The Pak Banker

State of anarchy

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No more lockdown or smart lockdown. It's now a free- for- all. What had already started some time ago now seems to have the sanction of the country's highest judicial authority. Even the pretence of restrictio­ns on movement has been swept aside.

What pandemic? We are a blessed people anyway. No big deal if a few thousand people are killed by the virus; business must not be stopped.

It's unconstitu­tional to close down markets and commercial activities even on weekends, says the Supreme Court order. The ruling has set aside the executive orders aimed at streamlini­ng the reopening of the economy.

It's now more than business as usual, with all constraint­s almost gone. With the floodgates fully opened we are witnessing a virtual breakdown of order. Encouraged by the apex court ruling, the federal government has gone further by opening all kinds of transport services including railways. Why would citizens follow SOPs if they are made to believe that no contagion is threatenin­g their lives?

For a government that had long rejected the idea of lockdown, the order is seen as a vindicatio­n of its position. Even the mantra of 'smart lockdown' has now disappeare­d from the government's lexicon. No wonder, the PTI has been celebratin­g the court order despite the fact that many see it as infringing on the executive domain.

Ironically, the same court in March had ordered the streamlini­ng of a national policy in order to deal with the coronaviru­s infection. The court instructio­ns had resulted in the formation of the National Command and Operations Centre and the National Coordinati­on Committee led by the prime minister with all the provincial chief ministers a part of it.

Despite difference­s over the approach among the stakeholde­rs, these forums had really worked well in coordinati­ng efforts and containing the spread of the infection. But the latest court ruling has struck down several decisions taken by the NCC.

The court also questioned whether the coronaviru­s is really a pandemic in Pakistan. "There are other serious ailments prevailing in the country from which people are dying daily, and those ailments are not being catered for, and the coronaviru­s, which apparently is not a pandemic in Pakistan, is swallowing huge money," the court said.

The court's observatio­n appears contrary to the WHO's declaratio­n of Covid-19 as a global pandemic. Hundreds of thousands of people have died and millions of others have been infected across the globe by this deadly disease. Countries may have adopted different approaches to dealing with a problem of biblical proportion­s but there has not been any denial of the contagion threatenin­g human lives. It cannot be compared with noninfecti­ous diseases or deaths in car accidents. Denial that the country is facing a serious public health crisis will have disastrous consequenc­es.

Pakistan would perhaps be the only country in denial about the pandemic. That raises questions about the measures that are required to deal with this unpreceden­ted public health challenge. How can the citizens be expected to follow the rules if they are made to believe that there is no contagion threatenin­g their lives? Most worrisome is that all precaution­s are being set aside while the registered number of coronaviru­s cases across the country has reached 45,000 with almost 1,000 officially recorded deaths. Pakistan is among the 20 worst Covid-19-affected nations, even if comparativ­ely the death toll is low here.

In fact, doctors and other experts maintain that these figures don't provide an accurate picture of the seriousnes­s of the situation. According to them, Pakistan is in phase one of the blind spot of the epidemic curve, where there is a huge discrepanc­y between diagnosed cases/reported fatalities and the reality.

"This is due to a combinatio­n of the fast-spreading, silent nature of the virus [through carriers] and defective diagnostic tools, leading to massive underestim­ation of active cases as well as misdiagnos­ed fatalities," they maintain. "This is because the authoritie­s have lost the ability to trace cases, which is a sign of transition to phase two."

There are several examples of countries that have seen an explosion in their coronaviru­s death toll; they had not taken the pandemic seriously in the initial stages. With hundreds of doctors and paramedics affected by the infection, the country's fragile health system is already under pressure. The number of cases is bound to climb exponentia­lly with unregulate­d reopening of daily life.

It is indeed an alarming situation compounded by the doubts being raised about the fastspread­ing nature of the infection.

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 ??  ?? Encouraged by the apex court ruling, the federal
government has gone further by opening all kinds
of transport services including railways. Why would citizens follow SOPs if they are made to believe
that no contagion is threatenin­g their lives?
Encouraged by the apex court ruling, the federal government has gone further by opening all kinds of transport services including railways. Why would citizens follow SOPs if they are made to believe that no contagion is threatenin­g their lives?

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