Pune: It is unusual to see people breaking into the argument or indicating the use of facial masks, which basically prevents the spread of the coronavirus.
At the RTO office, the word war broke out recently when a old man told a well-built young man in front of him in the queue to cover.
The young man said he had wore a face that covered almost an hour and pulled him to get fresh air.
When the elderly man tried to tell him that he had to wear a mask for his own safety, the children turned and misused him.
When several other people tried to calm him down, he announced that he would not use a mask at all.
Because the pandemic began, and the government’s authority began to mandate facial coverings, masks had become new flashpoints, triggering arguments and confrontations that sometimes resulted in complaints of police, and even broke up.
In some housing communities, wearing a face mask has raised a storm in a cup of tea at the annual general body meeting, with several members of the objection to the security guard leaning for not wearing a face cover.
Kamakshi Agarwal, a resident of Lulla Nagar, said that he broke up with his close friend for more than 15 years over the problem of wearing a mask.
“In our school group groups on social media, there is a discussion about the importance of wearing a mask after rising cases and I have said that prevention is better than cure.
But my friend argues that wearing masks is not a solution because many people are infected.
The argument continues to While the following time he said was frankly that he was not interested in talking to me.
He then blocked my telephone number.
“In the restaurant too, the problem of not wearing a mask often causes a fight.
Prabhakar Reddy, a staff member at a popular restaurant on FC Road, said, “Customers often take Umbrage if they are told to wear a mask properly.
A protector tells one of our staff members who have the right to cover since then he is more educated than him .
“A conductor on the PMPML bus on the Hadapsar route recently quarreled with a young man who refused to wear a mask because he sat alone in two chairs.
“I told the young man that he coughed and there were many passengers on the bus.
At first, he ignored my request.
When I told him the second time, he refused to cover his face.
I then asked him to get off the bus.
Because he didn’t follow the rules,” said conductor.
The problem using a mask even has a destroyed relationship.
Shweta Sinha, a teacher at the CBSE school at Aundh, given the two brothers who lived in the building came to blow up wearing a face mask.
“Both of them threatened to report to police with each other.
While they went down the stairs, they even exchanged a few blows.
Since then you haven’t met each other for more than a year now.”