Covid : The second visit

    10-May-2021
|
Yambem Laba
When the second Covid wave came knocking on the doorsteps of Manipur, the Sarkar gave an almost knee jerk reaction. It made a Covid free certificate compulsory for every returnee, the test to have been conducted 72 hours earlier. This was indeed questionable for Manipuris staying outside the State who would be left in a peril with nowhere to turn to in case they had tested positive for the virus. It should have been borne in mind that the many Covid Express and Mails that had chugged in at the Jiribam Railway Station last year from the Indian Metropolises were responsible for bringing in the scourge to the State. They were kept quarantined and those who tested positive were treated and discharged. But this time the State seems to be on the point of turning back its citizens on some novel advice. It should be noted here that the submission of a memorandum by the Manipur Students’ Association, Delhi and other student bodies in the capital urging the State Government to come to the aid of Manipuris who are Covid positive and are stuck there should say something profound.
 The Manipur Government also had a harsher counterpart thousands of kilometers away in Australia when the Government in Canberra announced that any of its citizens returning from India will be sent to jail. That created such an uproar that the Government was forced to rescind the order.
Then there is the question of shortage of Covid vaccines for the 18+ plus segment. The need to keep the supply chain going on was perhaps not thought of earlier. This is crucial as the second variant is considered much more lethal and a vaccination is considered the only solace against it for it can ensure atleast that you do not die even if you contract the virus. Then there is the question of a likely shortage of oxygen and considering Manipur’s track record of black marketeering it will not be suprising if segments of the oxygen cylinders being brought in finds its way to the Black Market. And in the Metropolises the price of a single cylinder of oxygen which used to retail for around Rs.800/- per cylinder had reportedly shot up to Rs one lakh.
The good news is that the Sarkar has clamped curfew for a week or so. But for how lond can you keep a population locked up. Don’t they require to go out and buy food and medicines. Unlike the first wave there is no visible sign of wannabe MLAs distributing food grains and lentils and cooking oil this time around.
 At least one member of family should be allowed to venture out atleast for two hours to procure essential items and please allow them to use their vehicles as it will save time. And another question is what is the logic behind opening banks and disallowing the normal citizens to do normal transaction instead confining it to Government transactions meaning Thika bills and for Covid related matters whatever the latter means. Also during the first round last year curfew passes were issued. People who took those passes required it for specific purposes. Either declare that the same passes will be valid or for heaven’s sake issue fresh ones so that those who still need to move around can do so.
And also the farmers in the villages need to sell their vegetables and people need to consume them.The opening up of online vegetable portals may be a novel idea but how many people actually have accesss to the internet that they can order Alloo-Gobi on it. It will do well for the Sarkar to mobilise the various Gram Panchayats and Village Authority people and purchase in bulk the produce of the villagers and stock them at every sub-divisonal headquarters where people can come on fixed dates and timings and purchase them for consumption.
These are just some food for thoughts during these days of the pandemic and hopefully the Sarkar would be listening.