wave of infections in places that have been relatively safe till now.

Rural areas have emerged as the new flashpoint in India’s fight , despite a government panel cautioning states about the need to strengthen health systems in villages.

In a report to the Union health ministry, the government’s Rapid Response Team (RRT) suggested local health authorities focus on rural areas. It was submitted to the health ministry just as an estimated 20-25 million migrants began making their way to villages in trains, buses and on foot.

 

The now two-month-long lockdown has ruined the livelihoods of millions of migrants, mostly daily wage earners, setting off India’s biggest migration since Independence. Many of them have made that journey—from workplaces in cities to their homes in villages—in packed buses and trains, making a mockery of social distancing norms out of desperation.

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Prof K Nageshwar: Will rural India turn into hot spots? (Video)

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Summary
Prof K Nageshwar: Will rural India turn into hot spots? (Video)
Title
Prof K Nageshwar: Will rural India turn into hot spots? (Video)
Description

ఊరూరా 'తబ్లీగీ జమాత్ లను' సృష్టిస్తున్న అసమర్థ నిర్వహణ||Will rural India turn into hot spots? An exodus of migrant workers to their village homes has triggered a new wave of infections in places that have been relatively safe till now. Rural areas have emerged as the new flashpoint in India’s fight , despite a government panel cautioning states about the need to strengthen health systems in villages. In a report to the Union health ministry, the government’s Rapid Response Team (RRT) suggested local health authorities focus on rural areas. It was submitted to the health ministry just as an estimated 20-25 million migrants began making their way to villages in trains, buses and on foot. The now two-month-long lockdown has ruined the livelihoods of millions of migrants, mostly daily wage earners, setting off India’s biggest migration since Independence. Many of them have made that journey—from workplaces in cities to their homes in villages—in packed buses and trains, making a mockery of social distancing norms out of desperation.