Hindustan Times (Patiala)

How to win the war against Covid-19

An all-hands-on-deck approach by citizens and organisati­ons is needed to win this war. Political and ideologica­l difference­s must be kept aside

- Raghu Raman is founding CEO, NATGRID The views expressed are personal

Two million people perished during the bloody birth of our nation. The pandemic has claimed one-tenth of that number already. There is no negating its severity anymore because even the staunchest deniers are sick, dying or cremating their families. Our health infrastruc­ture has already collapsed and we have yet to face subsequent waves as super-spreader melas and rallies start their transmissi­on cycles. India is waging a third world war. And a nation at war cannot afford internal squabbling.

What should or could have been done to avoid the situation are passe conversati­ons which can wait. A war requires unity of purpose and participat­ion of citizens. We are facing a much bigger enemy than difference­s in ideology, religion or political affinity. We will have time enough for the latter if we win the battle against the former. If we don’t, our economy will be in tatters, families will be devastated and we will live a mauled existence for decades. Who will the corporates sell to if their customer base is diminished? How will politician­s govern, if the nation is depleted of people? How can the rich live safely when the poor have nothing left to lose?

That is why, at this time, there must be a single-minded focus on how we can contribute to the war effort rather than indulge in recriminat­ion.

War times require nations to leverage their national capacity. A national war effort is a sum of the constructi­ve energy of every citizen and organisati­on. This war needs to be fought on fronts other than government operations which perforce deal reactively with the immediate crisis and will always be inadequate. Here are six strategic initiative­s which can help the war effort.

Bureaucrac­y must ruthlessly convert peacetime processes to a wartime sense of urgency. Every rule that impedes fluidity must be suspended. Every order passed must be war-gamed through its implicatio­ns in consultati­on with stakeholde­r representa­tives. These instructio­ns need to be reviewed every 12 hours and tweaked based on ground feedback. An entirely separate set of officers must start planning and catering for impending contingenc­ies like the approachin­g summer which will trigger power shortages, monsoons that will choke ravaged cities like Mumbai and non-Covid-19 diseases whose toll will start rising exponentia­lly.

Large corporates must pitch in with every possible resource they can spare. They should vaccinate all their direct and indirect employees and families, set up medical facilities for them and frontload their corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR) budgets for the next decade right now. The government must allow carrying forward CSR credit with pro-rata incentives. Similarly, corporates should hasten their payment cycles to vendors and employees to inject more spending power into the system. Venture capitalist funds must redirect their focus on equipment and platforms required to fight Covid to spur innovation and scale.

Software giants, telecom back-offices, call centres, e-commerce platforms must offer their resources proactivel­y. Business associatio­ns and various other trade bodies at all levels must submit assistance for coordinati­on and movement of resources and disseminat­ion of informatio­n. Unsold inventory of the real estate sector should be modified into wards or holding areas. The idle capacity of schools and private buses must be commandeer­ed and redeployed for the pandemic. These solutions must be planned in totality and offered as self-contained projects. The government is too overwhelme­d to redeploy resources offered piecemeal.

Our health and hygiene, police, medical supply chain and ancillary personnel are frontline warriors. Many of them have not been able to cater to their own families over the last few weeks. Resident Welfare Associatio­ns and neighbours should take every possible administra­tive load off them. Frontline staff should be commuted to work instead of having to travel themselves, their children should be looked after and their families helped, so that they can focus on the pandemic. The policemen on duty must be taken care of by us to alleviate exhaustion and fatigue. Hygiene workers should be given cash and food to boost their wherewitha­l. Every ounce of energy that frontline soldiers divert from the battle, towards their administra­tive requiremen­ts, results in lost lives. Every administra­tive call they have to attend to is a profession­al call missed.

We need to work the phones with our non-resident Indian (NRI) assets asking for assistance of resources and pressure to be applied on their host countries’ government­s. The latter must realise that India is a back-office and industrial base for the world, not just for Indians. Indian diplomats must make the case that a weakened India strengthen­s Chinese hegemony. We need to call in our IOUs to nations like the United States, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, France and so on who have benefited immensely from their Indian diaspora, and more importantl­y, need access to Indian markets in the future. Regardless of which parties NRIs support, they are still Indians and their homeland needs them.

Our national leaders, irrespecti­ve of political affiliatio­n must be pressed into service to leverage their expertise, organisati­onal capabiliti­es and relationsh­ips with counterpar­ts, CEOs and industrial­ists in other countries. This is not unpreceden­ted. Prime minister Narasimha Rao sent Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the then leader of the Opposition to defend India in the United Nations. Rao showed his statesmans­hip by electing the best man for the job and Vajpayee did India proud. Both fought for India even though they were political adversarie­s. And that is the spirit we need to win a war.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A war requires unity of purpose and participat­ion of citizens. That is why, at this time, there must be a single-minded focus on how we can contribute to the war effort
REUTERS A war requires unity of purpose and participat­ion of citizens. That is why, at this time, there must be a single-minded focus on how we can contribute to the war effort
 ?? Raghu Raman ??
Raghu Raman

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