Cry, The Beleaguered Country

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Cry, The Beleaguered Country

 

 

# 1555

 

An editorial by Poonam I Kaushish of the INFA (India News and Feature Alliance), printed today in Central Chronicle says that bird flu is emblematic of a much larger problem in India; the failure of the government to deal with an increasing number of social problems.

 

Not being a resident of India, I can't judge how accurate this assessment is.  Nor do I know the political leanings (or do I care) of the author.

 

This is, however, an illuminating look at some of the problems India is facing in this first decade of the 21st century, including bird flu. It makes fascinating reading.  

 

The author, after providing a litany of India's problems asks, "How long can this go on?"

 

 

 

I'll only print the opening paragraphs.   Follow the link for the entire editorial.

 

 

 

 

How do I know it's bird flu? 

 

Anger and anguish. Despair and desperation. Little did one know that India would celebrate its 58th Republic Day riding the crest of these emotions. Forget that India is fast earning the ignominious title of being the world's rape capital, that killing is the rhetoric of the times, what to speak of the frighteningly ever-widening gap between the filthy rich of Brand India and the depraved garib of Asli Bharat. Standing testimony to a callous, heartless and selfish country.

 

Epitomised by the worst outbreak of bird flu, the third since 2006. This time it has enveloped West Bengal and spread to neighbouring Bihar, Jharkhand, Meghalaya, Maharashtra and UP. Even down south Kerala has sounded an alert. "It is horrible," confessed the hapless Bengal Animal Resources Minister. Is this enough? Does it condone and justify the State Government's delayed action, bad planning and mismanagement?

 

Think. From 15 December when it surfaced in Margram village, in Birbhum district, till date the State Government is still grappling with the enormity of the crisis and is clueless as to how to proceed. There is no evidence of civic authorities and public health officials attempting cleansing operations on a war-footing. Its culling record of birds is dismal --only four lakhs out of 20 lakhs. To top it all, villagers continue to feast on the dead chickens, their children play with the infected ones and many carry on selling them as it's a question of their livelihood. Characterised by "chickens die of various diseases, how do I know it's bird flu?"

 

The end result? Equipment and necessary tools sent by the Union government to the State to help set up isolation wards, simply gather dust. No one visited the village till 16 January, a month since its outbreak. And those who did had no clue what to do as they were not bird flu experts. A majority of the "health surveyors" were school dropouts with no medical training or experience. They had no testing equipment, not even a thermometer! Exposing the tragic fallacy of India. Spotlighting once again our cavalier and churlish attitude and approach to a crisis. Not just a crisis of character, but of crass casualness, which has become the touchstone of our present-day culture.

 

Besides, it also demonstrates that the real filth is more administrative and political. The point is not that just a few countries have banned Indian poultry and that airlines are no longer serving chicken but that it highlights the nation's inability to manage a crisis, dictated by a ki farak painda hai attitude. Many of the CPM leaders were busy attending the Party Conference in Kolkata, rather than overseeing culling operations in their districts.

(Cont.)

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