The Citizen (KZN)

Analysts slam strongman govts

COVID-19: TYPICAL FOR THEM TO STIFLE CRITICISM

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Amnesty Internatio­nal cites China, Russia, Malaysia and Pakistan as examples.

Posturing, repression and a distaste for facts: the world’s strongman regimes have dealt with the Covid-19 pandemic in much the same way they deal with everything else, analysts say.

But the sometimes blatant disregard for the wellbeing of population­s, coupled with sheer incompeten­ce, has undermined whatever trust citizens have in such leaders, they say.

“They all have a similar type of leadership behaviour, a macho leadership,” said Uma Kambhampat­i,

a developmen­t economist at Britain’s University of Reading.

“This kind of pandemic must be irritating the hell out of them.”

After a strong public presence early in the crisis, leaders like Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, and Russian President Vladimir Putin are now avoiding the Covid-19 limelight, she said.

“In the initial stages they could blame others but now, six months down the line, they can’t blame anybody else,” she said. “It’s not a comfortabl­e position for them.”

One typical response has been to stifle criticism from health workers and other essential personnel, said Amnesty Internatio­nal, citing China, Russia, Malaysia and Pakistan as examples.

In a July report, titled Exposed, Silenced, Attacked, Amnesty highlighte­d cases of government­s imposing restrictio­ns to prevent such workers from voicing concerns about policy. Their worries often relate to unsafe working conditions, lack of adequate personal protective equipment, insufficie­nt training and inadequate testing of health care workers.

Amnesty cites the case in China of ophthalmol­ogist Li Wenliang, who warned colleagues about Covid-19 and was sanctioned for “spreading rumours”.

In Egypt, authoritie­s have used charges of “spreading false news” and “terrorism” to arrest, between March and June, nine doctors and pharmacist­s for speaking out, according to Amnesty.

The same charges were brought against Mohamed Mounir, a 65-year-old journalist working for Al Jazeera, who died of Covid-19 in prison in July.

In Pakistan, police broke up a protest by doctors against their working conditions and lack of equipment, ploughing into the crowd with batons and arresting dozens, Amnesty said.

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