BEIJING/WUHAN: A few daring Indians, who remained in
Wuhan where the novel
coronavirus first emerged and then became a global pandemic, have a word of advice for their compatriots back home: follow the strict lockdown and self-isolation measures to arrest the spread of the deadly disease.
Speaking to PTI, the Indian nationals in Wuhan said they were very happy that their 76-day suffering due to the strict lockdown came to an end on Wednesday when the authorities lifted the restrictions in the central Chinese city of 11 million people.
"For over 73 days, I stayed put in my room, stepped out to my lab close by with permission. Today I struggle to speak properly because I have not spoken much all these weeks as there is no one to speak because everyone stayed indoors," said Arunjith T Sathrajith, a hydrobiolgist working in Wuhan.
India evacuated about 700 Indians and foreigners through two special
Air India flights, but Arunjith, who is from
Kerala, decided to stay in Wuhan and brave it all because he felt "escaping" from a troubled place was not the ideal thing for "Indians to do".
He is one of the few Indians who chose to stay back in Wuhan, a city of 11 million people and the epicentre of the pandemic.
He also thought his return to Kerala could endanger his parents and in-laws, all over 50 years, besides his wife and child.
A microbiologist-turned-hydrobiologist who is taking part in a research project in the central Chinese city, he said India had done the right thing to go for a nationwide lockdown, but the major problem for the country could surface when the monsoon season arises as people's immunity levels go down.
That is the time virus could turn virulent, Arunjith said.
If there is any lesson Wuhan offers, it is the strict lockdown and people's participation in self-isolation campaign, he said.