FrontLine

Punishing the victims and volunteers

- BY DIVYA TRIVEDI

Even as people fall dead “like flies” in the State, the Yogi Adityanath administra­tion is bent on punishing those who expose its shortcomin­gs in dealing with the COVID crisis.

PHOTOGRAPH­S and videos coming out of Uttar Pradesh reveal a terrifying crisis sweeping the most populous State in India. In Agra, a man in a PPE (personal protective equipment) suit, later identified as 22-yearold Anmol Goyal, was captured on video shouting “my mother will die...” , and pleading with policemen to help him as some men were carrying away an oxygen cylinder. Within two hours of the video being shot, his mother died. Apparently, the cylinder, which Anmol had got for his mother whose SPO2 (oxygen saturation) levels had fallen, was snatched way under the watch of the State police to help a VIP patient. As the video went viral, inviting condemnati­on from all corners, the police not only denied the claims made by the journalist who tweeted it and Anmol but insisted that he was thanking the police for refilling his cylinder. Anmol’s family refuted that spin of the event and stuck to their version in front of the media.

As on April 30, COVID-19 fatalities in Uttar Pradesh had risen to a record single day high of 332. The total number of cases was 3,10,783, making Uttar Pradesh the second worst COVID-HIT State after Maharashtr­a. But even before the cases multiplied to clock 34,626 a day on April 30, the State’s health infrastruc­ture gave way and relatives of patients took to social media as a last-ditch effort to save their loved ones.

CRACKDOWN ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Instead of responding to the public outcry for help, the Yogi Adityanath government launched a crackdown on social media users who used Facebook or Twitter to crowdsourc­e critical medicines, plasma or oxygen. On April 25, the Chief Minister held a meeting with senior bureaucrat­s and police officials to take strict action under the Gangsters’ Act and the National Security Act against “misleading” social media posts that spread “panic and fear”. “The problem is black marketing and hoarding,

which will be tackled with a heavy hand,” he said. Adityanath, who became infected with the virus on April 13, told reporters that though Uttar Pradesh had no shortage of oxygen or medicines such as Remdesivir, which he had airlifted from Ahmedabad, not all patients needed these for recovery.

That may be true, but in an act reeking of insensitiv­ity and high-handedness, on April 21, Adityanath prohibited supply of oxygen to individual­s “except for those in serious conditions” and who had a prescripti­on. According to media reports, this order hit hard people in need of oxygen in home isolation. Those found refilling oxygen cylinders from a gas plant in Lucknow were arrested. Even those with emergency letters from doctors and government hospitals were sent back without a refill.

After the April 25 meeting, the Additional Director General of Police sent a letter to all police officials directing them to monitor social media 24x7 and take legal action against those spreading “rumours”. He himself made a declaratio­n that there was no shortage of oxygen in either public or private hospitals for which he was criticised by Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi. In a letter to him, she said, “Just imagine yourself in the place of those patients who are told that they will not get admission due to lack of oxygen. ‘Oxygen is low, take your patient’. Only an insensitiv­e government will give such a statement.”

Following this, several instances of intimidati­on and penalisati­on by the administra­tion were reported from different parts of Uttar Pradesh. In Amethi, after Union Minister Smriti Irani’s complaint, a first informatio­n report (FIR) was lodged against a man who tweeted seeking oxygen; in Gorakhpur, Adityanath’s home town, a hospital was forced to remove the notice of oxygen shortage; and in Kanpur, the district magistrate sent a legal notice to a media house that had reported on pyres in a cremation ground burning even after sunset.

Ashutosh Bharadwaj, a reporter with a mainstream media house, posted pictures from a crematoriu­m in Agra on Facebook saying, “This crematoriu­m is in the countrysid­e of Agra. I came here on April, only two pyres were burning. A villager had said that there was no corona in his village. Today, ... I counted forty pyres in this crematoriu­m .... In addition, around thirteen hundred bodies have been burnt in the last fourteen days at the city’s major crematoriu­m. [The] … government’s figure for the entire district is only seven. Death often becomes a statistic in disaster. This time we dead aren’t even numbers for them.”

Long queues outside crematoriu­ms were reported from many places in the State.

Despite the threat of action, desperate hospital administra­tions continued to send out SOS for oxygen. The daughter of a man whose SPO2 she claimed had dipped to 6 challenged Adityanath on camera to arrest her even as she ran from pillar to post to get oxygen for her father. Sangh Parivar members and some constables called up civil society volunteers trying to arrange oxygen for patients through social media and intimidate­d them

COURT’S WARNING

Amidst reports of the arrest of a dozen people for carrying oxygen and other critical medicine in Uttar Pradesh, social activist Saket Gokhale filed a public interest litigation (PIL) petition in the Allahabad High Court seeking protection for relatives of patients and volunteers.

The petition stated: “Filing criminal cases against families of critical patients issuing SOS calls for oxygen on social media is a gross misuse of the powers of the State and is illegal coercive action that is being taken to maintain the image of the government and to clamp down on any criticism of their handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and to present a fake picture that everything is hunky dory in the State.”

