FrontLine

Flying high

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Jharkhand has managed to keep the infection in check and handled the migrants issue maturely by even airlifting them home, and it accomplish­ed all this despite being ignored by the Centre

by all accounts.

something right. This is even more remarkable given the fact that over seven lakh migrants arrived in the State in May, some of them from States such as Delhi, Maharashtr­a and Gujarat that have seen an exponentia­l increase in the number of infections.

On May 31, Jharkhand had a total number of 593 cases only, and this was despite the fact that it registered a single day’s biggest increase on that day, 72. Out of this total number, 216 patients have recovered. The State has so far reported only five deaths.

According to senior government officials, this has been possible because of timely testing and quarantini­ng of migrants and a well-placed monitoring mechanism in place for the collection of samples, treatment and rehabilita­tion. The State has so far tested 59,452 samples, of which 522 were found to be positive.

For Jharkhand, the bigger worry

is

the

resource

crunch, not the coronaviru­s. “If only the Centre had released even our own share of funds, we would have managed it well. More than Rs.14,000 crore of our GST [goods and services tax] share is still pending with the Centre, besides other pending dues worth thousands of crores. We have written many letters to the Prime Minister and the Home Minister, but there has been no response,” said Pandey. Hemant Soren, who is slightly more reticent than Pandey, wondered why the Centre had adopted such an apathetic attitude towards the State. “It is beyond me why the Centre is paying no heed to our pleas,” he said.

Hemant Soren has been quoted in an interview as saying that he had been trying to contact Union Home Minister Amit Shah for three days but had not succeeded. “This was to request him to intervene because many of our people, including young girls and women, have been ment has done nothing on the ground. Zero arrangemen­t. No food, no facilities. People have minted money in the name of quarantine centres.”

The State also faces the prospect of floods. The meteorolog­ical department has predicted a normal monsoon, which is expected to hit the State in the first week of June. In June-july, when the pandemic is likely to peak all over India, Bihar will probably be grappling with floods also. Nearly 20 districts get flooded when the Kosi and the Ganga are in a spate during the rainy season.

The Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) media cell chief, Ashok Bhatt, said: “Bihar is fighting a threeprong­ed battle: against corona, against the rampaging opposition parties and against the impending floods. But we are geared up to deal with them all.”

Dealing with returning migrants remains the foremost challenge for the State government. Bhatt said: “We will provide them work under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MNREGA); those who are skilled, will do their own work.”

On allegation­s that the government has mismanaged the situation, Bhatt said: “They [returning migrant workers] are coming in lakhs, from all over India. It is not easy to make arrangemen­ts for all of them. Problems are bound to erupt.” He also said that the State government had anticipate­d this crisis and that was why Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had initially insisted that people should stay put wherever they were.

Nitish Kumar had indeed earlier refused to bring either students from Kota or migrant workers back. A senior Janata Dal (United) leader explained why the State government changed tactic: “When States like Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand started bringing their people back, the Bihar government, too, had to start doing the same thing. Otherwise it would have become an issue in the election.” forcibly detained in other States. In Tamil Nadu, for example, 150 girls and women have been forcibly detained by their employers. I have been trying to talk to Amit Shah for three days, but there is no response from him,” he said in an interview that was published recently on a news website.

He rued the fact that even in such tragic times the Centre was busy following its political agenda. “Politics nahi hoti to samasya hi nahi hoti [Had there been no politics, there would not have been any problem],” he has been quoted as saying.

Pandey, however, is more blunt and straightfo­rward in attacking the Centre’s stepmother­ly treatment towards non-bharatiya Janata Party-ruled States. “The Centre has totally abdicated its responsibi­lities. Tell me, what has the Centre done to control the pandemic? It imposed the lockdown in such a way that now the infection is about to cross two lakh cases. This exponentia­l increase in the number of infections is a direct result of the Centre’s short-sighted policies. And adding salt to injury is the fact that it is taking money from all of us as donation, but it is helping the affected people by giving loans! It has also made the pandemic an excuse to strip labourers of whatever protection they enjoyed earlier by amending the labour laws. It is selling out our national resources in the name of fighting the infection,” he said. Citing the privatisat­ion of coal mines, he said it was difficult to understand how this would help in fighting the virus. “This is just an excuse to sell our national resources.”

“Badi badi baatein, sirf bhashanbaa­ji [Only big words, only speeches, nothing else],” Pandey said of the Prime Minister in these stressful times. According to Pandey, a government that had captured power in the name of God had now left people to the mercy of God. “It has surrendere­d completely. To each his own.” m

 ??  ?? A MIGRANT labourer at the Birsa Munda Airport in Ranchi on May 28 with her children after they arrived from Mumbai on a special flight arranged by the State.
A MIGRANT labourer at the Birsa Munda Airport in Ranchi on May 28 with her children after they arrived from Mumbai on a special flight arranged by the State.
 ??  ?? CHIEF MINISTER Hemant Soren inspecting food to be provided to the migrants arriving from Leh on a special flight, at the Birsa Munda Airport on May 29.
CHIEF MINISTER Hemant Soren inspecting food to be provided to the migrants arriving from Leh on a special flight, at the Birsa Munda Airport on May 29.

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