Coronavirus: 254 Indian pilgrims stranded in Iran have tested positive

Coronavirus: 254 Indian pilgrims stranded in Iran have tested positive

Pilgrims say Indian authorities have assured them that everyone, including those who have been infected, will be flown back in batches.

At least 254 Indian pilgrims stranded in Iran have tested positive for Covid-19, tests conducted by a group of Indian doctors sent to the country have revealed. According to several pilgrims, Indian embassy officials in Iran have assured them that all those stranded will be airlifted back to India in the next few days.

“They had taken samples from almost all the stranded passengers over the last 10-12 days and now the results have come,” 36-year-old Mohammad Imran, one of the pilgrims stranded in Iran, said. According to Imran, most of the Covid-19 positive patients are above 50 years old. Imran himself has tested negative. The patients belong to a group of 850 pilgrims from Kargil marooned in Iran since February.

On Tuesday, the Indian authorities arranged for accommodation to isolate the Covid-19 patients and begin their treatment in Iran, said Feroz Khan, chief executive councillor, Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council, Kargil . “The doctors there will be Indian but it will be under the overall control of the Iranian government,” Khan added. He also said that those who tested negative will be flown to India in three batches in the following days. “After that, those who are positive might be flown to India in a separate sortie,” he added.

Anger over the evacuation delay

Most of the stranded pilgrims are quartered in hotels around the city of Qom, one of the worst hit places in Iran. With 14,991 infected cases, Iran has seen 853 deaths due to Covid-19, a disease caused by a new strain of coronavirus. On February 27, India cancelled all flight operations from Iran.

Pilgrims in Iran said that the test results had started arriving in batches days ago. But Indian embassy officials in Iran did not arrange quarantine facilities even though several had tested positive, they alleged.

“They just issued some verbal instructions asking us to isolate the Covid-19 patients from the others,” said one pilgrim, who wished to remain anonymous. “They haven’t even bothered to provide us with a single mask.”

Those who tested positive decided to go into self-quarantine. “Some of them are also going to Iranian hospitals for medical care,” the pilgrim added.

Khan and a delegation of leaders from Kargil have been trying to help the stranded pilgrims get medical care and be repatriated back to India. On Monday, they met Ali Chegeni, the Iranian ambassador to India, in New Delhi. They had also met India’s External Affairs Minister, S Jaishankar.

“We also had an interaction with India’s ambassador to Iran through video conferencing,” said Khan, who is still in Delhi. “We told them that some of them have been found Covid-19 positive and yet you didn’t isolate them. We also said that our people there aren’t willing to return to India and leave the positive cases behind in Iran.”

Ishita Kapoor

Ishita Kapoor