Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Covid-19: Portraying India unfairly

Despite the doomsday scenarios painted by critics, India has been a stunning, positive outlier

- BAIJAYANT ‘JAY’ PANDA ■ Baijayant ‘Jay’ Panda is vice-president, BJP The views expressed are personal

It would not have come as a surprise to most people when a recent national survey showed a staggering 93% of Indians expressing confidence in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership in tackling the coronaviru­s pandemic. In fact, other surveys had shown the public’s confidence has steadily grown, from 77% at the beginning of the national lockdown over a month ago to 83% at the end of April.

This was evident to anyone with an ear to the ground, such as the millions of volunteers who have been reaching out to assist those in need, or those who are in touch with many of them to coordinate aid. That confidence was also echoed by the vast majority of domestic and internatio­nal public health experts monitoring India. Their sentiments were backed by solid evidence of the nation having done remarkably well in managing the pandemic.

Neverthele­ss, for a group of the usual suspects among internatio­nal media, and some of their fellow travellers in India, all this might have been happening in a different galaxy. So deeply do they seem vested in purveying bad news about India that they appeared oblivious to the overwhelmi­ng evidence that India was a stunningly positive outlier.

In the early stages, this school of reportage and commentary predicted catastroph­e for India. They kept emphasisin­g that since first world nations with superior health care systems were in big trouble, India was doomed. Some headlines include: “Callousnes­s of India’s Covid response”; “A vulnerable population braces for a pandemic”; “The consequenc­es (in India) will be especially grim”; and even “Mr Modi is in big trouble.”

Next, as days went by, they cast doubts on the relatively few infections by hyping the “low level of testing”. Never mind that their cynicism — which should have been corroborat­ed by a severe shortage of hospital beds and ventilator­s, and a sharp rise in respirator­y-related deaths — was contradict­ed by reality. As testing was ramped up dramatical­ly to the hundreds of thousands, and it became clear that far fewer Indians were turning up positive than in Europe and the United States (US), that bogey has mostly been quietly tucked away.

Thereafter, their acknowledg­ement that India was doing relatively well has been fleeting, and the tone grudging. Some sounded wistful, almost as if hoping that the good news about India were untrue, or if it were, that it would soon be overcome by negative developmen­ts. To be sure, the road ahead for India’s fight against the virus will be long and arduous. But while it is not the global media’s job to exude undue optimism about India, neither should it be to downplay achievemen­ts and ooze negativism.

Finally, when the doom and gloom failed to materialis­e, these purveyors of a rigidlybli­nkered narrative on India turned to their favourite charge: Islamophob­ia. They pounced on the developmen­ts surroundin­g the Tablighi Jamaat, and the public’s disapprova­l of its members’ behaviour, to accuse the Modi government and most Indian media of polarising the situation.

Of course, the reports that made this claim invariably omitted mentioning that the government’s rules — such as the closure of places of worship — were equally applicable to all religions. Or that the PM’S repeated appeals to unite people, including asserting that this virus “does not see race, religion, caste...we are in this together” was exactly the opposite of their allegation. And ironically, even those in the Indian media who went out of their way to be politicall­y correct, more often preferring to use the euphemism “single source” rather than name the Tablighi Jamaat, were neverthele­ss accused just the same.

Such jaundiced views about India have gradually become commonplac­e among farleft, modern liberals within and outside the country. Another aspect that stands out among this group is an excessive empathy for China that defies reason and that has eroded their credibilit­y.

That was visible in the hotly-contested debate about the name of this virus. Although originally termed the “Wuhan virus” and later whitewashe­d into “SARS-COV-2,” the moment US President Donald Trump called it a “Chinese virus,” all hell broke loose. Calling it that has, somewhat oddly, been termed racist by these commentato­rs. More to the point, as the American talk show host and classical liberal — and no fan of Trump — Bill Maher pointed out, all past epidemics have been named after the place of their origin. These include German measles, Japanese encephalit­is, Spanish flu, Middle Eastern Respirator­y Syndrome and others.

The reason this should be of interest in India is that none of this cohort objected a few years ago when an antibiotic-resistant bacterial strain was named the “New Delhi metallo beta-lactamase 1 (NDM-1)”, because it was possibly first acquired here. This sort of hypocrisy only reinforces the perception of an entrenched bias against India among these circles.

As India grapples with the next phase of this pandemic, both in containing it as well as reviving the economy, it will also have to contend with more such determined­ly pessimisti­c portrayals. It would be more appropriat­e for us to strive for a more balanced global narrative on India.

 ?? BURHAAN KINU/HT ?? To deal with determined­ly pessimisti­c portrayals, India must strive for a more balanced global narrative
BURHAAN KINU/HT To deal with determined­ly pessimisti­c portrayals, India must strive for a more balanced global narrative
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