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Times Group and The Wire’s editor spread misleading claims over FICCI letter to NDMA about ventilators: Here is what FICCI said

On May 6, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI) issued a statement that a section of media has been distorting its April 19 letter to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). In its report, FICCI said that since they submitted the note, a lot has changed, and the respective state governments have taken the necessary actions to deploy unused ventilators.

The relevant paragraph that has been used by media houses says, “It has been observed that most of the 40,000 ventilators manufactured under the PM Care Fund last year have been lying unused at government facilities either due to shortage of intensivists ( specialist healthcare professionals) or due to lack of oxygen supply and consumables.”

FICCI said, “Since we submitted the letter, a lot has changed, and the state governments have taken action and redeployed them and are providing oxygen and expert professionals to deploy these ventilators.”

The association further clarified that they never suggested any negligence on the part of the government. Their suggestions were designed to spotlight the better utilization of critical resources as the second wave had started to rise at that time. “a lot of ground has been covered by all the governments in the last three weeks,” they added.

FICCI further added that any suggestion pointing fingers at any government – central or state- is either ill-informed or mischievous. “FICCI is committed to working closely and constructively with the centre and all the state governments to help the country in this moment of crisis and strongly disapproves of any attempt to point fingers at this time,” they said. While urging everyone to work together, they said, “The nation is faced with an unprecedented challenge, and all of us must work together to save lives and save livelihoods.”

Misleading reporting by Times of India

On May 3, the Times of India published a report stating over 40,000 ventilators produced under PM CARES Funds have been lying unused across the country while aid has been coming from foreign nations. The report suggested that there was a lack of coordination and negligence on the ground that led to such mismanagement. A screenshot of the e-copy of the information was shared by the TOI journalist Rupali Mukherjee.

Tweet by Rupali Mukherjee

The report added, “In a recent communication to the National Disaster Management Authority, Industry chamber FICCI said most of the 40,000 ventilators manufactured under the PM CARES Fund last year have been lying unused at government facilities either due to shortage of intensivists or due to lack of oxygen supply and consumables.”

Report by Rupali Mukherjee published in TOI

A clipping of the report was further posted by M K Venu, Founder Editor of the Left-leaning news agency The Wire.

Misleading tweet by The Wire’s M K Venu

In a Tweet, he said, “FICCI has written to Centre saying most of 40000 ventilators manufactured under PM Cares Fund last year are lying unused at government facilities. Mainly due to negligence & lack of coordination. We have reached a point  where the right-hand does not know what right hand is doing!”

Sugar Mills in UP to generate oxygen and supply directly to hospitals; other directions given by CM Yogi to special COVID team

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath Thursday directed the COVID management team to ensure that the oxygen generated by the sugar mills is supplied to the nearest CHC (Community Health Centre). CHCs are a secondary level of healthcare that aims to provide referral as well as specialist health care to the rural population. 

The sugar mills will help the government to set up two plants each in all districts. In addition, oxygen concentrators have been made available from CHC level to large hospitals. According to the needs of the districts, Yogi Adityanath has asked the team to buy oxygen concentrators. Industries and corporate have also been approached to chip in as part of the CSR (corporate social responsibility).

All necessary efforts are being made to increase the availability of oxygen. In view of future needs, oxygen plants are being set up in all districts of the state by the central government, state government as well as private sector for the availability of oxygen. Various PSUs are also setting up plants at their level.

Arrangement for oxygen supply

The state government has assured that all necessary arrangements are being made to ensure the supply of oxygen to all the districts in the state as per the requirement. On 5th May 2021, 823 metric tonnes of oxygen was distributed in the state of which 80 metric tonnes of oxygen came from Jamnagar in Gujarat.

  • Currently, 89 tankers are active in oxygen-related work. The government of India has given 400 metric tonne tankers to the state. Tankers have been made available by private industrial groups such as Reliance and Adani. Since there is a need to increase the number of tankers with regards to oxygen, the state is considering floating a global tender to procure cryogenic tankers.

Oxygen audit

The state government has informed that an oxygen audit has been conducted by seven reputed institutions of the state in collaboration with the objective of minimising oxygen waste. Yogi Adityanath has instructed that based on the oxygen audit report, demand, supply should be balanced and a separate action plan regarding oxygen for each district should be prepared immediately.

Arrangements for non-COVID patients

Yogi Adityanath instructed that all arrangements should be made for non-covid patients. State administration has been instructed to make appropriate medical arrangements including ambulances for all patients, who are suffering from serious diseases or emergency needs of pregnant women. A minimum of one hospital in every district should be dedicated to such patients.

Oxygen supply to home isolation

UP Administration has been instructed to ensure oxygen supply to home isolation as well as non-covid patients and that there is no shortage of cylinders. Arrangements to be made to supply on-demand oxygen to home isolation patients so that they don’t face trouble.

Ventilators availability

As per the state government, the Department of Health and the Department of Medical Education has been instructed that ventilators are made available in all the districts of the state the and their functionality should be ensured. Anaesthetic and other technicians have been appointed. State administration has been instructed to take necessary action to make additional arrangements for ventilators as well as manpower.

Testing, tracking and treating

UP government’s efforts which are rolled out in accordance with the policy of test, track and treat are getting satisfactory results. On average, UP is currently testing about 2 to 2.5 lakh people. At the same time, the total number of new cases is also constantly declining. Along with this, the number of people recovering and discharging is increasing rapidly.

