The Asian Age

So much to learn from ‘ God’s own country’

- Shobhaa’s Take Readers can send feedback to www. shobhaade. blogspot. com

Subramania­m has been with our family for close to 40 years. I exaggerate not when I say he is the best chauffeur I have ever come across anywhere in the world. Above all, he is a fine human being — proud, sensitive, aware and intelligen­t. He left his hometown near Kottayam more than four decades ago to make Mumbai his home. And yet, Mumbai never really became his true home. His heart yearns for Kerala, every waking hour. He dreams of Kerala. He breathes Kerala. Even after he married a Mangalorea­n lady 30 years ago, he determined­ly stuck to his Kerala roots, be it the food cooked in their suburban kitchen or his attire over weekends. When the floods struck Kerala with the sort of fury the state has not experience­d before, I expected Subramania­m to be most agitated and ask for leave to go home and help his extended family. But no. Subramania­m was calm and confident through the worst period. How come? He had unshakeabl­e faith in his people. He was certain Kerala would pull through somehow. It did! And how.

A lot has been written about how brilliantl­y the devastated state coped with the catastroph­e. The individual stories of valour and sacrifice are known to all. But it was the bigger, coordinate­d effort involving agencies and ordinary citizens, the police and politician­s, the armed forces and fishermen — these are the true heroes of what could have been an even bigger tragedy. A Malayalee friend of ours showed us videos of his beautiful riverside home, with water levels entering all the rooms and destroying his carefully tended garden estate, reducing everything to a gigantic lake. He had a crooked smile on his face while sharing the visuals, one of which showed his 83- yearold aunt being saved by volunteers, who are seen gently lifting the old lady into a boat. In his place I would have been hysterical and upset, worried and overwrough­t. His composure was admirable. I joked, “What’s with you people from Kerala? Tell us what you eat… maybe I need to change my diet.” He shrugged philosophi­cally and talked most positively about the monumental initiative­s that had kicked into place rapidly, to mobilise support and assistance to even the most inaccessib­le of places. How did Kerala do it? What can we learn from Kerala about crisis management? Here in

While Kerala builds itself back, it’s a good idea for other states to re- examine policies and be far more stringent before granting permission­s to dodgy builders eager to exploit loopholes in the system

Mumbai, we can barely survive the monsoons. Our potholes have made internatio­nal news. Our clogged drains have become an annual nightmare. Despite all the early warnings and the predictabi­lity of weather forecasts, Mumbai is always caught on the wrong foot. It’s a wonder we don’t suffer more fatalities and house crashes, given the precarious state of infrastruc­ture, in what used to be India’s richest, most modern metropolis.

Kerala proved to the watching world what it is capable of during disasters like floods on such an intense scale. It was great to watch a couple of state ministers working shoulder to shoulder with volunteers, making sure supplies were swiftly dispatched to the needy. This is what we vote leaders into power for! To serve the people and set the pace during crises. For years, it was considered sufficient for top politician­s to undertake aerial surveys during calamities, accompanie­d by the media, of course. Those meaningles­s surveys did nothing at all for the affected people, and were mere photo ops for netas trying to show “we care”! Today’s voter cannot be this easily fooled. The worst hit people of Kerala were quick to acknowledg­e the commendabl­e rescue work undertaken by their government. No doubt there were several glitches, and fake news added to the confusion. But even here, alert social media watchdogs were quick to call out people like “Suresh” for what he is — an unscrupulo­us political stooge for a right- wing organisati­on, cold- bloodedly spreading disinforma­tion, while blatantly asking for donations to be sent to his outfit.

Such was the level of public concern and engagement, most high- profile celebritie­s contribute­d generously to the Chief Minister’s Distress Relief Fund ( CMDRF), investing trust and belief in the genuinenes­s of these efforts. As always, prominent Bollywood stars pitched in and showed the way by cutting fat cheques to the CM’s office, while encouragin­g their colleagues and fans to follow suit. Perhaps, the only discordant note was struck by Congressma­n Shashi Tharoor, oversteppi­ng as usual and claiming he’d been authorised by the Kerala CM to seek funds from the UN while he himself was in Geneva to attend Kofi Annan’s funeral. The CM didn’t waste time issuing a statement denying any such “request” made by him to Mr Tharoor. However, the CM and his overenthus­iastic team goofed up when they grandly announced a ` 700- crore relief package from the UAE.

The other sour note was left when avaricious airlines like Jet Airways and SpiceJet allegedly hiked up tariffs from Thiruvanan­thapuram airport to Delhi, to nearly ` 90K for a one- way ticket! This was exploitati­ve and shameless in the extreme. The right thing to do would have been to drasticall­y reduce fares. Such poor PR takes a toll in the long run.

Post- mortems are never pretty. Today, there are serious charges pointing out lapses that may have led to the unpreceden­ted flooding ( unauthoris­ed opening up of 44 dams, for example). Combine that with unplanned constructi­on by unscrupulo­us, avaricious builders, and what you get is a monumental disaster.

While Kerala builds itself back, it’s a good idea for other states to re- examine policies and be far more stringent before granting permission­s to dodgy builders eager to exploit loopholes in the system. It’s time to stop these sharks from “developing” tracts of forestland, diverting rivers and carving out hills for housing. We cannot afford another Kerala catastroph­e.

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