Article on Lockdown heroes about 150 words
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A man who keeps his ration shop open, a young sarpanch who guards her village, a woman in Bengaluru who ensures her customers get their daily supply of milk, a businessman who feeds stray animals, electrical linesmen who ensure uninterrupted power — these are some of India’s many heroes who are taking risks in these trying times and doing their bit to keep their customers comfortable in times of lockdown.
NO RATIONING ON COMPASSION AT THIS DELHI STORE
Clad in jeans and a sky-blue shirt, his face hidden behind a surgical mask, Saurabh Gupta pulled up shop shutters at 9am. The first thing he does is to stand an empty cola bottle filled with hand sanitiser on a stool outside the outlet. He is nervous about the novel coronavirus that has overwhelmed the entire globe, but resolutely draws circles around a metre from each other outside his fair price shop in Basant Enclave in south Delhi's Vasant Vihar.
The 34-year-old then settles down to work for 10 hours at the shop. He is at risk, he knows, but his thoughts are more about the domestic workers, sanitation staff, daily-wage earners and the other poor who need him. Especially at this time of a nationwide lockdown, many in the unorganised sectors, such as auto drivers, have little money to spare and rely on the wheat (Rs 2/kg) and rice (Rs 3/ kg) that Gupta doles out.
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Explanation:
There is little to be cheerful about in a world battered by the coronavirus disease (Covid-19). The global tally stands at 1,447,471 confirmed cases and 83,401 deaths even as the pandemic peaks in one country after the other. In India, the news is becoming grimmer: infections, fatalities, shortages. As the numbers go up of people infected (5,274), dead (165), hospitalised and quarantined, staying home is seen as the only way India’s citizens can save others, but not everyone is convinced this is all they can do to help.
So, while they follow the official rules and restrictions, thousands of Indians are finding ways to help those who are more vulnerable. They are publishing data and insights, launching donation drives, sewing masks, video-chatting with senior citizens, mobilising support for migrant workers, countering fake news and fake science, feeding stray dogs, and making viral memes to remind people to do the simple things like washing their hands.