In the last 24 hours, 26,780 new cases were confirmed in the state while 28,902 Covid patients recovered. So far, 11,51,571 people have won the battle against Covid. There are currently a total of 2,59,844 active cases. The number of active cases was highest on 30th April 2021, when there were 3,10,783 cases in the state. Today, it has dropped by more than 50 thousand in a period of 6 days.

Vaccination

State administration has informed that Covid vaccination work is going on smoothly. So far, 1,32,55,955 vaccine doses have been administered. Continuous efforts have led to a reduction in vaccine wastage. 68,536 people in the age group of 18-44 have been vaccinated so far.

Vaccination of 18-44 age group is going on in seven districts with high infection rate and plans are in place to expand it in a phased manner.

Village and COVID management

Further, door-to-door screening and testing of 97,000 revenue villages of the state has started.

Yogi Adityanath has instructed that doctors should be in constant contact with the patients in villages through teleconsultation and the higher medical facility should also be provided to them as per the requirement. This campaign of village-to-village testing is very useful in protecting villages from infection. Along with this, the testing in the urban area should continue unchanged, Yogi said and instructed the team to keep in touch with the monitoring committees.

He further instructed to contract tracing in all districts so as to effectively break the transmission chain.

Preparing for future

The second wave of coronavirus pandemic has left the healthcare system struggling. Keeping in mind any future challenges that might come their way, Yogi Adityanath has asked the team to assess the availability of beds, manpower, medical equipment, oxygen and medicines and instructed that it is expedited to double the present capacity.

Hospital facility

Taking cognisance of certain incidents where some hospitals charged more than the rates fixed by the government or certain hospitals refusing to admit patients even though beds were empty which led to an atmosphere of panic and fear, Yogi instructed that strict action be taken against such hospitals. Incidents of harassment, exploitation should be strictly stopped immediately, Yogi instructed.

He further said that for Covid Hospital, the patient’s family must be informed about the health of the patient under treatment, line of treatment, etc. every day so that the family is aware of their patients.

Curfew and other measures

Yogi Adityanath has instructed the administration to effectively apply partial curfew in the state to curb the infection. On Friday, which will also mark Alvida Namaz, the last Friday of the holy month of Ramzan, COVID protocol should be maintained and the same should be communicated with religious leaders, he said. He also instructed that the police should be empathetic to people who are out to buy medicines for the loved ones.

He further instructed that community kitchens should be run for the needy, cart runners, rickshaws etc. As of now, they are being run in Lucknow and Prayagraj but the same should be opened in other districts, he said. He also instructed that proper food arrangements is made in the quarantine centres and ration distribution process is done smoothly.

Further, all major construction projects including expressways, roads, housing projects will continue in the state and these will be completed in time-bound manner.

After TMC leaders denying post-poll violence, Mamata Banerjee announces compensation for kin of victims

After the third time elected Chief Minister of West Bengal Mamata Banerjee played down the brutal post-poll violence on going in her state by the TMC cadre, she has now announced compensation to the kin of the victims who died in the attack. While declaring the compensation, Banerjee accepted that as many as eight BJP karyakartas have lost their lives in the brutality.

Mamata Banerjee in her announcement said, “Those who died in the post-poll violence will be given a compensation of Rs 2 lakhs each without any discrimination. Under law and order by EC, 16 were killed half of whom are from TMC and half from BJP, one was from Sanjukta Morcha.”

It is interesting to note that Mamata Banerjee in a recent interview declared that the news of clashes in West Bengal is nothing but BJP’s propaganda and devoid of any truth. However, her claim does not match her latest action of offering compensation.

The announcement, however, is an acknowledgment by the Mamata Banerjee government that post-poll violence has indeed taken place in the state.

TMC leaders claim all reports of violence to be fake

AITC leader Derek O’Brien has been putting out Tweet after Tweet to claim that either the reports of violence are fake or that that the political killings are due to in-party fighting with the TMC having no role to play. However, the videos emerging have a different story to tell.

On the other hand, TMC’s silence on the death of its own party workers is questionable.

Mahua Moitra, a TMC leader who has been accused of plagiarism time and again claimed that the BJP is trying to take off the attention from the coronavirus pandemic by creating a false environment of violence. Her Tweet read, “@BJP fake news factories working overtime on Bengal to distract attention from covid catastrophe & PM’s failures. GodiMedia lapping it all up.”

West Bengal governor lashes at the state government

West Bengal governor Jagdeep Dhankar, however, went on record multiple times to talk about the post-poll violence in West Bengal which resulted in many party workers and supporters fleeing the state.

The governor had urged the Chief Minister to get the law and order situation in the state under control at the earliest during Banerjee’s oath taking ceremony.

Lashing out at the media today during an interaction for covering up the tyranny, governor Jagdeep Dhankar said that Banerjee has failed to take concrete steps to curb the violence and that words are no substitute to actions. Slamming the media for its ignorance, the governor said that retributive political violence cannot be tolerated.

The governor had also tweeted earlier saying, “Concerned at unabated reports of unprecedented post-poll retributive heart-rendering violence in spite of flagging this @MamataOfficial @WBPolice @KolkataPolice. Such senseless violence shames democracy. Such collapse of law and order will neither be overlooked nor countenanced.”

