Jamaica Gleaner

Virus surge damages Modi’s image of competence

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INDIA’S HOSPITALS were packed with coronaviru­s patients, relatives of the sick scrambled to find supplies of oxygen, and crematoriu­ms were running near full capacity to handle the dead.

Yet despite those clear signs of an overwhelmi­ng health crisis, Prime Minister Narendra Modi pressed ahead with a densely packed campaign rally.

“I have never seen such a huge crowd before!” he roared to his supporters in West Bengal state on April 17, before key local elections. “Wherever I can see, I can only see people. I can see nothing else.”

As another deadly wave of COVID-19 infections was swamping India, Modi’s government refused to cancel a giant Hindu festival. Cricket matches, attended by tens of thousands, carried on, too.

The catastroph­ic surge has badly dented Modi’s political image after he drew praise last year for moving quickly to lock down India’s nearly 1.4 billion people. Now, he’s been called a “supersprea­der” by the vice-president of the Indian Medical Associatio­n, Dr Navjot Dahiya.

With deaths mounting and a touted vaccine roll-out faltering badly, Modi has pushed much of the responsibi­lity for fighting the virus on to poorly equipped and unprepared state government­s, and even on to patients themselves, critics say.

“It is a crime against humanity,” author and activist Arundhati Roy said of Modi’s handling of the virus. “Foreign government­s are rushing to help. But as long as decision-making remains with Modi, who has shown himself to be incapable of working with experts or looking beyond securing narrow political gain, it will be like pouring aid into a sieve.”

The 70-year-old, whose image as a technocrat brought him deep approval from a middle class weary of corruption and bureaucrat­ic dysfunctio­n, has been accused of stifling dissent and choosing politics over public health.

When the official COVID-19 death toll crossed 200,000 – a number experts say is a severe undercount – Modi was silent.

‘WAR FOOTING’

His government says it is on a “war footing,” ramping up hospital capacity, supplies of oxygen and drugs.

“The present COVID pandemic is a once-in-a-century crisis,” Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Minister Prakash Javadekar told The Associated Press. “All efforts are being made to overcome the situation by the central government in close coordinati­on with the state government­s and society at large.”

When Modi won national elections in 2014, he presented himself as someone who could unlock economic growth by merging business-friendly policies with a Hindu nationalis­t ideology.

Critics saw him as craving power over the national welfare and catering to his Hindu nationalis­t base. They blamed him – although courts exonerated him – in the bloody 2002 anti-Muslim riots in Gujarat state, where he was chief minister.

 ?? AP ?? Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a public rally ahead of West Bengal state elections in Kolkata, India, in March.
AP Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a public rally ahead of West Bengal state elections in Kolkata, India, in March.

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