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Kumbh Mela pilgrims turn into super-spreaders in India

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New Delhi

When millions of devout Hindusgathered last month in the Hi malayan town of Haridwar to participate in the Kumbh Mela festival even as India battled a devastating second wave of coronavirus, many feared that it would turn out to be a ‘super-spreader event’.

Those fears, it now seems, are coming true, with reports of Kumbh returnees testing positive – and possibly spreading the infection – coming from many parts of the country.

When Mahant Shankar Das arrived in Haridwar on 15 March to participate in the festival, cases of Covid-19 were already rising in many parts of India.

On 4 April, just four days after the festival officially began, the 80-year-old Hindu priest tested positive for Covid-19 and was advised to quarantine in a tent.

But instead of isolating, he packed his bags, boarded a train and travelled 1,000km (621 miles) to the city of Varanasi.

There, his son Nagendra Pathak met him at the railway station and they rode a shared taxi to their village 20km (12 miles) away in the adjoining district of Mirzapur.

Speaking to me on the phone from his home recently, Mahant Das said he was ‘now hale and hearty’ and that after his return, he had remained at home in quarantine.

He insisted that he did not pass on the virus to anyone else, but within days, his son and a few other villagers also developed Covid symptoms.

Mr Pathak, who’s also made a full recovery, says their village has seen ‘13 deaths in the past fortnight from fever and cough’.

The infections in the villagers may – or may not – be linked to Mahant Das, but health experts say his behaviour was irresponsible and that by travelling in a crowded train and sharing a taxi, he may have spread the virus to many along the way.

Epidemiologist Dr Lalit Kant says ‘huge groups of mask-less pilgrims sitting on the river bank singing the glories of the Ganges’ created an ideal environment for the virus to spread rapidly.

‘We already know that chorus singing in churches and temples are known to be super-spreader events.’

In Haridwar, officials said 2,642 devotees had tested positive, including dozens of top religious leaders.

Akhilesh Yadav, former chief minister of neighbouring Uttar Pradesh state, and Nepal’s former King Gyanendra Shah and former Queen Komal Shah, were among those who tested positive after returning home.

Bollywood composer Shravan Rathod died in a Mumbai hospital soon after his return from Kumbh. Nine Hindu seers from one group also perished.

With growing fears that the Kumbh returnees could start to infect others, several worried state governments ordered a 14-day mandatory quarantine and warned of strict action against those who withheld information about their travels.

Some made the RT-PCR test mandatory for them, but few states have a database of travellers and no state has a foolproof system of testing and tracing those entering its borders.

In the past fortnight, reports of Kumbh returnees testing positive have come from all over India: Authorities in Rajasthan blame the pilgrims for the rapid spread of Covid cases in the state, especially in rural areas

‘It’s disastrous,’ says Dr Kant. ‘And these numbers are only the tip of the iceberg. The groups of pilgrims travelling in crowded trains and buses would have the multiplier effect on the number of infections.

I can say without hesitation that the Kumbh Mela is one of the main reasons behind the rise in cases in India.’

Mahant Das is combative when I ask him if it would have been better to cancel the Kumbh at a time India was recording huge surges in daily cases and hospitals were turning away patients due to a shortage of beds, medical oxygen and life-saving drugs.

‘How is it right for the government to hold election rallies and elections in West Bengal then? Why is it that only we, the devout, are being told that it was wrong to gather?’ he asks.

Critics say Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s reluctance to cancel the gathering was because of possible backlash from Hindu religious leaders like Mahant Das.

The priests, the seers and the ascetics are among the party’s biggest supporters and play an important role in mobilising Hindu votes during elections.

On 12 April, the first big day of the festival – when more than three million devotees took a dip in the river Ganges in the belief that bathing there would help them attain salvation – India logged more than 168,000 new cases, overtaking Brazil to become the country with the second-highest number of cases globally.

The festival was scaled down only a week later after the lead monk of one of the participating groups died. Mr Modi requested the seers to turn the festival from then on into a symbolic event.

There had been concerns from the start that holding the Kumbh was fraught with risks. Health experts had warned the government in early March that ‘a new and more contagious variant of the coronavirus was taking hold in the country’ and letting millions of largely unmasked people gather for a festival was not prudent.

Uttarakhand’s former chief minister, Trivendra Singh Rawat, told me that he had planned the Kumbh to be a ‘limited, symbolic event’ from the start because experts were ‘telling me that the pandemic is not going to end soon’.

‘The festival attracts people from not just India, but other countries too. I was worried that healthy people would visit Haridwar and take the infection back with them everywhere.— BBC News

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