Mumbai (Maharashtra): The death of a COVID-19 patient from Mumbai's Dharavi, known as one of the biggest slums in Asia, has exposed its residents to the vulnerability of contracting the viral infection and sparked a fear of its spread in the highly congested area.
Several small scale industries and workshops of leather goods, pottery and textiles operate from the slum colony spread over 613 acres.
A whopping 15 lakh people live in small shanties dotting the narrow bylanes of Dharavi, making it one of the most congested areas of the city.
Therefore, after the death of the man, the authorities are taking no chance and they have sealed the slum rehabilitation authority (SRV) building in which he lived.
The area has been demarcated as a 'containment zone', a civic official said.
The building in which the man lived is surrounded by slums on all sides. The deceased, who had a garment shop in Dharavi, developed symptoms like cough, cold and fever on March 23 and was admitted to hospital on March 26.
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After the man died at the nearby government-run Sion Hospital, some 300 tenements in the building and around 90 shops were cordoned off by police.