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Amid lockdown, Indians show solidarity

Dharvi Vaid New Delhi
April 6, 2020

People across India have lit candles and lamps in a collective display of solidarity called for by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Meanwhile, COVID-19 cases in the country have risen by 505 in just 24 hours.

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Indien Ahmedabad | Coronavirus | Solidarität, Kerzen & Lichter
Image: Reuters/A. Dave

People in India turned off lights and lit candles and earthen lamps outside their houses on Sunday as a show of solidarity amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the nation earlier this week through a video message, calling for a nine-minute show of solidarity "to fight the darkness spread by the coronavirus with light."

"On 5th April on Sunday at 9:00 p.m., I want nine minutes of your time. Switch off all the lights in your houses and stand in your doorways or balconies and light candles, lamps, torches or flashlights of your mobile phones to highlight the objective for which we are fighting together," he had said in the message.

Read moreCoronavirus lockdown: Delhi struggles to feed migrants left behind

As soon as it was 9 p.m., residential complexes across the nation blacked out, as millions of people turned off their lights and came out onto their balconies and roofs. Some people were seen lighting candles and lamps, while others waved their phones with the flashlights turned on.

Chants, patriotic and religious, were heard from several apartment buildings in the capital, New Delhi, amid roaring applause.

#9pm9minutes trended on social media as several people, including Modi, shared their pictures.

Ambassadors from several countries including Germany also joined the people of India.

As the event progressed and crossed the nine-minute mark, loud bangs from firecrackers were also heard in different parts of the country. People called out the behavior on social media, saying that it was "insensitive" and the purpose of the event was not "celebration" but rather "peaceful solidarity."

This is the second time Indians have showcased a communal display on the prime minister's call. On March 22, when the country was put under a one-day voluntary curfew before the lockdown, Modi asked people to applaud health care workers, police and the media for their work by clapping and banging utensils.
Read moreIndia's new residence law triggers fury in Kashmir

Meanwhile, the number of COVID-19 cases in India on Sunday rose by 505 in just 24 hours, taking the total number of infections to 3,577. Eighty-three deaths have been reported since the outbreak began in the country. The latest Health Ministry figures show that 275 people have recovered.

Some 1.3 billion people in India have been under a 21-day lockdown from March 25 in response to the coronavirus outbreak. There are restrictions on people leaving their homes, with only essential services being allowed to function.

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