Current situation in West Bengal

Meanwhile, SOS calls and messages continue to emerge from the state where certain party workers have been crying for help.

The Union Minister of State V Muraleedharan who was on his way to meet the families of BJP karyakartas and supporters who lost their lives in the incidents of violence was attacked by the TMC goons.

Hundreds of BJP party workers and supporters, along with their families were forced to flee their village along with their families. They crossed over to Assam where they have been provided temporary shelter under supervision by minister Himanta Biswa Sarma.

It is not just the BJP but even CPI(M) which has accused the TMC of killing its workers.

Reports of attacks on BSF jawans have also emerged in the media.

Home Ministry sends a four member panel to assess the ground situation

Taking cognizance of the rampant violence, the central govt had asked the state government to send a report on the ongoing violence, but as the state govt failed to that, now a four-member fact-finding central team has been sent to West Bengal by the Union Home Ministry of India to study the situation.

The team, which would be led by the additional secretary of the ministry, would have to assess the ground situation in the state and submit its report on post-poll violence in the next 48-72 hours to the Union Home Ministry.

Black Lives Matter, a Facebook post and how I got censored: Big Tech, freedom of speech and the overall hypocrisy of the Ultra Left

On 11 February 2021, my Facebook account of 13 years was disabled without reason. In an age when the world seems to be more lived on the virtual realm than in the real one, I had been also chipping in, albeit in a much lesser way later than in the past. However, to be disabled without reason or recourse to appeal brought forth a beast that I had not expected to see myself, as much as I had read about it in both electronic and print media. For me, Facebook has been a means to share my experiences and thoughts. It has been a means to stay in touch with people who are geographically placed in distant lands but share certain threads of memory or association with me.

Since I have never shared anything that may be distantly problematic or untrue, the whole incident on the 11th was highly surprising. Initially, I thought that maybe certain ultra-Left critics and opponents, mostly from my days in the United Kingdom, were back to call me out on my recent invitation to BBC’s Asian Network programme ‘The Big Debate‘.

For them, an Indic and Dharmic voice on an increasingly leftist channel was not digestible. In the past, the prominent Hindu speaker Shri Jay Lakhani had been hosted on this programme but faced a slightly distasteful experience. However, on closer investigation and consulting with personal sources it came to light that all the admins of the Facebook page of a society that I had founded in Cambridge called CAMbFIRE had faced the same fate.

The absurd part was that the only slightly problematic event that may have triggered this was a certain Black Lives Matter event of which…wait for it…I was not even an active organizer of the event! The very fact that I had been the President of the society and remained admin (on Facebook) from my term as President was enough for my account to have been disabled. Had it been something glorious like standing up against an infamous but powerful public figure like Kim Jong Un or something inglorious like the rants of Donald Trump on Twitter, it would still have made sense!

CAMbFIRE and Facebook censoring

But this entire incident brought to the fore a bigger problem that we face today. That of big tech, censorship and freedom of speech. Before going forward on this larger theme, I would like to highlight the central event and subject that seems to have been the basis of this move by Facebook. CAMbFIRE was begun as a forum for free and open discussion, sans political rigidity, of socially relevant and politically important subjects of the day.

In doing so, we did not flinch from asking the tough questions or exploring nuances that others on both sides of the political spectrum may not have, on a given subject of discussion and debate. In January 2020, I left the society and only ever joined once in a while as an adviser and participant.

My Facebook post from around the time the event was held.

Back in the middle of 2020, CAMbFIRE had decided to organize an event on Black Lives Matter. The motivation to do so was the flare-up and movement for the cause that was underway in the United States, and which had reached a crescendo after the deplorable death of George Floyd at the hands of cops.

The CAMbFIRE event was oriented in a manner wherein the facets of the BLM cause and movement were to be explored, along with – and this was what created the furore – the question of can there be a Black Lives Matter vs All Lives Matter. In the description of the programme on Facebook, the latter point was posed and that became the bone of contention. Wave after wave of ‘activists’ unleashed the worst kind of opposition, not with civilized criticism or debate, but just plain hate and even abuse (on Twitter).

The waves of hate. You can see ‘activists’ express mock-amazement, talking of my Hindu nationalism and even citing an old committee list (so much for their extensive research)!

In all this, I literally had no hand whatsoever in either the conceptualization, promotion or actual organization of this programme and yet was a subject of the hate. Now, as a common citizen, without much contact with the inner workings of Big Tech and without having been given any notice or reason for this fairly random act, I can only guess that it was around the reporting of this particular event and the Facebook (CAMbFIRE) page that hosted the event that the whole series of account-disabling took place.

All this was without knowing that I myself had reservations on the way in which the programme was framed and conceived, and based on the highly flawed idea of ‘platforming’ simply because I happened to still have been an admin on the Facebook page of the society responsible!

More recently, upon having made another account for keeping in touch with my friends, relatives and acquaintances, I have had further issues (given the opaque manner in which this whole disabling and review process works, not sure if it was due to vicious reporting by others or due to the website’s own highly-flawed mechanisms).

A week or so back, my new Facebook account was temporarily disabled for the most absurd reason: putting a story on how we lack nuance and comprehensiveness in today’s political discourse. The picture was based on the aggression and violence that is meted out by the polarities of politics for their ideology and stances.

