Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Saving lives and livelihood in lockdown

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Key is in not creating anything new, but protecting, ramping up existing programmes, supporting pvt actors

is essential, not because it will annihilate the virus but slow its spread and buy desperate time. But now that the lockdown has begun, what should the State do and what are the instrument­alities of the Indian State to manage its multiple — and conflictin­g —goals?

To save lives, the government has taken the first major step at social distancing, and while this continues, it must heed the advice of the Director-general of the World Health Organisati­on(who), “Test, test, test. All countries should be able to test all suspected cases, they cannot fight this pandemic blindfolde­d.”

This requires ramping up the manufactur­e and distributi­on of a) personal protection equipment (from disposable face masks, to eye protection, gloves and gowns); b) lab testing and diagnostic­s, c) manufactur­e of medicines needed to treat secondary infections and complicati­ons and ventilator­s and d) rapidly creating dedicated hospitalis­ation facilities for those with serious infections.

THE ECONOMIC CHALLENGE

But what about livelihood­s? Here, the key lies in not creating anything new, but protecting and ramping up select existing programs and supporting private actors in specific areas. The key is extreme selectivit­y, knowing that there is little time and limited capacity.

The Finance Minister’s proposals are broadly in the right direction, with a mix of cash (Pm-kisan, Jan Dhan) and kind (increased allocation­s of rice or wheat and free distributi­on of gas cylinders to beneficiar­ies under the Ujjwala scheme). Importantl­y these measures use existing plumbing — the Jan Dhan Account-aadhar-mobile (JAM) infrastruc­ture and the Public Distributi­on System (PDS) — which despite some weaknesses, can ensure rapid delivery at scale.

The nearly 60 million ton grain mountain of Food Corporatio­n of India can be rapidly drawn down via free rations through PDS. With the rabi wheat crop about to be harvested, it might be better to draw down rice reserves to a greater extent, else wheat markets could be hit hard.

Concurrent­ly, there are three critical supply chains that need to be maintained: energy (electricit­y, fuel and cooking fuel); delivery services for essential goods; and agricultur­e harvesting and supply chains.

Electricit­y generation and distributi­on are not manpower-intensive activities. Distributi­on is, but hopefully there will be limited disruption­s over the next few weeks. The very success of Ujjwala means that dependency on cooking gas has markedly increased, and free delivery to BPL families for a few months will provide considerab­le relief.

The critical lacuna is agricultur­e where the government has to be more flexible, whether allowing farmers to sell outside Agricultur­al Produce Market Committees (and waiving manditaxes), allowing herders to graze their flocks and bring their goats to markets, and critically allow all seed supply operations which are hugely important for the planting of the kharif crop.

To manage the conflictin­g objectives of lives and livelihood­s around agricultur­e, the government needs to work with arthiyas (middlemen) and farmers groups. Instead of farmers coming to the mandi, which then becomes a hotspot for disease transmissi­on, it will be necessary to have the gram panchayats work with arthiyas to bring to the 22,000 Gramin Agricultur­al Markets and from there (if necessary) to the APMCS. As Mekhala Krishnamur­thy argued in an excellent piece in Theprint, with the rabi harvest in full swing, farmers need to be able to sell their produce and schemes such as Madhya Pradesh’s Sms-based preregistr­ation systems to try to regulate arrivals and manage logistics, while ensuring some social distancing.

Responses cannot be one-sizefits-all and will need to be tailored to local needs. Agricultur­e is a state subject and states and district administra­tors should have flexibilit­y and be encouraged to be innovative and not punished for thinking out of the box.

DEPLOYING ALL INSTITUTIO­NS

But how should all this be done? What are the instrument­s the State has at its disposal? The enactment of Disaster Management Act 2005 establishe­d the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) in 2005, headed by the Prime Minister. The NDMA is the country’s apex body for disaster management, and is responsibl­e for laying down policies and guidelines for disaster management and ensuring effective responses.

In 2009, India adopted a National Policy on Disaster Management. Following the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 (the first major internatio­nal agreement of the post-2015 developmen­t agenda), the revised National Disaster Management Plan of 2019 recognizes that the State has the primary role to reduce disaster risk but that responsibi­lity should be shared with other stakeholde­rs including local government, the private sector and other stakeholde­rs.

While the plan covers a wide range of emergency events, it largely envisaged local or regional effects, not the sort of systemic wide emergency that can bring down critical infrastruc­ture and supply chains and overwhelm health care facilities.

