Business Standard

AAP, BJP battle it out over Covid

- SHUBHOMOY SIKDAR

Delhi’s Covid-management infrastruc­ture has started showing signs of fatigue. Cases continue to rise at an alarming rate, even as the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government looks to balance containmen­t strategies with more relaxation­s after May 31.

So far, the story of the national capital is similar to most states, especially the worst-affected ones. However, over the past fortnight or so, it had to contend with an aggressive political opposition, especially the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which has intensifie­d its attacks on the Arvind Kejriwal-led government. The Opposition party claimed the AAP government failed on various counts and accused it of under-reporting of the death figure.

While the odd Twitter exchanges were on, it was widely believed that Kejriwal was relying on the strategy of avoiding confrontat­ion that served him well in the Assembly elections; some even speculated that he has had a deal with the Centre. For its part, the BJP’S local unit was also reeling from the impact of a humbling defeat at the hands of the AAP.

The Covid-19 crisis, however, has provided the BJP with an opportunit­y to strike the ruling party where it hurts the most: Its governance record.

Sanjay Kumar, director at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, said: “The elections are away but perception makes some difference. The votes that the AAP gets here don’t come from loyal supporters but those who reward it for performanc­e. When the government is not able to perform and you keep attacking the government, they may take a negative view.”

The controvers­y over the death toll erupted earlier this month. BJP leaders from the three municipal corporatio­ns have upped the ante ever since, attributin­g the difference (between reported and purported numbers) to cremations or burials according to the standard protocol in their respective areas.

“The number of death is something we have been vocal about for some time now, but of late, we have also seen a major jump in Covid-19 cases being reported every day. The other fallout has been that private hospitals are looting patients charging anywhere between ~5 to ~15 lakh. Someone has to take responsibi­lity for this and we have taken it upon ourselves to alert the government, so that it doesn’t repeat its mistakes,” Delhi BJP President Manoj Tiwari told Business Standard.

Tiwari has been vocal about lack of hospital beds in the past few days. “Similarly, when the government said that it has 30,000 beds, it counted private beds as its own. Now for patients who have large families and smaller houses, home quarantini­ng is not a workable solution and the government needs to ensure an adequate number of beds,” he said.

Jasmine Shah, AAP spokesman and Delhi Dialogue Commission vice-chairman, dismissed most of these allegation­s and accused the BJP of playing politics. He cited a recent Delhi High Court order refusing to scrap the Death Audit Committee (DAC) constitute­d by the Delhi government as a vindicatio­n of the government’s stance that there was no fabricatio­n of data.

“There was a procedural delay in sending death summary... All hospitals were told that they have to mandatoril­y submit the previous day's death summary by 5 pm next day,” said Shah.

The standing committee chairman of North MCD, Jai Prakash, who earlier had claimed that 282 people were cremated or buried in accordance with the Covid-19 protocol in his area, said the corporatio­ns will continue to raise the matter as the court hearing (on a PIL seeking the scrapping of the DAC) did not involve the corporatio­ns as a party. “Every day, we are getting reports of more and more bodies coming to crematoriu­ms and burial grounds; someone has to explain the mismatch.”

BJP leaders are also said to be upset about the fact that the foodgrain distributi­on under the Pradhanman­tri Garib Kalyan Yojana to non-ration cardholder­s is being done from the state-run PDF shops, which denies them the opportunit­y to claim credit for a central scheme. “Now imagine a beneficiar­y collecting the ration from a shop where he sees the picture of the chief minister, what will he think. We also believe that the disbursal is not happening properly,” said another leader.

Amid all these claims and rebuttals, what remains a fact that the government has its work cut out. The rising numbers and a major spike in May is an unconteste­d claim.

On Friday, it came out with a fullpage newspaper advertisem­ent that highlighte­d how “more than 80 per cent coronaviru­s-positive patients can recover easily at home”, thus signalling a change in the hospitalis­ation strategy.

Also on Friday, the Delhi High Court took suo moto notice of the matter related to the cremation of bodies of Covid-19 patients based on a news report that brought to light the lack of facilities for the cremation of bodies at cremation grounds. The BJP was quick to lap it up, launching a fresh attack on the government.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? The BJP has been attacking the Arvind Kejriwal government over the alleged under-reporting of deaths and non-availabili­ty of hospital beds. The Covid-19 case tally stood at 18,549 in Delhi as of Sunday; this included 416 deaths
PHOTO: PTI The BJP has been attacking the Arvind Kejriwal government over the alleged under-reporting of deaths and non-availabili­ty of hospital beds. The Covid-19 case tally stood at 18,549 in Delhi as of Sunday; this included 416 deaths

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India