City
Epaper

New Year eve revelry banned in Covid-hit Bengaluru

By IANS | Updated: December 11, 2020 23:40 IST

Bengaluru, Dec 11 New Year eve revelry on December 31 night would not be allowed in public places ...

Open in App

Bengaluru, Dec 11 New Year eve revelry on December 31 night would not be allowed in public places across Bengaluru, especially in the downtown, to contain coronavirus spread, a senior minister said on Friday.

"New Year eve celebrations in public places and high streets like M.G. Road and Brigade Road in the city centre are banned to prevent crowding and avoid large gatherings, which pose risk of spreading the infection," state Health Minister K. Sudhakar told reporters here.

As thousands of revellers throng the high streets in the central business district and the upscale localities across the city to usher in the New Year, the police will be deployed to prevent people from gathering in public places.

Though Covid cases have been declining in the city, which accounts for 50 per cent of the southern state's caseloads, experts fear a second wave of the virus due to cold weather and violation of virus-induced guidelines by the citizens.

"Citizens can have the New Year eve bash at their homes and residential areas by wearing mask, maintaining physical distancing and sanitising their hands to ensure their safety in the pandemic times," said Sudhakar.

State Revenue Minister R. Ashok said that though it is customary for people to celebrate the New Year's eve, since the virus has devastated the country over the last nine months, the occasion should be observed solemnly and in the memory of those who lost their lives due to the pandemic.

"Public celebrations, including religious gatherings, marriages and Christmas will be limited to 200 people from December 20 to January 2, 2021. Bars, pubs and restaurants will not be allowed to host guests more than 50 per cent of their capacity at a time to ensure social distancing and their safety," said Sudhkar.

A technical advisory committee, set up by the state government to contain the pandemic, said in a report that people have to strictly follow the guidelines in December and January to prevent a second wave of infections in January and February in the city or the state.

Clarifying that the state government was braced up to face the second wave of the pandemic, Sudhakar said hospitals in 10 districts and 30 taluks have been equipped with oxygen generators and other life-saving medical equipment at a cost of Rs 38 crore to contain the virus spread over the next three months.

"Rs 34 crore has been earmarked to buy 10 lakh rapid antigen kits and medicines to treat Covid patients over the next 90 days in the event of cases going up again in the state," Sudhakar said.

The state has registered 8,89,01 positive cases till Thursday of which 18,593 are active cases.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentDiksha Dhami calls her mother her 'Guiding Light' during her Mother’s Day tribute

BusinessFiroza Khan & Husband Sohel Shine in Dubai: Love, Lights & VFX Turn Reel Romance into Real Magic

EntertainmentMiss World 2025: Welcome board set, ticket counters in place, security tightened for inaugural evening in Hyderabad

InternationalPak tested our air defence, we proved ourselves highly effective: Military experts on India’s decisive response to cross-border aggression

BusinessA World Too Perfect to Be Real-Maya's Mirage

Health Realted Stories

HealthHeart rhythm disorder traces to bacterium lurking in gums: Study

HealthStudy shows weight-loss drugs can cut alcohol intake by almost two-thirds

HealthThis cholesterol pill may fight high risk of heart attack, stroke: Study

HealthIndia continues to witness significant improvement in key maternal, child health indicators: Report

HealthGujarat govt expands 542 general ambulances into 108 emergency service network