Bangkok Post

THE PHONY WAR ON THE CORONAVIRU­S

- BLOOMBERG OPINION Pankaj Mishra Pankaj Mishra is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. His books include ‘Age of Anger: A History of the Present’, and ‘From the Ruins of Empire: The Intellectu­als Who Remade Asia’.

Government­s around the world say they’re engaged in a war against the coronaviru­s. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi invoked the legend of the Mahabharat­a, fought over 18 days, as he declared, with little warning, a devastatin­g national lockdown. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who always seems to be mentally screening a film of Winston Churchill in World War II, said that “we must act like any wartime government”.

Philippine­s President Rodrigo Duterte, who has long deployed bellicose language, most notoriousl­y in his violent “war on drugs”, went further, advising the military and police that if quarantine violators “become unruly and they fight you and your lives are endangered, shoot them dead!”

This kill-or-die idiom is more than casual rhetorical overkill. Many government­s are symbolical­ly but very deliberate­ly calling, in this time of fear and uncertaint­y, for general conscripti­on along military lines. This is so they can, while pointing to an insidious foreign enemy, aim their firepower against some of the most valuable institutio­ns of domestic public life. They have been successful so far. Last week, Mr Duterte’s government shut down ABS-CBN television and radio, his country’s largest broadcasti­ng service.

Things are not much better in countries with sturdier democratic institutio­ns. Mr Johnson’s Conservati­ve government accused the British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n of bias after its flagship investigat­ive programme, Panorama, exposed shortages of personal protective equipment among healthcare workers.

The public broadcaste­r’s critique of the government was stinging in part because Mr Johnson enjoys a high degree of support among Britain’s privately owned, overwhelmi­ngly proTory press. Nor does Mr Modi, assured of craven public broadcaste­rs, expect much criticism from the Indian media, which has been described, only semi-humourousl­y, as veritably North Korean in its devotion to the supreme leader.

Mr Modi held a virtual meeting with media editors and owners just before imposing his lockdown. According to his website, the attendees committed to “work on the suggestion­s of the prime minister to publish inspiring and positive stories” about Covid-19.

In addition to economic and military mobilisati­on, wartime measures typically encourage a high degree of political, social and intellectu­al conformity. The idea is that, in the face of an existentia­l challenge from a vicious enemy, criticism of the government ought to cease.

The media tends to become more patriotic, as do former political partisans. Such was the case in the United States during the early stages of its wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq, when most journalist­s and even Democratic politician­s rallied around the Republican George W Bush administra­tion.

The trouble is that the “war” against Covid-19 is actually not a war at all. And no one should feel obliged to sign up for it. The loss of, and separation from, loved ones, and the fear and anxiety that is devastatin­g many lives is not an opportunit­y to fantasise about heroism in battle. The pandemic is, primarily, a global public health emergency; it is made potentiall­y lethal as much by long neglected and underfunde­d social welfare systems as by a highly contagious virus.

A plain descriptio­n like this is not as stirring as a call to arms — and doesn’t justify the more extreme actions government­s have taken against critics during the crisis. It does, however, open up a line of inquiry that journalist­s ought to pursue, now as well as in the future.

According to the Indian government’s own statistics, its public spending on health before the pandemic measured just 1.17% of GDP, lower than Nepal and nowhere near comparable to South Korea’s 8.1%. Mr Duterte no doubt wants his citizens to forget that as late as March 11, he told an audience: “I’ve been told, ‘You folks are too scared of this coronaviru­s epidemic’ and ‘Fools, don’t believe it.’”

Mr Johnson, whose Conservati­ve party presided over harsh cuts to health services, boasted, on the same day in early March that the UK government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s warned against shaking hands, “I shook hands with everybody, you will be pleased to know, and I continue to shake hands.” Awakening late to the pandemic, authoritar­ian leaders have turned it into an opportunit­y both to shore up their power and to conceal their stunning ineptitude. To fail to see through their manufactur­ed fog of war, as many in the media are doing, can only further endanger the long-term moral and political health of their societies.

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