National

Get Counselors, Community Leaders To Calm Down Migrant Workers: SC Tells Centre

The Centre told the Supreme Court that the suggestion to sprinkle water and chemicals on migrants to sanitise them does not work scientifically and is not the right way.

Advertisement

Get Counselors, Community Leaders To Calm Down Migrant Workers: SC Tells Centre
info_icon

The Supreme Court Tuesday asked the Centre to set up a portal within 24 hours for the dissemination of real-time information on the coronavirus pandemic to counter the panic being spread through fake news.

The top court, which observed that panic will destroy more lives than the virus, asked the Centre to get trained counselors and community leaders of all faiths to calm down the migrants, who are kept in shelter homes across the country.

It also asked the Centre to ensure that migration is stopped and to take care of food, shelter, nourishment and medical needs of the people and also to follow up on cases of the virus, also called COVID-19.

Advertisement

The Centre told the apex court that the suggestion to sprinkle water and chemicals on migrants to sanitise them does not work scientifically and is not the right way.

The top court, which refused to restrain the High Courts from taking up the issue of migrants, said they may monitor the issue more closely.

It, however, asked the Centre to tell the government lawyers to inform the high courts about the orders passed by the apex court.

A bench of Chief Justice S A Bobde and L Nageswara Rao, which took up two PILs on the issue of migration through video conference, asked the Centre to look into the letter petitions filed by Kerala MP from Kasaragod constituency Rajmohan Unnithan and one filed by an MP from West Bengal on the issues related to Coronavirus.

Advertisement

The bench asked the Centre to ensure that duties of managing the shelter homes, where migrants are being kept, are entrusted to volunteers and not to the police and there should not be any use of force or intimidation.

It asked the government that there must be adequate provisions of drinking water, food, beds and medicines in these shelters.

Advertisement