A truly Dharmic way inherently is liberal (and here I do not mean liberalism as defined by our Left-liberal friends necessarily, if at all) and nurtures cosmopolitanism and pluralism in accepting disparate aspects of the same point of discussion and/or debate. I stand for this and have every right to share the same. If that is inconvenient for some – either individuals or organizations/companies (like Facebook) – I can only try to work around it. This selective outrage and censuring is unhealthy and shows in sharp contrast how illiberal certain so-called liberal entities really are!

My Facebook account was temporarily disabled after I put this thought and picture as my Facebook story, before them having to admit their mistake and enable it again.

How Big-Tech censorship can go wrong

Censorship and regulation of debate and discussion are important to ensure that such interactions (or rather certain positions in such interactions) do not lead to conflagrations or acts of mental, emotional or physical violence to members of society. However, when this censorship targets those who even remotely are unassociated with any such positioning or instigation, then that is problematic. In my case, I have never been one for the All Lives Matter platform.

As much as Ad Hominems, Petitio Principii or Ignoratio Ellenchi are logical fallacies in a debate, tautology happens to be one too. Of course, all lives matter and the dignity of the individual is important, but does that mean that specific cross-sections of identities and their associated historical baggage or crises must not be discussed? If that were the case then the truth of death must dissuade us from doing anything at all while living, for all human experiences, end in the singularity of death! Even in the discussion of caste-based reservations, I have stood for the truth of social repression of certain communities, not only historically but even today and very much so, as much as I have stood against the misuse of positive affirmation by those who may not need it.

In today’s world, everything is so binary that people often forget that there are some who do not tread either of the poles that are so-presented. I have previously written about how I find the whole conception of the political binary between the Left and the Right not only absurd but primitive. We live in such a polarized world that people cannot see anyone who does not conform to certain set ideas and notions succeed. I am yet to get the notice that we all were supposed to turn into sheep, blindly following one of two (evidently limited) poles!

Anybody who stands for India or for Hindu values, or who does not find communism to be the dream that some believe it is, or who speaks against the hypocrisy of some in seeking the space for dissent but at the same time crushing any opposition in the crudest manner possible, is not an ‘unthinking and uninformed Bhakt‘, just as everyone who does like Lenin and Marx is not a ‘Maoist‘ and ‘Urban Naxal‘ – these being some of the terms in wide-use currently. I am an Indian proud of my Dharmic roots as well as a modern outlook on various subjects, and yes, these things can co-exist!

If US President Joe Biden really wants to end what he calls an ‘Uncivil War’, he must begin by cleaning his backyard. The position of Big-Tech companies has been highly problematic, with various policy reversals, inconsistent enforcements, shifting and fairly unclear rationales for how they will approach content moderation, over the last decade.

There have been both human as well as machine-based errors by Facebook and Twitter in the past. In June 2019, Twitter apologized for suspending accounts that were critical of the Chinese government before the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre. This turned out to be a case of a mistake made by a system designed to catch fake accounts and spammers. In June 2019, videos on Hitler uploaded by British history teachers were flagged by YouTube for hate speech accidentally, as per The Guardian.

The machine-based, as well as the human moderation system, works on term-based flagging, user behaviour as well as users’ reporting. Whether a certain content stays up or is taken down can depend on a moderator’s interpretation of a single word or phrase. When one factors in subtleties like cultural context and understanding, this is a quicksand that social media sites and big-tech can often fall into. In 2017, Facebook was criticized by the members of the LGBTQ community after their accounts were wrongly suspended for using the word ‘dyke‘, as per Wired.   

This has happened in the past as well, when a story in the New York Post on an alleged meeting between Joe Biden and Ukrainian energy executive Vadym Pozharskyi that was purportedly brokered by Biden’s son Hunter met immense opposition. While the veracity of the story is debatable, the systematic and brutal lockdown of the story’s distribution is a story in itself! Former Democratic Party staff-member Andy Stone, who later became Facebook’s policy communication manager, said that Facebook would be reducing the distribution of the story, while Twitter not only barred users from sharing the story with followers or through direct messages but also locked accounts of people who retweeted it.

This included the then-White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany. In June 2020, Google excluded the website ZeroHedge from its advertisement platform based on ‘violations’ in the comments sections of stories around Black Lives Matter. A month previously, Facebook took down 88 Trump campaign ads that attacked Antifa, the far-left movement. On the other hand, there have been users who have said that Facebook does not censor conservatives. Speaking of Black Lives Matter, way back in September 2016, Shaun King, a well-known BLM activist and writer, was temporarily banned for posting a screenshot of an email he received that used the N-word, in what Facebook regarded as a violation of ‘community standards’!

As per a report published by National Public Radio (NPR), the world of censorship by Facebook is more convoluted (ironically, in its simplicity) than it may look. Speaking to employees of the company, it was found that when a user flags some content on Facebook, it is sent to a division known as the ‘Community Operations Team’. Facebook apparently had tried crowdsourcing solutions such as CrowdFlower and then consulting firms such as Accenture that helped it assemble a dedicated team of subcontractors. Currently, this team has several thousand employees, with prominent offices in Poland and the Philippines.

