Covid-19 India Press Release

Covid-19 India Press Release

  • By Oxfam India
  • 30 Mar, 2020

Oxfam India writes to Prime Minister, requests urgent measures to fight Coronavirus in India

Oxfam India today released an open letter (attached) to the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi calling for an eight-point plan that includes focus on increasing free testing, ensuring gender and socially inclusive response, and enabling the civil society network to join the fight against coronavirus. 

The pandemic has caused widespread suffering in rich countries, overwhelming some of the best healthcare systems in the world. In India, high levels of poverty and inequality risk accelerating the disease, the public health challenges are even greater.

This is a public health emergency which requires government to provide free healthcare, testing for all. Testing should be made free in both public and private sector in line with the recommendations made by the ICMR; current private sector rates capped at 4500 INR are too expensive given that 74.25% of households earn less than 5000 INR per month (SECC, 2011).

Safety of health workers and those on the frontlines of the response must be ensured by making available personal protective equipment to minimize the risk of their infection and monitor and prevent any discrimination or attacks on health workers.

Measures taken as part of the recovery package announced by the Finance Minister are welcome. However, more could be done. According to the World Bank's Global Findex Database 2017, 20% of Indian adults lack a bank account; 54% of women's Jan Dhan accounts are inactive. Some of India’s most marginalized, like unregistered construction workers and those without Jan Dhan accounts, will remain outside social protection during the pandemic.

Urgent support is needed for migrant informal sector workers including food, temporary housing (for those stranded) and cash transfer. The government should explicitly ban reduction in workforce of MSMEs and other enterprises and put a freeze on any evictions and demolitions in all low-income settlements for the duration of the endemic.

Amitabh Behar, Oxfam India CEO said “These are unprecedented times. We need community support and compassion in these times. We have suggested an eight-point plan which includes allowing the civil society to respond to this public health emergency. Civil society can potentially help by pooling resources, running awareness campaigns and addressing issues of livelihood and providing relief material. To make this happen, we need Indian government to provide guidelines which would help transport relief material and enable volunteers, staff of credible organisations to support the response on ground.”

India has a small window of opportunity to implement prevention measures to stop and delay the further spread of the pandemic. The world into which we would emerge at the end of the pandemic would be a fundamentally different one. All steps need to be taken to ensure that it is a better one.

Oxfam India is coordinating with different inter-state agencies across various states in India to prepare a relief response. We are also appealing people to support our effort and donate https://www.oxfamindia.org/coronavirus

 

Note To The Editors:

Oxfam India’s spokespersons are available for interviews on different issues- Health, Education, Inequality & Humanitarian Response. To arrange interviews or further queries please contact Himanshi Matta, 91-8860182310


Related Stories

Education

03 Mar, 2022

Lohardaga, Jharkhand

A School Away From School

Not only are Mohalla Classes helping bridge the learning gap, the child-friendly and activity-based classes are proving to be the best way to ensure children do not drop out of schools and go back to formal schools once they reopen and run. The Lohardaga Mohalla Classes are helping children from the most marginalised communities catch up.
Read More

Education

02 Mar, 2022

Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh

Shivani Rajak: The Volunteer and The Student

From a dalit family, and eldest of four siblings, Shivani is driven by two things—one, the strong belief that children have to study so that they have a better future and two, that she wants to be a teacher and is seeing this as her training to become one. She along with Alka, Oxfam India's community mobiliser, takes classes for 31 children—18 girls and 13 boys—in Gaukhedi village in Pratapgarh district.
Read More

Women Livelihood

28 Feb, 2022

Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh

Organic Farming Brings Life Back On Track

Before Oxfam India and Aim Trust started working in the Lakhimpur Kheri district, Rajeshwari and her husband would only use pesticides and chemical fertilisers in their field. They believed that the usage of chemicals on land was their only option and they were not aware of the harmful effects of dangerous chemicals on soil. In 2018, Aim Trust organised a meeting in Jangalipurwa, in which Rajeshwari participated alongside 10 women. They learned about organic farming techniques that did not damage soil quality.
Read More

Women Livelihood

28 Feb, 2022

Koraput, Odisha

Treadle Pump: A Low Cost Game Changer

In May 2021, the group comprising 52 women farmers was formed in Lingamguda, Koraput. Sunduri Nayak was one among them. One of the first things they discussed was the farm pond, the difficulty in irrigation, and the need for proper irrigation in the area. Our team then started discussions around low cost irrigation technologies. After some deliberation, the treadle pump was decided as the idle irrigation system for the area.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India