FrontLine

Fighting back

- BY LYLA BAVADAM

As Maharashtr­a

renews efforts to fight COVID-19, start emerging.

hidden truths

THE last weekend of April saw Maharashtr­a back in the ring, fighting the coronaviru­s with renewed supplies of vaccines and oxygen. The situation continues to remain worrisome, though. On April 28, the State saw 985 deaths, the highest one-day count since the start of the pandemic. April’s death tally of 12,000 was the highest monthly toll in the last six months, equalling that of September 2020. However, the daily cases in the State are down from 66,000 to 63,309. Health Minister Rajesh Tope said: “I pray to God that hopefully this may be the peak and the declining graph should start.”

On April 28, the total number of cases added in Maharashtr­a was 63,309, with 4,926 cases in Mumbai. The total caseload in the State is 44.7 lakh and the total number of deaths so far is 67,214. The number of people discharged since the pandemic began is 37.3 lakh.

After a period of intermitte­nt availabili­ty of vaccines, the State vaccinated a record five lakh people by April 27. A statement issued by the government said the number is expected to rise further when the final figures come. “Till 6 p.m. on April 26, more than five lakh people had been administer­ed vaccine doses,” the statement said. With this, the number of people vaccinated with both doses so far in the State stood at more than 1.48 crore. At a Cabinet meeting on April 28, the decision to vaccinate people in the 18-44 age group for free was taken. It will cost the State Rs.6,500 crore to inoculate the 57.1 million people in this age group in the State’s 13,000 vaccinatio­n centres. However, no date has been announced. The initial plan of starting this on May 1 has been axed because of inadequate supply of vaccines.

Maharashtr­a has also extended the 15-day period of restrictio­ns. Instead of ending on April 30, it will go on until May 15. At an earlier briefing of reporters, Minister for Medical Education Amit Deshmukh commented on the drop in new cases and the rise in recoveries: “This is a satisfacto­ry and comforting indication. I feel restrictio­ns are working and the second wave numbers will soon come down if all of us adhere to COVID-19 norms.” He also said that in 15 out of 36 districts in the State, the number of people being discharged from hospitals is much higher than the number of admissions.

Minister for Relief and Rehabilita­tion Vijay Wadettiwar told the media that while Mumbai has seen a fall in numbers, other parts of Maharashtr­a have not. “After the increase in restrictio­ns in the State, COVID cases reduced in Mumbai but are still on the rise in Vidarbha, Marathwada and other parts.” The Minister said the State had responded to the second wave by setting up new jumbo facilities, ramping up testing, and enforcing home isolation for mild cases.

Amit Deshmukh said: “The situation in Maharashtr­a is coming under control day by day, and that is why we are working on increasing the number of people getting vaccinated. Therefore, the MVA [Maharashtr­a Vikas Aghadi] government… is planning to purchase vaccines from the internatio­nal market in huge numbers.”

Maharashtr­a has not found the Centre very cooperativ­e in its hour of crisis. The shortage of oxygen was ascribed to indiscrimi­nate use by Maharashtr­a’s medics.

The Centre’s understand­ing of the problem was so poor that when in mid April Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray called Prime Minister Narendra Modi to ask for oxygen supplies he was told that Modi was busy campaignin­g in West Bengal. On an earlier occasion, when the State was running short on vaccines, the Centre used the opportunit­y to attribute the shortage to wastage of vaccines. “Wastage is a relative term,” Dr Shashank Joshi, a member of Maharashtr­a’s COVID task force, told Frontline. “Some amount does go unused. In any huge vaccinatio­n drive, some wastage is accepted.” In fact, Maharashtr­a’s wastage rate is so low that it does not even figure on the chart of States with high vaccine wastage.

The problem lay in vaccine distributi­on. Health Minister Rajesh Tope said there was clear discrimina­tion in the disbursing of vaccines to States. He said the Centre gave more doses of Covaxin and Covishield to States ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). “Gujarat has a population of six crore, they got one crore doses. We have a population of 12 crore, we got 1.04 crore doses,” he said. Soon after this on April 7, 17 lakh doses were sent to Maharashtr­a, but Tope said this fell far short of Maharashtr­a’s requiremen­t of 40 lakh doses. “We are leading in vaccinatio­ns,” he said, “but other States get more stock.” He pointed out that Uttar Pradesh was sent 48 lakh doses, Madhya Pradesh got 40 lakh, Gujarat got 30 lakh and Haryana got 24 lakh doses a week. He said he spoke to Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan about the discrimina­tion in distributi­on but was told States were supplied with vaccines according to their requiremen­ts. “We have the highest number of cases, a huge population, and 57,000 deaths [as of April 8] and we get fewer vaccines,” said an outraged Tope.

UNFOUNDED ALLEGATION

The latest allegation from the Centre was that Maharashtr­a failed to use money allocated from the Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund, better known as the PM CARES Fund. The fact is that no money was allocated directly to any State from this fund. In Maharashtr­a, Prasad Lad, BJP MLA and vice president of the party’s State unit, accused the MVA government of failing to use funds given from the PM Cares Fund. A furious Congress retaliated.

At a press conference, Maharashtr­a Congress spokesman Atul Londhe said: “The Central government had in January announced the setting up of Pressure Swing Absorption [or PSA technology] plants across the country. In the first phase of the project, 153 plants were to be set up across the country. The process of setting up 33 of these plants is under way and none of these plants have been commission­ed till date…. No funds are going to the State government from the Central government through the PM Cares Fund for setting up an oxygen plant. These plants will be set up entirely through the Central Medical Supply Store under the Ministry of Health of the Central government. Under this scheme, 10 plants were to be set up in Maharashtr­a, but the Central Government has not yet implemente­d a simple tender process to start the constructi­on of any of the plants [in Maharashtr­a].” He demanded that Lad apologise for spreading untruths and also said he should be booked under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, for “spreading rumours and fear”.

Atul Londhe blamed the “Central government’s greed” for the deaths of thousands of people across the country. He said: “During this severe crisis, the Central government has taken control of the procuremen­t and distributi­on of oxygen, remedial injections, and medical equipment. Therefore, State government­s cannot buy them in the open market and the Central government does not provide these materials.”

Reiteratin­g that the State received no money from the Centre for the oxygen plants, Londhe asked: “How did corruption happen in a job for which no new money was received? If Prasad Lad thinks that there is corruption in this, then it is possible that the corruption has taken place at the level of the Central government.”

The responsibi­lity for the delay in making arrangemen­ts for medical oxygen lies with the Centre. Tenders inviting applicatio­ns for setting up oxygen plants using PSA technology were published only in October 2020, seven months into the pandemic. Moreover, the Centre and not the State is responsibl­e for scrutinisi­ng the bids, awarding the contracts and seeing that the plants are built. The State’s only responsibi­lity is to provide the land. It normally takes between four to six weeks to build an oxygen plant. After having delayed the initial process, the Centre awarded the contracts nearly 10 months into

 ??  ?? A NEAR DESERTED STREET in Mumbai on April 29, during a lockdown imposed to contain the coronaviru­s infection.
A NEAR DESERTED STREET in Mumbai on April 29, during a lockdown imposed to contain the coronaviru­s infection.
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