A woman walks past a coronavirus awareness scarecrow installed by municipality of Chennai city in southern India on April 11, 2020. AFP
A woman walks past a coronavirus awareness scarecrow installed by municipality of Chennai city in southern India on April 11, 2020. AFP
A woman walks past a coronavirus awareness scarecrow installed by municipality of Chennai city in southern India on April 11, 2020. AFP
A woman walks past a coronavirus awareness scarecrow installed by municipality of Chennai city in southern India on April 11, 2020. AFP

Coronavirus: India to extend world's largest lockdown by two weeks


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India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to extend the world's biggest pandemic lockdown for two weeks, state ministers said after talks on Saturday.

The three-week nationwide lockdown was to end on Tuesday. With the death toll rising, several chief ministers from India's 29 states and territories have pressed Mr Modi to prolong restrictions for the 1.3 billion population.

Two states – Odisha and Punjab – have already extended the lockdown by about two weeks, but critics said a nationwide lockdown was needed to stop people moving between states and perhaps taking the virus with them.

India has reported about 8,500 cases and 290 deaths, but the government said there was no community transmission.

Delhi's chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said Mr Modi had taken the "correct decision" by extending the lockdown.

"Today, India's position is better than many developed countries because we started (the) lockdown early. If it is stopped now, all gains would be lost," Mr Kejriwal posted on Twitter after the meeting.

Other ministers who took part in the video conference talks told media the lockdown would go on for another two weeks.

The government made no immediate announcement, and officials said Mr Modi may not make a statement until Sunday.

According to reports, the Hindu-nationalist government was worried about the impact of the restrictions and ban on international flights on the economy, which was slowing even before the pandemic crisis blew up.

Millions of people have lost jobs in the past three weeks, and the lockdown sparked a mass migration as workers headed for their home villages.

Every state has now declared a coronavirus case, but Maharashtra, which includes the financial capital Mumbai, has been among the worst hit. The western state accounted for more than 1,600 cases and more than 110 deaths in India's total.

The coronavirus is spreading in Mumbai's Dharavi district, one of Asia's biggest slums.

Mumbai council spokesman Vijay Khabale-Patil said that more cases had been uncovered at "extensive medical camps in Dharavi and other areas of Mumbai to test more people".

He said there were now 28 cases in the slum and three people had died there.

The capital, Delhi, has reported a growing toll with more than 180 cases declared on Friday, taking the total to 865.

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Gallery: Coronavirus around the world

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    Nurses and healthcare workers formed the word "Hope" with candles as they mourn and remember colleagues who died during the outbreak of coronavirus outside Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan, New York City. AFP
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    A parishioner prays as she enters an almost empty church on Good Friday in Bangkok, Thailand. EPA
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    A woman uses her mobile phone at a subway station in Beijing. AFP
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    South Korean Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun has his temperature checked upon arrival at Dongsan Medical Center in Daegu, South Korea. Yonhap via AP
  • Aamir Gill plays with his daughter in a public park near a Christian neighbourhood in Islamabad, Pakistan. AFP
    Aamir Gill plays with his daughter in a public park near a Christian neighbourhood in Islamabad, Pakistan. AFP
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    A health worker collects a swab sample from another health worker at the Istanbul University Cerrahpasa medical faculty hospital. AFP
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    A healthcare worker takes the temperature of a visitor to Essentia Health in Duluth, Minnesota. Star Tribune via AP
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    Rolls of fabric feed into a machine on a protective mask production line at Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) Northern Sector staff camp in New Delhi, India. Bloomberg
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    Martine Milonde, a Congolese community mobiliser who works with the aid group World Vision in Beni, eastern Congo, engages the public about coronavirus prevention. AP Photo
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    A sign reminds motorists it's "Safer At Home" in Los Angeles, California. AFP
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    A traveler wearing a protective mask sits with his luggage in Shinjuku Expressway Bus Terminal in Tokyo, Japan. Bloomberg
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    An evacuated passenger of a coronavirus-stricken Australian linerdescends from a bus to board the medically equipped plane that will fly Australian and New Zealander passengers to Melbourne, at Carrasco International Airport, Uraguay. AFP
  • Crosses are seen outside a church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Each cross represents one life lost to coronavirus in the state. Reuters
    Crosses are seen outside a church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Each cross represents one life lost to coronavirus in the state. Reuters