With the NDMA acting as coordinato­r both horizontal­ly (across government department­s) and vertically (with states and districts), in addition to the 15 year old National Disaster Response Force (NDRF – a specially trained force which is structured like paramilita­ry forces for rapid deployment), the government needs to rapidly redeploy the three pan-indian organizati­ons with the largest human and organizati­onal resources: the military; central armed police forces (CAPFS); and the Indian Railways. The army has the best ability to rapidly scale up quarantine and hospitalis­ation facilities. The CAPFS need to be deployed in ensuring crucial supply chains (and, where needed, supplement­ed by the army). The railways have a network of 182 Accident Relief Trains, 165 Accident Relief Medical Vans (ARMVS). Each of these should be dispatched to a poorly resourced district to augment its weak health care facilities.

A ROADMAP

Concurrent­ly the government needs to do five things.

One, there needs to be clear messaging about behavioral changes aimed not just at the public but also the police. If even the Prime Minster folds his hands, requesting the public to keep indoors, the police should be given stronger guidance and need to be under strict instructio­ns that force should be the last and not the first resort.

Two, the State needs to work with industry to rapidly develop and manufactur­e diagnostic tests, personal protection equipment, medication­s and ventilator­s. This needs to be done in Mission Mode, working alongside empowered leadership from the private sector with deep experience and credibilit­y in manufactur­ing. For each product requites one team, that midwives the manufactur­e of the product from selecting the design and standards, to identifyin­g a set of manufactur­ers, ensuring working capital, and robust input logistics chains and output distributi­on channels. They need to be indemnifie­d and protected against any future CAG, IT type enquires. Yes, there are risks in this approach, but the risk in delay are manifestly greater.

Three, the government needs to leverage the credibilit­y and trust enjoyed by many civil society organisati­ons to get essential services to vulnerable population­s who the state cannot reach easily, such as migrants, older people or people with disabiliti­es. And it should do so with fealty to its own National Disaster Management Plan of 2019 which pointedly devotes a whole chapter on social inclusion, emphasisin­g, “While hazards do not discrimina­te, people do.”

Four, from health care to supply chains, from the civil services to public utility personnel, several million Indians will necessaril­y be part of maintainin­g essential services. They are serving the country at considerab­le risk to themselves. They need to have first claims to personal protective equipment and testing and better life insurance. The Finance Minister’s proposal for Rs 50 lakh medical insurance cover to health profession­als is very much in the right direction.

Five, the government needs to recognize that in a crisis of this magnitude it needs the best expertise and competence, whether bureaucrat­s (serving or retired), or personnel from the private sector and civil society. Loyalty and ideology may have their place — but the costs today are simply too grave and manifest.

Finally, the Prime Minister has to realize that more than anything else, he will be remembered in history most by how he and his government handled this grave national peril. His leadership will require bringing the country together in a way that has not been his government’s strong suit. He needs to strongly lead with a spirit of cooperatio­n with all states (such as a regular conference call with all the Chief Minsters), reach out to the political opposition and to all communitie­s. History will then remember him as a healer and unifier, which will be critical to pull the country out from a spiraling national crisis.

(Devesh Kapur is the Starr Foundation South Asia Studies Professor and Asia Programs Director at the Paul H Nitzeschoo­l of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC. The views expressed are personal)

NEW DELHI: The US, France, Germany and other countries are engaged in hectic efforts to evacuate close to 14,000 of their nationals stranded in India following the suspension of commercial flights around the world due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

France and the US are hopeful of organising the first flights for their citizens by the end of this week, people familiar with developmen­ts said on Friday. There are nearly 2,000 French tourists stranded in the country while hundreds of American travellers are waiting to fly out, the people said on condition of anonymity.

Russia has close to 8,000 tourists in the country, mostly in Goa, while more than 450 were evacuated on Wednesday. Japan, Malaysia and Ukraine have also operated special flights to fly out hundreds of their nationals.

About 1,500 Israeli nationals have been evacuated in six flights from New Delhi, Mumbai and Goa since March 21. Two flights – one operated by Air India and another by El Al – with about 600 Israeli citizens took off from New Delhi on Thursday night. An alert posted on the US embassy’s website on Friday said efforts by the state department and airlines to arrange flights from India “are making progress”, with “initial flights most likely to depart New Delhi and Mumbai”.

German ambassador Walter Lindner has been leading efforts at a 24x7 crisis centre within his embassy to facilitate the evacuation of more than 3,000 German tourists and travellers from other European countries. So far, the German embassy has arranged two flights by Lufthansa from Delhi to Frankfurt to evacuate 750 Germans and 250 nationals of other European countries. Lindner tweeted after the second flight: “Thanks to IND authoritie­s (esp MEA) for helping us doing this amidst lock-down. What an operation!”

A person familiar with developmen­ts said the German embassy is looking to evacuate 2,500 more tourists in the coming days.

 ?? BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT PHOTO ?? Migrant workers walk to their native place for want of public transport, at Nizamuddin in New Delhi on Friday.
BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT PHOTO Migrant workers walk to their native place for want of public transport, at Nizamuddin in New Delhi on Friday.

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