DM Monitoring
NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court has questioned the government over its decision to allow a key Hindu pilgrimage even as experts warn that a third COVID-19 wave was inevitable in the country. The judges sought answers from Uttar Pradesh state and the federal government over the decision to allow the Kanwar Yatra from July 25, saying they were “disturbed” over the matter, legal news portal Live Law reported on Wednesday.
The court said citizens were “perplexed” by the permission, at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi and medical experts have warned against large gatherings and urged people to follow physical distancing and other protocols. It fixed the next hearing for Friday.
On Tuesday, Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, said the pilgrimage could take place with a “minimum number of people” and “with strict implementation of COVID-19 protocol”, Indian media reports said. Every year, an estimated 50 million ‘kanwariyas’, devotees of Hindu God Shiva, travel on foot or by other means from various states to collect water from the holy River Ganges.
The Indian Medical Association (IMA), which represents the country’s doctors, has said the third wave of COVID-19 was inevitable.