Gujarat High Court has compared the situation in the state to the
“sinking Titanic”, bringing under glare the role of the administration
that has been handled with kid gloves by the Centre and its political
support system that had left no stone unturned to target Bengal chief
minister Mamata Banerjee.
In Bengal, the Raj Bhavan has gone out of his way to needle Mamata.
In Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Gujarat, the governor won’t even think
of troubling chief minister Vijay Rupani.
Given a free hand, the
Rupani administration committed such blunders like introducing
artificial mechanised breathing machines as ventilators.
The high
court has now struck hard. The court’s findings were unpalatable enough
to make the BJP, which is aggressively exposing the deficiencies in
states like Maharashtra and Bengal, look for a place to hide.
In a 143-page order, the high court described Gujarat as “one of
worst affected states” in the country and pointed to “lack of PPE,
shortage of ventilators, ICUs and isolating wards.…”
Describing
the condition of Ahmedabad Civil Hospital as “pathetic”, Justices J.B.
Pardiwala and Ilesh Vora said the hospital “is as good as a dungeon,
maybe even worse than a dungeon”.
The judges said “there is no
single command and control structure in Civil Hospital” and “the health
minister of Gujarat does not seem to be aware of what is going on, nor
appears to have ever visited the hospital”.
The withering comments
have been earned in spite of reported oversight by the Prime Minister
and the fact that the nodal agency to manage the Corona crisis is the
Union ministry, headed by Amit Shah who is an MP from the adjacent
Gandhinagar. Four Assembly segments of Shah’s constituency fall in
Ahmedabad city.
While Bengal is a poor state, Modi sold the Gujarat model to
establish his claim as the leader who can take India to newer heights of
development.
Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi on Sunday
publicly made the comparison between Gujarat and Bengal. He said: “Are
the Prime Minister and the home minister even aware of what is happening
in their home state? If so, have they ever intervened, chastised or
punished the Gujarat government? Have they used similar standards,
similar adjectives, similar terms of endearment (sarcastically) and
similar inspection teams for Gujarat government as for the West Bengal
government? Why has the Gujarat governor not adopted the same intrusive
standards as his Bengal counterpart did?”
Singhvi also pointed out
that the Gujarat government had submitted in an affidavit to the high
court that “more number of tests will lead to 70 per cent of population
testing positive for Covid, thereby leading to fear psychosis!”
Asking
whether the same criteria were being applied throughout the country by
refusing to ramp up testing, Singhvi said: “Is this being done to
protect the image of the Prime Minister and the home minister? Is it not
playing with the lives of the people?”
Singhvi said the Gujarat government admitted in court that private
testing of Covid, even by authorised private institutions, had been
stopped. The court blasted the government for artificially controlling
infection data.
The Ahmedabad hospital, which used the fake ventilator, has recorded the highest deaths in Gujarat.
Singhvi
said the Gujarat government was profiteering in crisis by selling N95
masks at Rs 65 against the procurement cost of Rs 49.61 (admitted in
court), at a straight profit arbitrage of 31 per cent.
Whether this is the same Gujarat model that Modi nurtured or successor Rupani distorted, it is difficult to guess.
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