The politics of India’s Covid-19 crisis

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
7 Min Read

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A set of interrelated factors have led India to the Covid-19 crisis it is experiencing today – a government apparatus more invested in upholding the cult of personality around its strongman leader, a continuous hollowing out of democracy over the past few years, pressure on the free media, attacks on freedom of speech and expression, and a federal government in continuous election mode.

Warnings about an impending second Covid-19 wave began as early as November 2020. Yet the federal government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), spent the last few months on electioneering and image management.

The BJP made winning the recent elections in the eastern state of West Bengal a matter of prestige. While cases of the new variant of Covid-19 were rising throughout the country, Modi and his party continued with mass rallies throughout the state.

On April 17, as India, whose population is more than 1.3 billion, approached the third consecutive day of 200,000 new Covid-19 cases, Modi addressed an election rally where he said he was “elated to see a large crowd.”

Also read: Modi’s Covid catastrophe sows seeds of a backlash

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