On April 30, while hearing a suo motu case pertaining to COVID-19 issues, a Supreme Court bench consist

ing of Justices D.Y. Chandrachu­d, L. Nageswara Rao and S. Ravindra Bhat unequivoca­lly said that there should be no clampdown on the informatio­n on the Internet or social media of citizens communicat­ing their grievances. “It is a matter of grave concern to us. If citizens communicat­e their grievances either on the Internet or on social media, there cannot be a clampdown. We don’t want a clampdown of informatio­n. That’s the worst way of dealing with a crisis,” the bench said.

The court said that “to act against someone who is seeking help for oxygen or a medicine is against the basic precepts”. It said: “Let this message go very clearly to all States and their DGPS [Directors General of Police], we will treat this as a contempt of this court if they want a clampdown on communicat­ion. Let everyone understand that we are not projecting anyone in a bad light but looking out for help. Let informatio­n flow freely. Let us hear the voices of our citizens and not a clampdown on them.” Solicitor General Tushar Mehta agreed with the court saying there could not be any action on people who were already in distress.

In another hearing at Allahabad High Court, a Division Bench of Justices Siddhartha Varma and Ajit Kumar ordered uninterrup­ted supply of oxygen. “No one should die for want of oxygen,” said the bench, adding, “If even after seven decades of our attaining freedom with so many heavy industries set up, we are not able to provide oxygen to our citizens, it’s a matter of shame.”

The State government submitted that it had been allotted 857 metric tonnes of liquid medical oxygen and it was sufficient for the State to tackle the situation. Unconvince­d, the bench sought a report on the status of oxygen supply to private hospitals and their need along with a report on the viability of using LPG cylinders for filling liquid medical oxygen to meet the demand of cylinders.

The bench also asked the government to shun the attitude of “my way or no way” and to welcome suggestion­s from all quarters. The bench stated: “It is now an open secret that government had gone complacent due to weakening of virus impact by the end of 2020 in the State and the government got more involved in other activities including panchayat elections. Had it been constantly vigilant, it would have prepared itself to face the onslaught of the pandemic in its second wave.… Posterity would never forgive us if we remain oblivious to the real public health issues and let the people die for want of adequate health care.”

DEATH IN THE HINTERLAND

Theadityan­ath government’s strong-arm methods spelt doom for the hinterland of Uttar Pradesh where the virus is steadily making inroads. Even as hospitals in urban centres struggle to contain the virus, reports of people “falling like flies” are coming in from villages where the health infrastruc­ture is so abysmal and lacks even the basic minimum requiremen­t of oxygen.

The four-phase panchayat election in the State since April 15 became a super spreader as people from cities travelled to rural areas to vote. Despite the obvious threat of the virus’ spread through the election process, the Allahabad High Court refused to postpone them. Advocate Shoeb Alam approached the Supreme Court seeking an interim stay on the High Court’s order and to defer the elections until the State returned to normalcy. A bench headed by Justice A.M. Khanwilkar agreed to take up the matter and issued a notice to the State of Uttar Pradesh and the State Election Commission.

But it was perhaps too late for the courts to intervene as, according to various teachers’ unions, 577 teachers, Shiksha Mitras and Investigat­ors died while on panchayat election duty in the State. The High Court took note of the reports of the deaths and issued notice to the State Election Commission to explain as to why it had failed to check non-compliance of COVID guidelines during the elections.

ANGER WITHIN BJP

Adityanath’s public posturing that it is only those opposed to the government who are spreading misinforma­tion about COVID spread in the State stood exposed when reports of several BJP leaders and supporters falling victim to the virus started coming in. In what should be a wake-up call for Adityanath, three BJP legislator­s— Suresh Srivastava, Ramesh Diwakar and Kesar Singh Gangwar—died of COVID. Gangwar’s son Vishal slammed Adityanath for failing to ensure treatment for his party MLAS. In a Facebook post, he said: “UP government has not been able to provide medical care to the MLAS…. I tried calling the Chief Minister’s office several times but no one picked up the calls. Dhanya hai UP sarkar...dhanya hain Modiji [Praise be to UP government! Praise be to Modi!].”

Kaushal Kishore and Rajendra Agarwal, both BJP’S Members of Parliament, also criticised the State government for failing to ensure uninterrup­ted supply of oxygen and Remdesivir to patients. State Minister Brijesh Pathak had earlier said that the health officials never picked up phones and that there were neither beds in hospitals nor ambulances to carry the patients. m

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 ??  ?? INSIDE A TENT erected by a gurdwara to provide oxygen for patients, in Ghaziabad on April 29.
INSIDE A TENT erected by a gurdwara to provide oxygen for patients, in Ghaziabad on April 29.
 ??  ?? AT A CREMATORIU­M in Ghazipur on May 1.
AT A CREMATORIU­M in Ghazipur on May 1.

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