The catch here is that speed is of the essence for these employees, with a worker deciding on a piece of flagged content once every 10 seconds, on average! This can create a problem when one has to understand the context or other nuances of a piece of content, since these employees do not quite get time for making real judgements! In many cases, the resolution is fairly random and based on the decision made at that particular point in time. Moreover, due to privacy laws and technical glitches, subcontractors often cannot even see the full context of a piece of content.

In Conclusion

In this essay, I have highlighted two distinct issues that afflict our world today. One is that of the arbitrariness and unfairness of big-tech censorship, having faced the same for a rather incorrect association, as highlighted. This has been seen by users across the political spectrum, but has lately been used by the Left in its crackdown on opponents.

The other issue is that of the witch-hunt and hounding undertook by the radicals on either side of the political spectrum (myself having faced that of the ultra-Left in recent years) of anyone who does not conform to their definition of what is ‘politically correct. While the latter can only be countered by the two-pronged approach of proactive politics that transcends dogma and political rigidity along with calling out and strongly standing against any instances of parochial politicking, the former needs a nuanced and comprehensive plan to make sure that the world of social media and big-tech is truly fair.

There is a need for a clear and consistent framework for virtual platforms and the application of the same fairly and equally to all users. At the moment, there is a debate around Section 230 of the US Constitution, which shields social media companies from any liability for what their users post. This is seen to give platforms immunity when ‘moderating objectionable content’. Joe Biden has called for Section 230 to be revoked. Besides this, a number of bills that would hold these social media behemoths legally accountable for how they moderate content are circulating in the US Congress, including the PACT Act and EARN IT Act.

In India, we have had a greater focus of the government on big-tech and social media companies, with the government recently calling on Twitter to block certain accounts after the unfortunate incident of protesters storming the Red Fort in Delhi. I think the recent rise of Koo, an app made by Indians and supported even by Union Ministers, has been commendable and goes a certain way in breaking the monopoly of the West when it comes to social media and big-tech.

Although Koo itself has various elements that are similar to Twitter’s (including the concept of ‘ReKoo‘ instead of ‘retweet’), the step is the first of hopefully many others, which would involve fundamentally novel tech initiatives that can make a mark internationally and potentially also set a new benchmark of fairness.

The contemporary world is increasingly elevating itself to a more information-driven existence, which relies heavily on the virtual domain that is dominated by social media and big-tech. Even as we discover modes of functionality, we must also ensure the operation and preeminence of universal values and ideals in this realm. And prime among those are the ideas of liberty and freedom of speech, but even more than that is the principle of equality and fairness. Censorship and regulation are important in this world, but the misuse of elements to ensure moderation is counterproductive to the aims of the said moderation.

I am not sure whether Facebook will allow me to present these aspects for my individual case (given that it apparently does not want the CAMbFIRE admins to even appeal!) and mis-judgement of the CAMbFIRE association, but I feel it is only right to speak up on this, so that people can be made aware of this all-too-evident problem of the modern world!

I would like end by quoting Soviet and Russian littérateur and poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko: “When truth is replaced by silence, the silence is a lie.”

Exposing the bias of Western media: Old video of Azerbaijan President goes viral. Here’s what he said

With India facing a severe COVID-19 crisis, Western media has descended upon the country like vultures, trying to photograph every possible funeral to showcase it in the West. From launching drones in the sky to photograph funerals, to selling those pictures for Rs. 23,000 to gain more clicks, the Western media is media shamelessly profiting off India’s misery. Sometimes, they just straight-up use an old fake picture to depict India’s COVID-19 victims. All of these stunts have earned some well-deserved contempt for the western media from Indians.

In this climate, an old video of Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev talking to a BBC reporter has gone viral. In this interview dating back to November 2020, the BBC reporter tries to put Aliyev on the spot, asking him about media freedom in Azerbaijan. Instead of being defensive, Aliyev goes on the offensive and asks the reporter point blank, “You think they do not have it? Why do you think that people in Azerbaijan do not have free media and opposition?”

The BBC interviewer then tries to clap back at the Azerbaijani Prez, claiming that multiple independent sources in the country have told her that Azerbaijan has no press freedom. To this, Aliyev demands to be told about these independent sources. When the interviewer refuses to disclose the sources, Aliyev responds coldly, “Oh, if you couldn’t name that means you are just inventing the stories.”

After a spate of accusations from the BBC interviewer about lack of press freedoms, a crackdown on NGOs, critics in jail, etc., Aliyev issues a strong denial and repudiation of the BBC, bringing up the imprisonment of Wikileaks-founder Julian Assange.

“Absolutely fake, absolutely. We have free media, we have free internet. Now, due to martial law, we have some restrictions but before there have been no restrictions. The number of internet users in Azerbaijan is more than 80 percent. Can you imagine the restriction of media in a country where the internet is free, there is no censorship, and there is 80 percent of internet users? We have millions of people on Facebook. How can you say that we don’t have free media? This is again, a biased approach. This is an attempt to create a perception in Western audiences about Azerbaijan. We have opposition, we have NGOs, we have free political activity, we have free media, we have freedom of speech. But if you raise this question, can I ask you also one? How do you assess what happened to Mr. Assange? Isn’t it the reflection of free media in your country?”, said Azerbaijan President Aliyev in the BBC interview.

