India marks 4th anniversary of first Covid-19 lockdown

SIBY JEYYA
Four years ago, on a balmy march evening, india went through an unprecedented statewide "lockdown"—a health-related restriction on public movements—to allay initial worries about the Covid-19 epidemic.
 
The World health Organization (WHO) formally declared the COVID-19 virus to be a global pandemic on march 11, 2020, effectively severing people and nations from one another as they realized the potential consequences of the deadly virus, which was said to have "born" in china the year before.

Prime minister Narendra Modi announced the countrywide lockdown two weeks later on march 24, 2020, making it one of the first in the history of the international community of countries.
 
Shuddering indoors for months, people barricaded themselves in their houses, villages, towns, cities, districts, states, and even the entire nation.
 
Today, the Covid-19 epidemic has lasted four years, leaving a troubling legacy for both india and the rest of the world.
 
According to the Covid-19 tracker Worldometer, there were 4,50,33,332 instances reported in India. which, astonishingly, 533,535 proved to be lethal.
 
With an astounding 11,17,27,592 illnesses and the largest number of fatalities (12,18,464)—more than twice that of India—the US dominated the world.
 

A total of 70,43,18,936 infections and 70,07,114 deaths worldwide have been attributed to the invisible virus.
 
On the other hand, out of the 229 nations that Worldometer tracked, the Western Sahara (West Africa) had the lowest rate of Covid-19 infections and deaths per 100,000 people, making it the second most sparsely populated nation globally.
 
It was preceded by Tokelau (80), in the sub-100 category, and Vatican City (29 afflictions), the residence of the Pope.
 

Niue (1,059 cases, near New Zealand), Montserrat (1,403 cases and 8 deaths, in the Caribbean Isles, a british Overseas Territory), and Falkland Islands (1,930 cases, another british Overseas Territory and the catalyst for the 1982 Falklands war between argentina and the UK) were among the more than a thousand cases that were recorded.
Amidst the global fallout from COVID-19, certain historic events occurred. For example, the annual Hajj trip to Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia, which is attended by over two million Muslims annually, was postponed that year.
 

A somber At a sodden but eerily vacant St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Pope Francis bestowed a unique blessing onto the globe, although more than 11 million people in italy and around europe watched it live.
 

Nearby in Mumbai, for the first time in its nearly 250-year existence, the famous Mohammed ali Road Ramadan street food mart was closed for the full month.
 
Throughout the two-year lockdown, which began with the first 21-day installment, limits were progressively lifted as many people experienced emotional and psychological suffering as a result of the limitations placed on their freedom of movement and their ability to communicate with other humans.
 

A new world order emerged as a result of the pandemic and the ensuing paranoia on several fronts, including local and international air travel, health care programs, online learning replacing classroom instruction, workplaces transitioning to work-from-home arrangements, holidays becoming "at-home" occasions, online shopping largely replacing brick-and-mortar shopping, doorstep delivery of everything in the markets, virtual "darshan" in place of temple visits, online sunday masses or friday "namaz," etc.
 

Thankfully, the first COVID-19 vaccine was created in december 2020, and india received its immunizations in january 2021. Both vaccines are regarded as "life-savers," although they should only be used in an emergency.
 
Almost 70% of the world's eligible population has received around 14 billion Covid-19 doses to date. This has been done despite both known and unknown short- and long-term negative effects, although few people are objecting.
 
All the same, compared to the terrible period of only four years ago, the world is a far safer place to live and prosper.

The World health Organization (WHO) pronounced the pandemic to be over in May 2023. By the end of 2023, the coronavirus appeared to have run out of deadly ways, and everyone can now relax because the number of daily Covid-19 infections is currently less than 100 and is only found in a small number of nations.
 
 


 

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