Between April 10 and 14, more than 1,600 positive cases were detected at the Kumbh Mela. Finally, after one week, Narendra Modi sent a tweet inviting the devotees to now perform a "symbolic" Kumbh, because saving lives was also "sacred". But this "super spreader" - to use the media’s formula - amplified the pandemic in many different ways, as people brought the virus back to urban and rural parts of the country.
Elections at any cost and the decline of checks and balances
The Kumbh Mela was not the only "super spreader" - election meetings have played a similar role. State elections have been announced while the second wave was intensifying on February 26. They were supposed to last until April 29 in half a dozen states, including four big ones: West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Assam. The Election Commission of India (ECI) established an anti-Covid protocol that was untenable, simply because social distancing could not be observed during election meetings. Politicians themselves did not respect the rules that the ECI had issued, as almost nobody wore masks properly - including the candidates (two of whom died of Covid-19 in West Bengal). In all the election-bound states, the correlation between the election campaign and the explosion of cases from late March onwards has been documented.
Why have elections not been postponed? Because the ruling party was adamant and could dictate its terms to the only institutions which could have resisted the BJP government. Narendra Modi and Amit Shah - his Home Minister who was the party’s chief campaigner in West Bengal - were particularly eager to win West Bengal, a state whose Chief Minister, Mamta Banerjee has become one of their most vocal opponents. If Narendra Modi cancelled his last meetings on April 22, Amit Shah continued to tour the state, even after the second wave was resulting in more than 300,000 daily cases. On April 19, while Rahul Gandhi announced that he would stop holding meetings, Amit Shah argued, as India’s Home Minister, that election rallies did not contribute to the spread of the pandemic. The ECI thought otherwise. But it did not initiate any sanction against anyone. It simply recommended that the election meetings should not be more than 500 people large - a clear indication of its submissive attitude vis-à-vis the government, a trend already obvious for years.
The decline of the judiciary’s independence - another symptom of "the deinstitutionalization of India" - also helped BJP to exert power the way it wished. The situation of Uttar Pradesh, a state where local elections were also taking place in April, is a case in point. There, in reaction to the second wave, the High Court, imposed a lockdown in five major cities, because the BJP government remained idle. The said government appealed to the Supreme Court.
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