Aliyev brings up the unjust imprisonment of Wikileak’s Julian Assange, who is still in a British prison, after being dragged out of his Ecuadorian embassy asylum in London two years ago. The United States is seeking Julian Assange’s extradition to try him for conspiring to hack into US military databases to acquire sensitive secret information, which was then published on the Wikileaks website. In other words, the USA wants to prosecute Julian Assange for doing journalism and publishing documents stolen by other people which reveal US war crimes in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, etc. Publishing stolen or leaked information is not a crime, it’s journalism.

Thus, President Aliyev was successfully able to expose the BBC’s hypocrisy of questioning media freedoms about another country, when it is funded by taxpayer’s money from Great Britain, the country currently imprisoning Julian Assange. According to United Nations Special Rapporteur Nils Melzer, Julian Assange has been a victim of injustice, torture, and political persecution at the hand of the British and American governments. Therefore, the West has no “moral right” to criticize not just Azerbaijan, but any other country, whilst they allow and support the obvious persecution of a journalist like Assange.

“In order to accuse me saying that Armenians will not have free media here, let’s talk about Assange. How many years, sorry, how many years he spent in the Ecuadorian embassy, and for what? And where is he now? For the journalistic activity, you kept that person hostage actually killing him morally and physically. You did it, not us. And now he is in prison. So you have no moral right to talk about free media when you do these things,” said President Aliyev, raising the important issue of Assange’s captivity.

Western media’s bias

This interview from November 2020 has resurfaced because of the obvious contempt towards western, mainstream media which is on the rise. The COVID-19 pandemic also revealed the western media’s unhealthy fetish of linking India’s COVID-19 outbreak with funeral pyres. Several media organizations, be it Washington Post or Reuters, posted pictures of funeral pyres from various places in India to highlight the severity of the pandemic. One of the Washington Post journalists even described a cremation ground’s vertical shot as “stunning”.

Where there are deaths, there are obviously going to be funeral pyres. When the pandemic took its devastating toll on the US, Italy, and other western countries, there were hardly any media organizations that symbolized the outbreak with the images of burial grounds.

This indignity of linking the COVID-19 outbreak with funeral pyres is reserved only for Indians, and it smacks of the West’s envy of India, which was remarkably successful in staving off the initial COVID-19 outbreak when the developed and richer countries of the world were finding it incredibly difficult to control it.

After their trial by fire, BJP needs to frame the narrative in Bengal without playing into Mamata’s hands

To say that the BJP is in a tough spot in Bengal right now would be an understatement. On the one hand, there is large scale violence on BJP workers unleashed by the TMC. Of course, liberal bias in media will ensure that state-sponsored violence in Bengal never gets the kind of saturation coverage reserved for every crime in say BJP ruled Uttar Pradesh. But can the world’s largest party really afford to look like they cannot even protect their own workers? What message does this send to BJP workers and supporters everywhere?

Add to this the fact that much of the public, including large numbers of BJP supporters, are unhappy with the handling of the second wave of Coronavirus. Could it get any worse for the BJP?

Unfortunately, it does. Like any scenario in game theory, the opponent is aware of the BJP’s dilemma and will play their hand accordingly, to take full advantage of it.

Fundamentally, the BJP has two kinds of options. The first kind consists of being proactive. At a most basic level, it could be party leaders speaking out all across the country against atrocities in Bengal. At its most extreme, there are “power moves” such as imposing President’s rule. The second kind are passive options, playing the role of a typical opposition party. In real terms, this means letting grim fate playout for the hapless BJP workers across the state.

But Mamata Banerjee knows what to do should the BJP try to get proactive. She doesn’t really care all that much what the rest of India thinks of her. She just needs to keep Bengalis convinced that there is a conspiracy by “outsiders” to malign the legitimately elected Chief Minister and by extension, the culture of Bengal. After 70 years, Bengal does not have much to show except for obsessive self-admiration. They will guard that fiercely.

Right now, with BJP leaders across India holding dharnas, BJP supporters fuming on social media, it all plays out exactly the way Mamata Banerjee would have wanted. The outsiders are attacking Bengal. See?

I am not saying that the path of outrage is wrong. I am just saying that it will serve no purpose. We have to contend with regional sentiments. We cannot wish them away.

After losing miserably in the 2012 Assembly elections, Congress began a nationwide campaign to shame the Gujarat model. It made the party deeply unpopular in Gujarat. In the next two Lok Sabha elections, all 26 seats in the state went to the BJP. Now, BJP supporters might be enraged by the comparison. But perception is everything. Right and wrong come much later.

If such an approach did not work for Congress, it would work even less for BJP. The Congress has long made peace with its shrinking footprint. Even in the UPA years, it made no serious attempt to expand its presence across India. So Congress strategists in 2012 probably did not even mind the prospects of losing all 26 seats in Gujarat. For the Congress, it is about one family staying in power by cobbling together just over a hundred seats from across the country. In Kerala this time, they did not even try. They handed the state on a platter to the CPIM. But is that how the BJP approaches elections?

Not at all. The BJP has just acquired huge stakes in Bengal. Once the euphoria fades, even the bhadralok will have to contend with a 75 plus contingent of opposition BJP MLAs in Bengal. The BJP leads in North Bengal and controls entire swathes of territory stretching from the border with Jharkhand to deep inside Bengal. The BJP even had a healthy show in Muslim dominated Malda and Murshidabad regions of Central Bengal. The nucleus of the TMC’s win is the Greater Kolkata region, where they won 99 seats to the BJP’s 9. The BJP faces stiff resistance here. But surely they hope to make headway here, not beat a retreat. They could ill afford to ruffle the delicate ego of Bengalis.

