Business Standard

Situation normal, but all locked up

India needed to get back to work in stages. But by not getting the country out of the induced coma of the lockdown, Modi govt has risked incapacita­ting it

- By Special Arrangemen­t with Theprint

India needed to get back to work in stages. But by not getting the country out of the induced coma of the lockdown, Modi govt has risked incapacita­ting it, writes SHEKHAR GUPTA

Just how successful has the lockdown been? Just how bad would the situation have been if it wasn’t this total? How can you take a chance in a country of 1.38 billion, mostly poor, people? Didn’t the prime minister say “jaan hai to jahan hai”? Jaan toh hai. We have the lowest per million fatality rate from coronaviru­s for any major country. Therefore, thank your chosen God, so far, so good. And get back indoors. Really?

We are managing to stay alive, but our livelihood­s are in deep freeze. For far too many fellow Indians these won’t return any time soon. Tens of crores who’ve been lifted out of poverty post-1991 are half a wheezing breath away from slipping back there. We are alive of course, but remember the famous words of Amitabh Bachchan

in the 1979 hit Mr Natwarlal, yeh jeena bhi koyi jeena hai lallu?

Or let me set the Hindi cinema calendar back five decades instead and offer you a more prosaic descriptio­n, if with the help of fine poetry.

The late Gopaldas Neeraj (1925-2018) is remembered mostly as a poet of deep melancholi­a. Never mind that he also wrote some of the most lifting romantic lines that transcend generation­s, including likhe jo khat tujhe (for Shashi Kapoor, Kanyadaan, 1968) and phoolon ke rang se (Dev Anand, Prem Pujari, 1970).

But his imprimatur for poetic immortalit­y comes from his saddest: Karwan guzar gaya, gubaar dekhte rahe ... (the caravan passed me by and I was left staring at the dust-clouds in its wake). Sung by Mohammed Rafi and composed by Roshan in 1966 Tanuja-starrer Nai Umar ki Nai Fasal, it was the ultimate song of selfpity for the jilted, defeated lover.

It was so sad that it lent itself naturally to becoming the most parodied of our early school years. The refrain, in the publishabl­e parody version, changed to: Mar gaya mareez hum bukhar dekhte rahe (all I did was keep checking the temperatur­e, but the patient died).

I understand the connection between fevercheck­ing and coronaviru­s and the risk of being accused of trivialisi­ng a once-in-a-century tragedy. But continuing on, unthinking­ly, with more or less the same lockdown amounts to exactly this. If the virus won’t kill us, joblessnes­s, hunger, desolation, depression, loss of self-esteem will. A quarantine

shouldn’t become a death-bed. s the government’s latest decisions — two-week lockdown extension and very selective opening up in most of our colour-coded country — show, this is not about to change soon. That absolute power corrupts absolutely is old hat. Check out the history of any state or establishm­ent. Absolute power can also intoxicate you absolutely.

That is why the central government is now micromanag­ing not just the affairs of all the states, but also the day-to-day lives of us individual­s. Added with such total power over people, you can only expect many bureaucrat­s to start behaving like mini Robert Mugabes. Check out Haryana. A senior cop announced on camera the district’s borders were closed for everyone, including journalist­s (never mind) and doctors. Hello, the state has proudly built something called the Medicity, where several large hospitals function. Hundreds of patients, doctors and paramedics commute here from Delhi.

It is one thing that a state is nutty enough to be locking up a district with pretension­s to being India’s third Silicon Valley. But it is also a zone both Delhi and Rajasthan need for transit. You think this is absurd enough as an example of absolute power driving the establishm­ent nuts? Read the story by Theprint reporter Jyoti Yadav on how the state is digging up decent roads on the borders to keep coronaviru­s in Delhi ( https://theprint.in/india/to-stop-entry-of-coro

Ana-carriers-from-delhi-haryana-digs-up-roads-after

sealing-borders/412614/). Good idea, digging a moat, just in case it comes riding a T-72 tank.

India may not have the cash or the fiscal headroom to print money — unlike the US, blessed with the world’s reserve currency — to spend its way out of a crisis. But it has an Army, Navy and Air Force, to shore up your spirits as we will see soon. Flypasts, bands, even helicopter­s dropping flowers over hospitals treating coronaviru­s patients are cute ideas for an Akshay Kumar film. But when lakhs of workers at the lowest rung of the employment ladder would still be walking back home, this is the true 2020 equivalent of “let them eat cake”.

What they need, on the other hand, is a more purposeful reopening and a reassuranc­e that their jobs are not only not going away, but resuming soon and they are needed. Flypasts as if to celebrate this mass exodus are, I am afraid, an obscenity.

During the Vietnam war, the press corps had given the daily US military briefings a name: Five O’clock Follies. Such a thing happens when an establishm­ent begins to see its people as infants. Watch the daily Ministry of Health briefings in New Delhi, supposedly giving an overview of the Covid-19 situation in the country.

These are so anodyne, so monotonous, and so shy of taking any questions that you could pretty much name these as Four O’clock Follies. Just the numbers of cases and deaths, how much better we are doing than the rest of the world, day after day after day after day. Out of sheer exasperati­on at the lack of informatio­n I even landed up at one of these the other day, attending a PIB briefing after a couple of decades, if not longer.

I did also ask a question: “Of all the active cases now, how many are on ventilator?” The lone scientist/doctor there didn’t answer this, a civil servant did. Something like, the percentage of people in serious condition is routinely stated by the Icmr/health authoritie­s. Or something to that effect. No follow-up, no nothing. Just a restatemen­t of the familiar old bureaucrat­ic tactics: “I won’t ever lie to you. But if you ask me my name, I shall give you my date of birth.”

Three months after the first Covid-19 case was reported in India, we need more than a daily scoreboard. That can be simply tweeted by someone at a fixed time in a day. Nor do we deserve daily instructio­ns, dos and don’ts and then clarificat­ions. One has already landed (on liquor sale) even as this is being written, confirming the truism: Never believe anything from this government until it’s been clarified.

We need to see the road ahead, a road to some kind of normalcy. Or, we will end up a nation of beggars, waiting for sarkari orders and mai-bap handouts for survival. We are getting deluded by how inspiratio­nally compliant Indians are with this unthinking, one-sizefits-all, lockdown that would do Tughlaq proud.

The reason we are so compliant is that we are so fearful. Fear, fatalism, self-pity are all viruses more infectious than coronaviru­s, more destructiv­e and also addictive. This nation of 1.38 billion people, hailed globally for being so aspiration­al and entreprene­urial, is now sitting in the trenches grateful it is still not dead.

We know that there is a valid concept of putting a grievously ill patient under a medically induced coma, to allow the body to recover. But you need to lift it as early as possible. If you let her go on in coma, and pat your own back each time you check the temperatur­e, you risk falling into the syndrome we parodied poet Neeraj about: Kept checking for fever while the patient died.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
 ??  ?? NATIONAL INTEREST SHEKHAR GUPTA
NATIONAL INTEREST SHEKHAR GUPTA

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