The lockdown was announced by the prime minister at an 8 pm address where he said that to counter the surge of Covid-19, the protocols were implemented on the intervening night itself. The lockdown meant an abrupt closure of inter-city and inter-state transportation, offices, workspaces, educational and social institutions of all kinds. At first, there was panic. Supermarkets and grocery shops were flooded with customers queuing up to buy sanitisers, rations, and other essentials. Those who could afford hoarded mounds of rations and supplies, leaving the shelves empty for others who couldn't make it to the shops in time. And that was just the beginning. The next day, on March 25, India woke up to deserted cities, crashed market and millions of jobless migrant labourers stuck on foot as the government closed state borders and daily wave work. The lockdown caused millions of job losses and large-scale displacement of migrant labour, many of whom are still struggling to find a foothold in the Covid-impacted economy.