Moreover, the BJP has nothing to gain by attacking Mamata Banerjee’s image in the rest of the country. Because her image is terrible anyway. In fact, if Mamata Banerjee wants to lead the opposition as a PM candidate in 2024, it would be a huge positive for PM Modi. It would make Congress jealous of its regional allies and the regional parties jealous of each other.

So all the “proactive” options for BJP seem kind of pointless and self-defeating. But, in a classic game theory style riddle, Mamata Banerjee understands this too. If the BJP stays passive, she can just crank up the violence till the BJP is no longer able to tolerate it. If the BJP still does nothing, she gets to destroy the morale of BJP workers and supporters everywhere. And in Bengal, she can get BJP workers to leave the party in droves if only to save their lives.

In other words, there are a number of ways in which Mamata Banerjee can win. The BJP has very few. This imbalance comes from the fact that success means two different things to the two groups. For the TMC, holding on at the state level, even incurring small, manageable losses, is a victory. Anything beyond that is just gravy. The BJP, on the other hand, needs to expand massively in both Lok Sabha and Assembly elections. Everything else is defeat.

There seems to be just one way for BJP and it isn’t easy. It has to criticize the TMC government aggressively but through Bengali voices and Bengali accents alone. It may feel like the Bengal BJP is not sufficiently powerful yet for the criticism to make an impact. That is exactly what makes it so hard. But it is the only way. In Bengal, the TMC sets the rules. The BJP will have to play by them and defeat the CM in her own den.

Amid all the doom and gloom, you cannot take one thing away from BJP. They have just been through trial by fire. Their leadership, much of it acquired from other parties, is new to the ways of the party. But they can settle down. Already the people of Bengal have left a door open by defeating the sitting CM in Nandigram. This is not something that happens everyday. It is for the BJP to buckle down in Bengal and refuse to give up. That is what Mamata Banerjee did decades ago.

This was the BJP’s first real election in Bengal. The shock and awe tactics did not work. The hard drilling begins now.

Gujarat: Somnath Temple Trust steps in to help ease the oxygen crisis amid coronavirus pandemic

Shri Somnath Temple Trust will be donating Rs 50 lakh for setting up oxygen plant in Prabhas Patan based community health centre, reports online portal DeshGujarat. The plant will come up in the local state government hospital and be up and running in three weeks’ time. The plant is expected to offer about 51 oxygen cylinders daily.

Shri Somnath Temple Trust has also given up its Lilavati Bhavan to the government to run as COVID care facility. As per the report, the trust is also running a kitchen and tiffin service to help the needy during the pandemic.

Hindu temples rise to the occasion amid the pandemic

Hindu temples across the country have risen to the occasion and helped the needy with food, shelter, COVID facility as well as donation. Swaminarayan temples in Gujarat have converted part of their premises into COVID care facility which also has oxygen and ICU facility. Similarly, Puri’s Shree Jagannath Temple Administration has decided to convert its Nilachal Bhakta Nivas into a Covid-19 Care Centre. Shri Mahavir Temple Trust in Patna is also providing oxygen cylinders free of cost.

Shree Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra’ has also announced the setting up of an oxygen plant at an estimated cost of Rs 55 lakh in view of the Coronavirus crisis.

Gujarat has till now recorded 6,33,427 coronavirus cases of which 1,48,124 are active cases. 7,912 people have lost their battle to COVID.

West Bengal: Mamata govt to use over 2.75 lakh ‘quack’ doctors to fight Covid in rural areas

The newly elected West Bengal government, under the leadership of third-time Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, has decided to use 2,75,000 quack doctors as the first line of defence against the second wave of Covid-19, as per a report in Hindustan Times. As per official stats, the number of cases has risen by 5-8 times in rural regions of Bengal compared to last year’s peak. Reports suggest that the state health department will soon issue a dos and don’ts list for the quacks to handle Covid-19 patients.

Hindustan Times quoted a senior health official of West Bengal, saying, “Even when the state was witnessing the peak of the first wave in October 2020, the cases in rural Bengal were under control. But now, cases have shot up almost 5 – 8 times in the districts with more than 50% rural population.”

During the first surge, West Bengal reported 4,157 cases in a single day on October 22, 2020. During the second wave of Covid-19, the state has already reported over 18,000 cases in a single day. Based on the data of rural districts including Birbhum, Murshidabad, Hooghly and Nadia, the cases on October 22 were 82, 110, 225 and 194, respectively. On the other hand, these regions reported 722, 500, 986 and 869 cases, respectively, noting around 5-8 times more cases.

Quack doctors have ‘helped’ West Bengal during last wave

The official further added that the state had been utilizing ASHA workers to fight against Covid. But now, they are planning to use quack doctors as they are available in almost all villages. “It is a huge workforce which we want to rope in because villagers visit them regularly for treatment. The state health department is coming up with a guideline in the form of dos and don’ts for this purpose,” he added.

If needed, these doctors can be given crash course training by the block and sub-divisional hospitals on handling Covid-19 patients and what steps to take if they come across a critical patient. It has to be noted that this is not the first time West Bengal is using quack doctors to fight Covid-19. During the first wave, the quack doctors reportedly ‘helped’ in keeping the infection at bay.

