Found11articles in tagcovid-19-crisis
CRY believes that the government needs to make concerted efforts to improve systems related to children’s education and protection mechanisms and strengthen social security schemes to help families sustain themselves – now more than ever, particularly in the backdrop of the pandemic.
The need of the hour in these trying times is to understand our roles - role as a doctor, role as a nurse and role as a general public. And we cannot only rely upon the machineries of the government to do everything for us. Each of us has a role.
While it was indeed inhuman for the hospitals to refuse treatment in the wake of medical emergency, we must also consider the apparent fear even among doctors and nurses in view of rising infections among them, and the aspect of pressing conditions faced by health professionals in terms of lack of proper equipment, infrastructure and qualified manpower.
During this pandemic, we need to tap the rich human resource that we have within and without the state. Let us tap this resource wisely and in good time. Or else, it may explode and become a major nightmare.
Dishonourable political contentions and their adverse impact amidst the already chaotic pandemic
Human actions, including deforestation, encroachment on wildlife habitats, intensified agriculture and acceleration of climate change have pushed nature beyond its limits.
Six buses left Kangpokpi at 7:40 am on Saturday for Jiribam to bring back stranded people to Kangpokpi who are expected to reach Jiribam railway station in the coming few days.
DeMaS stated that it stepped up to extend help as it received requests from various Manipuri students and families from multiple locations in Delhi.
As many as 400 people were provided free essential items as the relief distribution for stranded Manipuris in Delhi.
The arrangement at IIIT, Mantripukhri which function as the IQC as well as the Screening Centre for those travelling by road is a confusing mess and with the long queues many of those who retuned were forced to wait without even water for a very long time.
As lockdown persist with COVID-19 spread in the state, nearly 4,000 women vendors of the three Ima Keithels in Imphal have little choice but to take back their products stored in the markets
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