A three weeks lockdown in india aimed at stopping the coronavirus is preventing perishables from reaching its teeming cities, pushing up prices and forcing some farmers to feed their ripening produce to their animals instead. The breakdown in the supply chain is especially hurting hundreds of millions of rural and urban poor in the world's second-most populous country, which is facing a spike of coronavirus cases with more than 700 infections and 17 deaths as of Friday.

 

"The police are not allowing farmers to transport vegetables to the city market," said farmer vijay Rajpure from Kanur village, about 240 km southeast of Mumbai. On tuesday, prime minister narendra modi locked down the entire country for three weeks in the world's most ambitious bid to control the coronavirus epidemic. Photographs of baton-wielding police beating people violating the order have gone viral on social media.

 

Tomatoes grown on half an acre of Rajpure's land have been ripe for harvesting since early this week, but he has instead been feeding some of them to his sheep. Fellow villager ashok Salunkhe said he had stopped transporting vegetables to mumbai in his small vehicle because he was fed up with the numerous check-points and police harassment since the lockdown came into force. The other problem was that most diesel pumps were shut, he said. As a result, Nita Suryawanshi, who lives on the outskirts of mumbai, is having to pay 90 rupees/kg for tomatoes, nearly three times the price before the curbs.

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