Aurangabad (Maharashtra):The possibility of the drivers, who had ferried pilgrims from a gurdwara in Maharashtra's Nanded to Punjab in buses, spreading the coronavirus infection among them cannot be ruled out, Maharashtra minister Ashok Chavan said on Saturday.
Chavan's statement came against the backdrop of several pilgrims from Punjab, who had stayed at the Gurdwara Langar Sahib in Nanded, testing coronavirus positive after reaching their home state.
Chavan also said that these drivers might have carried the infection to Nanded which had no COVID-19 cases a week ago. The number of cases has shot up to 26 now.
"The drivers who came from Punjab to ferry the stranded pilgrims in Nanded might have spread the infection here and during their return journey (to Punjab)," Chavan said in a Facebook live session.
Had the infection originated in Nanded then why not a single coronavirus positive case was reported here earlier?, the PWD Minister questioned.
An MLA from the district, Chavan is also the Guardian Minister of Nanded, which houses Gurdwara Langar Sahib and Gurdwara Hazur Sahib, also known as Takht Hazuri Sahib Sachkhand, which is among the holiest Sikh shrines in the country.
"The drivers from Punjab who came to Nanded and took the pilgrims back might have got infected during their journey. These drivers might have also carried the infection in the gurdwara in Nanded and also amongst the pilgrims during the return journey," he said.
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Chavan said that a total of 78 buses with two drivers each had reached Nanded on April 26 and the drivers stayed here for two days.
"They ate food in 'langar' (community kitchen). There is a possibility that the infection spread then," he said.
Chavan also said that the drivers who had travelled to Punjab from Maharashtra on April 23 were found infected only after they made a return journey, which indicates that the source of the coronavirus infection was not Nanded but somewhere outside its boundary.