In SURAT 1994 A PLAGUE SPREAD BECAUSE THERE WAS SO MUCH OF GARBAGE ,STILL THERE ARE CITIES WHERE IS SO MUCH OF GARBAGE,WHY DID'T THE PLAGUE SPREAD IN OTHER CITIES
Answers
Explanation:
New Delhi: It was the morning of 21 September 1994 when Vibha Marfatia and her husband Saumil were woken up by their neighbours in Surat.
“Don’t drink the water…people are dying,” she remembers them as saying.
In the next two days, rumours of a contagious disease had led to chaos and people began hoarding water and antibiotics. But no one knew what was causing the deaths, she tells ThePrint over phone.
On 24 September 1994, the situation deteriorated so much that Vibha, Saumil and their two young children left Surat, undertaking the long journey to Mumbai via Saputara in Gujarat.
It wasn’t only the Marfatias who left town that September 26 years ago. In nearly two days, over 200,000 people had left Surat. It was one of the biggest migrations since the 1947 Partition — 60 per cent of the city’s population had left town in the span of few days.
Answer:
New Delhi: It was the morning of 21 September 1994 when Vibha Marfatia and her husband Saumil were woken up by their neighbours in Surat.
“Don’t drink the water…people are dying,” she remembers them as saying.
In the next two days, rumours of a contagious disease had led to chaos and people began hoarding water and antibiotics. But no one knew what was causing the deaths, she tells The Print over phone.
On 24 September 1994, the situation deteriorated so much that Vibha, Saumil and their two young children left Surat, undertaking the long journey to Mumbai via Saputara in Gujarat.
It wasn’t only the Margaritas who left town that September 26 years ago. In nearly two days, over 200,000 people had left Surat. It was one of the biggest migrations since the 1947 Partition — 60 per cent of the city’s population had left town in the span of few days.
Explanation: