India superspreader event draws 3,000,000 people despite new COVID-19 surge

Superspreader: India religious event draws 3,000,000 people amid new COVID surge
Superspreader: India religious event draws 3,000,000 people amid new COVID surge
Written by Harry Johnson

While public gatherings are banned in some parts of the country, where infections with the highly transmissible Omicron variant have been on the rise, the local government in West Bengal allowed the festival this year.

According to official estimates, up to three million pilgrims may gather on northern India’s Sagar Island for the religious bathing ceremony in the waters of the Ganges River.

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India superspreader event draws 3,000,000 people despite new COVID-19 surge

Huge crowds of Hindu devotees have been flooding the Ganges delta, desperate to take a dip in its waters. People from numerous regions visit the event, which runs for many days. Defying pandemic rules, they travel on crammed buses, boats, and trains to the island and then back home.

There was already “a sea of people” present as worshippers gathered to mark the Makar Sankranti (or Magh Mela) festival, a local official in the India‘s State of West Bengal said, adding that most of the pilgrims were not wearing masks.

0a1 10 | eTurboNews | eTN
India superspreader event draws 3,000,000 people despite new COVID-19 surge

Drones are being deployed at the site to spray water on pilgrims and reduce crowding by the river, but this doesn’t stop them from taking the actual dip in the Ganges.

“They believe that God will save them and bathing at the confluence will cleanse all their sins, and even the virus if they are infected,” local police official said.

According to organizers, only those with vaccination certificates and negative PCR test results are allowed to attend, and thermal screening has been put in place. However, there are concerns that no proper security checks can be enforced, as those might lead to stampede-like situations. “

Despite the arrangements, many devotees are taking the holy bath and flouting the limit of 50 persons at a time, but we’re unable to prevent them from doing so,” a senior official told local media.

Nearly 80 police officers and cleaning personnel deployed for the festival have tested positive for coronavirus, it was reported today.

“This is going to be a superspreader,” a lawyer who has petitioned a court to cancel the festival, Utkarsh Mishra, said.

While public gatherings are banned in some parts of India, where infections with the highly transmissible Omicron variant have been on the rise, the local government in West Bengal allowed the festival this year.

The Calcutta High Court asked the administration to insist that devotees opt for a so-called ‘e-bathing’ this time, Indian media reported. Some have applied to receive e-bathing kits via post, but the majority wanted to attend in person.

A similar Hindu gathering last year is believed to have sent infections with the devastating Delta variant all across the country. On Thursday, nearly 265,000 new cases of coronavirus were recorded, with some estimates suggesting the numbers might surge to 800,000 in just a few weeks’ time.

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About the author

Harry Johnson

Harry Johnson has been the assignment editor for eTurboNews for mroe than 20 years. He lives in Honolulu, Hawaii, and is originally from Europe. He enjoys writing and covering the news.

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