HomeNewsOpinionCOVID-19 doesn’t recognise Mumbai’s class divide

COVID-19 doesn’t recognise Mumbai’s class divide

The virus that international travellers brought into Mumbai, through the aviation sector that the poor or migrants have little to do with, has come to settle in gated apartment complexes and high rises

September 26, 2020 / 13:02 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Representative Image
Representative Image

If Mumbai’s COVID-19 story is told in all fairness, it would speak of a classic turnaround in how Mumbaikars thought the virus would travel and how it actually did.

COVID-19 was expected to hit the city’s slums and informal settlements the hardest considering their ultra-high density of population, unavailability of space for physical distancing, and lack of steady water supply for frequent hand washing. As cases rose in the informal settlements of Worli-Koliwada and Dharavi through April-May, these areas were described in uncomplimentary phrases — ‘ticking time bombs’ or ‘fertile ground’ for rapid spread of the virus.

Story continues below Advertisement

The inference was unmistakable: Mumbai’s high density slums and settlements were responsible for the city’s spiralling case load, and worse lay ahead. A study done by a reputed international group within six weeks from the first case in March quickly demonstrated that most containment zones — areas with large number of cases, fully sealed to inhibit all movement in or out of them — were within slums or nearby. Slums and informal settlements house around 42 percent of Mumbai’s nearly 18 million residents.

Yet, six months after the virus brought India’s commercial capital to an unprecedented halt, as the total cases crossed 170,000 this week, it’s apparent that coronavirus does not respect classier demography or geography. On September 22, there were 617 active containment zones across Mumbai’s slums and informal settlements; in contrast, as many as 10,065 buildings including gated communities and high rises had been sealed.