According to a report published in BBC in July 2020, over 100,000 such doctors helped the West Bengal government control the disease. The report suggested that since 2008, a Kolkata-based organization has been providing training to such ‘doctors’ and now the West Bengal government also provide such training at over 30 centres.

Who are quack doctors?

Often known as informal healthcare providers, quacks are basically those unregistered or unqualified health practitioners who do not have formal training in medicine. While some quacks treat the ailment with the help of home remedies, others use the knowledge they have gained after working with a registered qualified doctor over the years. These are similar to “non-physician clinicians” in Africa.

Covid-19 in West Bengal

The first phase of assembly elections was held on March 27 in the state. At that time, the state was reporting under 1,000 cases per day. However, as time passed by and the state was done with the eight phases of the assembly elections, the state was reporting over 17,000 cases per day.  Based on the latest stats provided by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, West Bengal has reported 18,102 cases on May 5. There are 1,21,872 active cases in the state. 103 people have lost their lives between May 4 and May 5 due to complications associated with Covid-19.

Another life lost in West Bengal violence as RSS worker Balaram Majhi lynched to death by TMC workers: Reports

Another youth has become the victim of ongoing attacks by TMC workers against opposition party workers in West Bengal. 22-years-old RSS worker Balaram Majhi, who was mercilessly beaten by TMC goons on Tuesday, succumbed to injuries later in that day.

According to sources, TMC workers had attacked Majhi on Tuesday night at his residence in Sripur village in the Ketugram Tehsik in East Bardhaman district. Apart from beating him badly, his house was also vandalised by the allegedly Muslim goons. Balaram Majhi tried to escape from the attack, but he was nabbed by the attackers. He was pinned to the ground and beaten badly, and he was left by the attackers in a very serious condition.

After the attack Majhi was admitted at the local hospital, but as his condition was serious, he was shifted to a nursing home in Bardhaman town. But he could not be saved and he died later in the night.

Balaram Majhi was an active Swayamsevak of the RSS and was involved in the various activities of the organisation in the area.

Following the news of the death, situation became tense in the Ketugram area. A large police force has been deployed in the areas to prevent any untoward incident.

Balaram Majhi is the latest in the list of victims of the post-poll violence by TMC workers after the party won the assembly elections in West Bengal for the third consecutive time. Several other BJP and RSS workers including Shobha Rani Mandal, Uttam Ghosh, Avijit Sarkar, Horom Adhikari, Momik Maitra, Gaurav Sarkar, Arup Ruidas and others have lost their lives in the attacks.

As a result of such attacks, thousands of BJP workers have fled their homes along with their family members, and have taken shelter in neighbouring states like Assam.

Islamist org that collected and routed money to India after anti-Hindu Delhi riots banned by Germany for funding terrorism in Syria and elsewhere

On Wednesday, Germany announced that it was banning the Islamist organization Ansaar International, for financing terrorism worldwide through its donations. A German government spokesman said that “The network finances terrorism worldwide with donations,” and quoted Germany’s Interior Minister saying, “If you want to fight terror, you have to dry up its sources of money.” The banned organization had also solicited donations in the name of post-CAA riots.

The Germany-based Islamist organization is accused of sending funds to multiple terrorist groups abroad including the Al-Nusra Front in Syria, the Palestinian Hamas (which is on an E.U. terrorism blacklist), and Al-Shabab in Somalia. Interestingly, The banned organization had also solicited donations in the name of the Delhi anti-Hindu riots. On their website, they had mentioned that they were soliciting funds for Muslims of India after these riots and had also admitted that they were providing local help to Muslims.

The German Interior Ministry has claimed that some of the money donated to Ansaar International also went to projects that can be counted as “directly within the sphere of activity of one or another of these terrorist organizations.” This claim means that it is certainly possible that any donations Ansaar International collected in the name of anti-Hindu Delhi Riots could have gone to fund international terrorism.

Raids against Ansaar International were conducted all across Germany on Wednesday morning, in ten different states to be exact.

Ansaar International’s website says that its humanitarian projects help “people in need at home and abroad,” with projects in Lebanon, Sudan, and the Palestinian territories advertised. The Islamist organization has also distributed some relief materials to Indian Muslims affected by the anti-Hindu Delhi riots, with the materials carrying the tagline, “Wake Up Ummah!”

Image obtained from the Ansaar International website

German authorities had carried out a major raid on the Ansaar network two years ago in April 2019 during which extensive materials were seized, prompting a series of investigations that have now resulted in Ansaar International being declared unlawful.

According to the German Interior Minister, Ansaar International “spread a Salafist world view and finance terror around the world under the guise of humanitarian aid.”

Germany’s domestic intelligence said in the 2020 annual report that the country’s number of Salafists had increased to an all-time high of 12,150 in 2019, listing them being “Islamist extremists.”

According to the report, the number of Salafists had more than tripled since 2011 and the Salafist scene in Germany was going through a “consolidation stage,” with followers keeping a low public profile.

This is also a lesson for India and its intelligence/security apparatus to be more vigilant of foreign organizations or other assorted NGOs who don the cloak of humanitarianism but are instead funding terrorist groups worldwide.