Coronavirus in Nepal’s corridors of power - News Online English

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Saturday, 3 October 2020

Coronavirus in Nepal’s corridors of power

Photo: PMO

After lying relatively dormant since January, SARS-CoV-2 is spreading rapidly in Nepal, with most of the cases now in Kathmandu Valley, affecting even close advisers of Prime Minister K P Oli.

On Saturday, four of Oli’s aides including press adviser Surya Thapa, political adviser Bishnu Rimal, foreign policy adviser Rajan Bhattarai and secretary Indra Bhandari said they had tested positive. Two other staff at the PMO in Baluwatar had also tested positive last week.

Also on Saturday, 28 Nepal Army soldiers guarding the prime minister’s official residence at Baluwatar also tested positive, but none of them were said to be assigned as Prime Minister Oli’s personal body guards. The infected soldiers are in the process of being replaced.

The spread of the virus within Nepal’s corridors of power at Baluwatar has raised worries about the wellbeing of Prime Minister Oli who has had two kidney transplants and is said to be immuno-compromised.

Then came news late on Saturday that four members of the opposition Nepali Congress had also tested positive: Gagan Thapa, Arjun Narsingh KC and two other central committee members. KC is Thapa’s father-in-law.

Thapa announced that he had Covid-19 through his Twitter account, and said his condition was normal but that he was isolating at home. He also warned anyone who had been in close proximity to him to consult a doctor if they had any problems.

Interestingly, NC leader KC said through a Twitter post that he was surprised to hear that he had tested positive through the mass media, and added that the party headquarters where the tests were conducted had not informed him.

The other two NC central committee members who tested positive are Ganga Chaudhari and Sambhulal Shrestha. On 1 October the party had tested 240 of its secretariat staff, security guards and party members ahead of a meeting that has been called for 5 October.

Meanwhile, the Prison Management Department announced on Saturday that more than 700 inmates across the country had tested positive for Covid-19, and eight of the prisoners had died. Six of the fatalities were in the Central Jail in Kathmandu and one each in Banke and Morang. 

So far, 1,900 prison inmates have been tested so far, and aside from the 700 active cases 200 have recovered. The Department has only been testing those with symptoms, and it is expected that the real number of positive cases is higher. Those who have tested positive so far have been in jails in Parsa, Banke, Suyangja, Lalitpur, Sindhupalchok, Kathmandu, Jumla, Saptari, Siraha, Sunsari and Morang.

The Department has cancelled all visits at prisons, and spread out the detainees. Nepal’s prisons are notoriously crowded and experts have warned that they could be hotbeds for the virus. There have been calls to depopulate the prisons by releasing those serving time for relatively minor crimes.

Charts: WORLDOMETER

After being relatively unscathed since January, the coronavirus has been spreading rapidly in Kathmandu Valley. The first surge was seen after the first lockdown was partially lifted in July, and the second since the restrictions were lifted on 10 September.

Eight more deaths were reported all over Nepal on Saturday, two of them in Kathmandu Valley, taking the total to 528. Most of the dead are over 60 years old. 103 of the total fatalities are from Kathmandu, 25 from Bhaktapur and 24 from Laitpur districts.

Of the nearly 13,000 tests done in the past 24 hours nationwide, SARS-CoV-2 was detected in 2,120, taking the total confirmed cases to 84,570. There were 2,044 who had recovered on Saturday, taking the total recovered to 62,740 and giving Nepal a recovery rate of 74.1%.

There are now 21,302 active cases all over Nepal, of which nearly 10,000 are in hospitals and the rest in home isolation. The Ministry of Health had warned that the lockdown may need to be reimposed if the number of active cases exceeded 25,000 because of the limitations on hospital beds

Unlike during the early weeks of the pandemic, many more cases now are symptomatic and the deaths are among the elderly population, indicating a rapid spread of the virus in the community. 

The number of patients in ICU is now 217, and there are now a record number of 31 people in ventilators.

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