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Concern grows for vulnerable people in Kashmir, Yemen, Bangladesh amid coronavirus crisis

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Concern grows for vulnerable people in Kashmir, Yemen, Bangladesh amid coronavirus crisis
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A Kashmiri woman along with her child walks past an Indian paramilitary soldier, Srinagar, Thursday, March 19, 2020. (AP Photo)
BY DAILY SABAH WITH AGENCIES
MAR 19, 2020 3:41 PM
The already dire humanitarian situation in crisis-hit places – the disputed Kashmir, Yemen and Rohingya refugee camps – raises fear over the spread of the coronavirus
The concern for vulnerable people in the disputed Kashmir, war-torn Yemen and refugee camps in Bangladesh is growing as they could be especially at risk should the virus begin to spread locally, due to poor health facilities and infrastructure and worsening humanitarian situations.

Muslim-majority Kashmir has been relatively unaffected by the virus, reporting its first case on Wednesday evening. But the picturesque valley of 7 million is one of most militarized places on earth due to a decadeslong insurgency against Indian rule, and its residents have been subject to prolonged curbs on freedom of movement. An internet shutdown that began in August following sweeping constitutional changes in Kashmir has only just been eased.

India blocked roads in Kashmir on Thursday after the insurgency-torn region reported its first case, as several other parts of the country imposed restrictions on public gatherings in attempts to prevent its spread.

War-torn Yemen

COVID-19 has yet to be documented in war-torn Yemen. It is a perfect storm of a disaster should this virus introduce itself, the country's World Health Organization (WHO) representative, Altaf Musani, said.

The five-year conflict has killed more than 100,000 and unleashed a humanitarian crisis in which many others have died. Yemen's shattered health care infrastructure and already weakened population suggest the virus could wreak more havoc if it takes hold. Cholera, dengue, malaria and poor sanitation are rife and around 80% of Yemenis are reliant on humanitarian aid while millions live on the brink of starvation, leaving them vulnerable to other forms of the disease.

On both sides of the divide, Yemen has stepped up measures to contain and mitigate against the coronavirus should it appear, including screening and tracking arrivals.

Currently, Yemen has the capability to conduct a couple of hundred tests to confirm infection with the virus at centers in Sanaa and Aden. More are on the way so a few thousand people can be tested, the WHO's Musani said. Musani said the fragile health system operates at around 50% capacity and the emergence of the coronavirus would greatly overstretch it.

Bangladesh's Rohingya camps

Only three coronavirus cases have so far been confirmed in refugee camps in Bangladesh as of March 13 as Rohingya refugees in the southern Cox's Bazaar district are distressed. We are poor. We are stateless. We are dependent on the mercy of others, the community leader of the persecuted minority told Anadolu Agency.

He spoke of the vulnerable conditions they were living in – a breeding ground for all sorts of viruses.

More than a million of our people reside in 34 refugee camps ... four to five stay in a single makeshift room made of tarpaulin sheets and bamboo sticks, he said. Most of us sleep on plastic paper spreading on the muddy floor in the tents. We have fewer options to think about our hygiene or take measures necessary to fight the coronavirus.

The persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar is one of the worst humanitarian tragedies of our time, but it is also the most overlooked. Rohingya, described by the U.N. as one of the most persecuted communities in the world, has been facing systematic state persecution in the northern Rakhine state of Myanmar since the early 1970s.

www.dailysabah.com/world/asia-pacific/concern-grows-for-vulnerable-people-in-kashmir-yemen-bangladesh-amid-coronavirus-crisis/amp
 
Well, we know you guys want to bring up Kashmir and keep the issue alive, but at least do it in a way that makes sense. Trying to bring up Kashmir by associating it with the coronavirus crisis is hilarious and dubious at best, doubt anyone is going to buy it. Kashmir is probably the safest place in India currently from the point of view of coronavirus. It is almost under daily curfew, streets deserted, soldiers patrolling, no public gatherings. It is almost like the Wuhan lockdown. On top of that, limited internet and mobile connectivity, so no room to spread stupid rumours. As for medical facilities, Srinagar has better and more hospitals than most cities in Pakistan. When you've had 30 years of insurgency, hospital business thrives.
 
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India is using Covid19 as a biological weapon in Kashmir.

RSS Nazis have been indoctrinated into believing on alternate medicine 'invented' by Master race are flocking into the valley escorted by the Indian Imperial Army.

The doctrine included systematically downgrading immunity of the Kashmiris under imprisonment and then exposing them to the deadly virus.
 
India is using Covid19 as a biological weapon in Kashmir.

RSS Nazis have been indoctrinated into believing on alternate medicine 'invented' by Master race are flocking into the valley escorted by the Indian Imperial Army.

The doctrine included systematically downgrading immunity of the Kashmiris under imprisonment and then exposing them to the deadly virus.
Why doesn't United Nations do anything about it?

- PRTP GWD
 
Well, we know you guys want to bring up Kashmir and keep the issue alive, but at least do it in a way that makes sense. Trying to bring up Kashmir by associating it with the coronavirus crisis is hilarious and dubious at best, doubt anyone is going to buy it. Kashmir is probably the safest place in India currently from the point of view of coronavirus. It is almost under daily curfew, streets deserted, soldiers patrolling, no public gatherings. It is almost like the Wuhan lockdown. On top of that, limited internet and mobile connectivity, so no room to spread stupid rumours. As for medical facilities, Srinagar has better and more hospitals than most cities in Pakistan. When you've had 30 years of insurgency, hospital business thrives.


YOU SICK SWINE, after you been butchering them for 70+ years, don't try to pretend you care for their wellbeing all of a sudden, shamelessly trying to justify the inhumane lockdown now?? There is no doubt in anyones mind that the virus is going to be brought there (probaby already is) to further kill off the native populace, the ones that have survived the onslaught by your dog army these past 7-8 months to artificially rearrange the demographics, thats the reason you had the blackout there in the first place. If you really cared for the plight of Kashmiris, then GET THE F*** OUT, your army of dogs are clearly not welcomed there, stop polluting sacred land, may your government and mongrels alike burn in hell.

Regards

A Native Kashmiri
 
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YOU SICK SWINE, after you been butchering them for 70+ years, don't try to pretend you care for their wellbeing all of a sudden, shamelessly trying to justify the inhumane lockdown now?? There is no doubt in anyones mind that the virus is going to be brought there (probaby already is) to further kill off the native populace, the ones that have survived the onslaught by your dog army these past 7-8 months to artificially rearrange the demographics, thats the reason you had the blackout there in the first place. If you really cared for the plight of Kashmiris, then GET THE F*** OUT, your army of dogs are clearly not welcomed there, stop polluting sacred land, may your government and mongrels alike burn in hell.

Regards

A Native Kashmiri

You seem quite angry, you should read a novel or go out to watch an old fashioned movie with friends :lol:
 
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