Modi alerts northeastern States

Step up vaccination, do aggressive testing to rein in COVID-19, he tells eight CMs.

July 13, 2021 02:21 pm | Updated July 14, 2021 12:44 am IST - New Delhi/Guwahati

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday urged the Chief Ministers of eight north-eastern States to ramp up vaccination rates, set up temporary hospitals and form micro containment zones with aggressive cluster testing and tracking to control the COVID-19 situation.

Mr. Modi addressed the Chief Ministers of Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Tripura, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram and Manipur via videoconferencing, as according to the Union Health Ministry, 80% of cases were from 90 districts, of which 14 were in the North-East. It was also the first such interaction where new Health Minister Mansukhbhai Mandaviya was present.

Crowds at hill stations

Mr. Modi expressed concern over the teeming crowds at hill stations by holiday-makers, saying that while trade and tourism were important, “the main question in everyone’s mind should be on how to prevent a third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The Union government’s ₹ 23,000 crore package for COVID-19 infrastructure was for ramping up testing laboratories, setting up oxygen units in hospitals and paediatric intensive care units (ICUs) and other infrastructure with regard to the disease, he pointed out. “Looking at the specific challenges thrown up by the terrain in the north-eastern States, I would urge that temporary hospitals be set up with oxygen facilities and very importantly training of manpower be done to handle oxygen related care and ICU duties,” he said.

The best practices from across the country should be adopted in dealing with the pandemic and the help of all sections of society sought in ramping up vaccination rates in the north-eastern States, he noted.

Zero wastage in Arunachal

Arunachal Pradesh chief minister Pema Khandu said his state was ensuring zero wastage of vaccine but raised the point about poor Internet connectivity. “Our data is being uploaded after four days, resulting in wrong conclusions by ICMR (Indian Council of Medical Research), whose portal says Arunachal’s positivity rate today is 16.2%. But our data show the average of last one week is 8%,” Mr Khandu said.

The State has about 1,000 oxygen beds ready and the occupancy rate is only 8% as of now, he said while acknowledging the Centre’s concern over increasing COVID-19 cases in the northeast.

Meghalaya situation

Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad K. Sangma said the positivity rate in his State had not declined at the expected rate because of the scattered population, and two districts with a positivity rate of more than 10% were the biggest worries. He admitted that the vaccination drive had been slow because of initial reluctance but the pace had picked up over the last couple of days because of the involvement of MLAs, MDCs (members of district council) and civil society groups. “We will be able to cover all the eligible people by early October if we can administer 20,000-25,000 vaccines a day,” he added.

Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said his State had ensured medical oxygen production, ICU beds, oxygen beds and isolation wards. He requested the Prime Minister to increase the allotment of vaccines to Assam so that the target of the entire population could be achieved at the earliest.

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