Nearly 400 districts across India still have a double digit positivity rate, this is a sign that we are not testing enough. The current testing capacity is around 20 lakhs, almost 80% of this is in urban areas. This means that we don’t really have an accurate assessment of the status in rural areas. The situation is frightening and tragic.
Well, one solution would have been to plan and put in place measures for the emergence of the second wave. There was enough warning, the government had all the resources at its disposal. India is one of the largest producers of oxygen in the world, why are we having to beg other countries for help today? Why did the government do nothing between the first and the second wave? It could have put in place a logistics network and increased the number of oxygen tankers in the country so that if a crisis hit, oxygen could have been transported to hospitals with ease. Instead we increased the export of oxygen seven times in 2020. We are one of the largest vaccine producers in the world. While the US placed orders with Indian vaccine manufacturers in July 2020, our government waited till January 2021 to place its first order. Most countries ordered vaccines in quantities many multiple times that of their population. We ordered 1.60 crore vaccines for a population of almost 140 crores. Not only that, between January and March 2021, we exported 6.63 crore vaccines and vaccinated only 3 crore Indians. We exported 11 lakh doses of Remdesivir in the last six months.
But now that we are in this tragic situation where our government has completely failed to protect us and abdicated responsibility. I do not know if this government is willing to listen but if they are then:
• Firstly, they ought to make a clear vaccination policy. They need to centralise procurement and decentralise distribution. Presently they are functioning in reverse. Their central government’s vaccination policy is based on political exigencies rather than being driven by the need to save the maximum number of lives. Nowhere in the world are states and cities in the same country compelled to issue tenders and compete against each other to acquire vaccines.
• Secondly, they should use all the power and resources at their disposal to immediately set up testing and treatment facilities in every block and village. Involve all help at hand – paramilitary, military, civil society, state agencies, etc. At this stage, managing and containing the rural spread is most urgent.
• Thirdly, the black fungus and white fungus epidemics are emerging responses to COVID and its treatment. As time progresses there may be more medical conditions emerging as off shoots of the virus. It is imperative for the government to listen to experts and engage meaningfully with them in order to prepare for the inevitable third wave. It needs to issue much clearer directives. People seem divided into two groups at present – those who have access to too much conflicting information and those who have no information at all. Both create the circumstances for life threatening situations to arise.
• Fourthly, divert funds from vanity projects like the Central Vista Project towards the fight against COVID. It’s not just the money, building a residential palace for the Prime Minister at a time like this sends a very wrong signal to the public about his priorities. It is insensitive and hurtful to those who have run from pillar to post in search of help and lost loved ones due to the lack of facilities. There is so much that can be done with those same funds. For example, just yesterday I was talking to some of the teacher’s from UP who have lost more than 1,600 colleagues on election duty, some of these funds could have gone towards compensation that will sustain affected families or even towards a comprehensive financial package to support doctors and healthcare workers who are risking their lives to keep the rest of us alive.
• The fifth thing that I feel really needs to be done is for the government to stop obsessing with PR and image building. More than anything else, it is this obsession that is derailing every effort to fight COVID. Concealing data impedes the measures needed to identify, isolate and treat patients. Harassing and penalising those who ask for help or even those who attempt to provide help instils fear in the public mind and obstructs the flow of correct information that is essential to save lives. All this indulgence in cooking up tool kits and attempting to show every constructive suggestion as an anti-national affront is a waste of the government’s time and resources. It is a shame at a time like this.
Fundamentally, they need to realise that it is incumbent on them to save lives. Whether they like it or not the responsibility to govern the nation during this unprecedented calamity falls upon the Prime Minister of our country.
The government says it’s in control and the states have to take responsibility.
During the first wave they completely centralised their response to the crisis, now they conveniently want to pass the buck. The same Home Minister who was micromanaging lockdowns to the extent that orders were being passed outlining steps to be taken by Resident Welfare Associations, has vanished after the West Bengal elections. Where is he today?
Do you see the hypocrisy? They are functioning on a short term PM’s Image Management Plan rather than on a long term COVID Management Plan. Unfortunately for them, leadership is about taking responsibility not passing it on to others. They have been arbitrary in their treatment of states throughout this crisis. Their assistance has depended on the party to which the Chief Minister belongs. When people in Delhi and Punjab were gasping for air, more oxygen tankers from Haryana’s facilities were being sent to distant BJP ruled states than to Delhi and Punjab.
The Centre has not even paid many states their GST dues in months or indeed shared the Rs 1.8 lakh crores of cess they collected from fuel price hikes in the last year. Many states remain financially strapped.
If the centre genuinely wants states to manage this massive crisis it should give them the resources to do so and not destabilise them. After all, as the first wave began, they toppled the Congress government in Madhya Pradesh, at the start of the second wave, they dropped the Congress government in Puducherry. Between the first and second waves they tried to subvert legitimately elected governments in Maharashtra, West Bengal and Rajasthan.
In hindsight, it is so tragic that they spent their time on such undemocratic misadventures instead of bringing all the states together in a truly democratic spirit to plan and prepare for the second wave. It is the people of India who end up paying for these misplaced priorities with their lives.
BJP leaders talk a lot about collective action and constructive politics during a crisis but their words belie their actions. At any rate, it is the Prime Minister who is directly responsible for protecting the people of India and steering the country through this crisis. It is so all over the world. No one held the governors of U.S states responsible for mismanaging the COVID pandemic in America- Donald Trump clearly carried that can.
Indian Youth Congress and its president Srinivas BV have been questioned over hoarding allegations. Is this serious?
The allegations of hoarding and profiteering are certainly non-serious, in fact they are ridiculous. If you can’t help people when they are desperate and dying and someone else steps in to do what is meant to be your job, you should be grateful for his existence rather than indulge in harassing him and his organisation for no evident reason.
I don’t think anyone can dispute that the Indian Youth Congress’s conduct has been exemplary through the course of the pandemic. Its cadres have strived tirelessly to provide relief completely free of cost to affected people across India right from the first wave until now. Their work speaks for itself.
In any case the government seems to waste too much time and too many resources in these sort of actions rather than focussing on saving lives. It’s truly a sad state of affairs.
Read all the Latest News , Breaking News and Coronavirus News here