National affairs

Demonetization Revisited says Kamal Hassan about the lockdown.

NATIONAL Lockdown | Modi making same mistake of demonetisation albeit at a larger scale: Kamal Haasan

STAFF REPORTER

UPDATED: APRIL 07, 2020 11:48 IST
This ill-planned lockdown is leading us to a fatal combination of loss of both life and livelihood, he says
In a sharp attack on India’s response to COVID-19 pandemic, Makkal Needhi Maiam founder Kamal Haasan on Monday said Prime Minister Narendra Modi was making the ‘same mistake of demonetisation’ albeit at a much larger scale by imposing an ill-planned 21-day lockdown.

Writing an open letter to Mr. Modi, Mr. Haasan compared the adverse effects of the current lockdown to that of demonetisation in terms of its impact on the poor.

“My biggest fear is that the same mistake of demonetisation is being repeated albeit at a much bigger scale. While demonetisation led to loss of savings and livelihood of the poorest, this ill-planned lockdown is leading us to a fatal combination of loss of both life and livelihood,” said Mr. Haasan.

Mr. Haasan slammed Mr. Modi for ‘ordering an entire nation of 1.4 billion people to shutdown within 4 hours, despite having four months’ notice as India’s first case was reported on January 30.

Lighting of lamps
Criticising the Prime Minister’s last address to the nation, he said that while people were lighting lamps in balconies, poor were left without enough oil for their next roti.

“On one hand you are asking the more privileged people to put up a spectacle of lights while on the other hand the poor man’s plight is itself becoming a shameful spectacle. While your world lit up oil diyas in their balconies, the poor are struggling to gather enough oil to bake their next roti,” said Mr. Haasan, adding, “These psychotherapy techniques can address the first world anxiety problems of the ‘haves’ who have a balcony to cheer. But what about those who don’t even have a roof on their heads?”

Mr. Haasan added, “I am sure you don’t want to be a balcony government only for the balcony people by completely ignoring the poor who are biggest constituent of our society, our support system and the foundation on which the middle-class, the well-to-do and the rich build their lives.

He said Mr. Modi was often sliding into his ‘comfort zone of unleashing a spirited election-style campaign idea’ when there was an opportunity to arrest the slide and underlined that ‘compliance must not be confused as our subjugation’.

“It seems you are comfortable outsourcing responsible behaviour to the common people and transparency to the State governments,” said Mr. Haasan.

Warm campaigning
He also termed the Prime Minister’s response to the crisis as focussing only on warm campaigning, ignoring ground reality.

“The focus on merely keeping people’s spirits alive through warm and fuzzy campaigning is probably leading your establishment into ignoring certain actionables that could actually save lives. Long into the epidemic, when the entire country’s law and order system had been primed, your system failed to stop congregations of ignorant and foolish people in different parts of the country,” said Mr. Haasan.