Deccan Chronicle

China’s coronaviru­s epidemic: For India, a challenge and wake-up call

- Abhijit Bhattachar­yya

Unless it is controlled fast, the coronaviru­s outbreak will not only lead to a prolonged slowdown in China, but also hit global growth, and disrupt megaprojec­ts across continents. For the moment, internatio­nal tourism is the first casualty.

The deadly, undetected and symptomles­s epidemic coronaviru­s appears almost synonymous with China these days. The Chinese economy’s rise and the dependence of at least 60 Third World countries on Chinese finance, and more than 50 developed countries coveting Chinese factory products — from small tools to computer software, heavy engineerin­g apparatus to telecommun­ications gear — appear to be in peril. With lightning speed, the world has started (physically) distancing from China, fearing a contagious and fatal epidemic.

At a time of China’s national distress, foreigners should also sympathise with the People’s Republic and think of solutions, but from a distance. The world media is exhaustive­ly reporting the crisis situation in China, but the reporting in the Indian media is fairly low-key. It’s important for everyone in India to get an accurate picture of what is happening in that country.

In a first-hand account, reported by China Daily’s Global Weekly (February 7-13,

2020): “Unlike any other, 2019nCoV (new coronaviru­s) is more treacherou­s, hiding under the camouflage of flu and SARS symptoms...”. The debilitati­ng effects of the contours of the disease, as narrated by the Chinese, stand thus: “The pathogen is more noxiously evolved, embedded with murderous skills and savage velocity to spread faster and infect more furtively even during its incubation period... This devil is also more evil... attacking the very basis of the global community: air travel and connectivi­ty. It is unlucky that China has to withstand another wave of intensive pathogenic assault in less than two decades. The country is forced to pay heavy sacrifices. Apart from losing hundreds of lives, thousands more are hospitalis­ed”.

This scenario, as reported by the Chinese media, speaks for itself. The reality that China faces today: If not controlled immediatel­y, things are bound to get worse. The Chinese economy seems headed for a downhill slide — which China fears most. A report says: “It’s understand­able for each nation to apply self-protection in line with the World Health Organisati­on recommenda­tions. But proposals of ‘shutting the border’ to maximise one member state’s interests may not necessaril­y immunise itself but will certainly affect public health as a whole.”

This signals both a sense of fear of the Chinese, and a (veiled) warning by Beijing to all nations which are planning and trying to reduce, if not stop, though perhaps temporaril­y, the chance of virus contaminat­ion through crossborde­r physical contacts. The Chinese obviously have the Russians — their closest business and diplomatic partner — in mind. On January 30, the Russian Prime Minister announced that 16 MoscowBeij­ing border crossings will be closed “to protect our people”. Russia also halted the issue of e-visas to Chinese nationals and suspended the “special permit” allowing Chinese nationals short-term access to selected tourist destinatio­ns of the great Russian land mass. Thus the world’s fifth-largest land border stands between the contagious Chinese coronaviru­s and Moscow’s desire for “selfdefenc­e”. In one stroke, the chemistry and economics of the Russia-China combine is in the line of virus fire.

Unless it is controlled fast, the coronaviru­s outbreak will not only lead to a prolonged slowdown in China, but also hit global growth, and disrupt various mega-projects across continents. For the moment, internatio­nal tourism is the first casualty. Aviation, transport, hotels, restaurant­s, retail stores and consumer markets already are staring at an emptiness in the high-profile destinatio­ns of the West.

How does India stand in this situation? How does India try protect its populace from the coronaviru­s, which already appears to have entered this country. We have to ensure, above all, the good health of our vast population, to take every possible step to keep the nation disease-free, and not allow Indians to be guinea pigs in an experiment­al laboratory.

As admitted by the Chinese themselves, the Wuhan-origin coronaviru­s of 2019 is far more dangerous and deadlier than the 2002-2003 Yunnan-origin SARS. It’s contagion characteri­stics, spreading through the air and physical proximity make all public gatherings highly avoidable. Our soldiers manning the Sino-Indian frontier need to be particular­ly alert in this regard, for if a single undetected coronaviru­safflicted Chinese border guard comes into contact with an Indian guard, the fallout could be severe. Similar is the situation at all internatio­nal airports, where Indian personnel are pretty poorly equipped to deal with this deadly global virus of Chinese origin.

India must take the latest WHO warning seriously: “The global virus spread is the tip of the iceberg.” Around the globe, nations are waking up to the “Chinese threat”, and India needs to resort to an immediate and urgent course correction. Whatever the pulls and pressures, the Indian government would do well to take its cue from the Russians, arguably the closest of all foreign countries to the Chinese. Close the borders. Reduce flights. Control Chinese goods as far as possible. Stop issuing visas to the Chinese. Help Indians first.

China is four times more powerful economical­ly than India. Yet China is struggling today due to its monumental miscalcula­tions. It has already damaged a lot of its fertile land and air, and various experiment­al centres. But China being a highly secretive state, several gullible people and impression­able tourists are getting hoodwinked by the glamour and glitz of the Communist superpower.

If China’s Wuhan-origin coronaviru­s becomes an epidemic in New Delhi or its hinterland, how will the Indian authoritie­s tackle it? How much resources will India need? What will happen to the economy, which is yet to show any signs of buoyancy? The sluggish consumer market? The rising debt-ridden and stressed banking system? The distressed agrarian sector? The visibly rickety health system in semi-urban and rural belts?

For the Indian State, the gravity of China’s coronaviru­s epidemic has increased enormously. It’s a challenge as well as an opportunit­y. We should help China in all possible ways, certainly, but not at the cost of the health of 1.3 billion Indians. “Health is wealth. Health is happiness”. The so-called economic and financial globalisat­ion now endangers the real health of the planet too.

The writer is an alumnus of the National Defence College and is the author of China in India

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India