The Great Indian ‘Corona Divide’ – Stop Karo Na

Sarah Elizabeth Jacob
4 min readJul 29, 2020

If you have attended classes on political science, journalism or any other Humanities course, or have taken an interest in current affairs, you would know terms like ‘economic inequality’, ‘income inequality’ and ‘digital divide’. Now, let’s add ‘corona divide’ or ‘pandemic inequality’ to the list.

The brilliant ones among you might have already guessed where I am heading. For the unaware, this is how it goes. It was the night of July 11 and my phone rang abuzz with notifications. The tone sounded like that of news updates from NDTV, the sound that usually gave me a sense of fear during the pandemic. Each update would talk about highest single-day hike in COVID-19 cases in the country. But this news update was different. Amitabh Bachchan and his son tested positive for the virus and were hospitalized. Having been an Indian since birth, I wasn’t surprised at the VIP treatment. Nothing new, I thought. While my sympathies were with the Bachchan family, I was taken aback by the city mayor tweeting relentlessly about the actor’s test reports. What stayed unfathomable was a Maharashtra minister tweeting about the family’s COVID-19 updates. That the family got access to hospital beds wasn’t new – maybe the perks of being a celebrity in a country of 1.3 billion people. But the irony is that government officials found it important to give updates about a celebrity while families of so many COVID-19 patients claim to run from hospital to hospital for a bed made me realise that even a pandemic can discriminate.

As the pandemic progressed, Dr C. Vijayabasker, Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Tamil Nadu, tweeted, ‘Virus doesn’t discriminate the rich or poor, literate or illiterate, young or old, men or women! We should understand #COVID is a pandemic and anyone can be victim to the disease. So, let us support each other and overcome.’ But there’s a rider. Anyone can be a victim. But not everyone has equal access to healthcare facilities. This is a result of years of selfish governance and corruption. All political parties are to be blamed equally. News reports of patients dying because they did not receive medical help in time and visuals of inhumane burial of dead bodies of COVID-19 victims make me wonder about the whole handling of the pandemic. A personal example – the mayor of our city visited our colony to encourage the residents to get themselves tested at the community testing centre, but she had a condition. They would test workers of the Bharatiya Janata Party first. At the end of the day, only the party workers got tested. The rest got left out.

Even though certain state governments or government officials want to ensure they treat every patient, the public healthcare system is too rotten to be solved within 4-5 months. Private hospitals charge lakhs of rupees for even a five-day admission. We shouldn’t forget our healthcare workers – some who haven’t been paid their salaries for months – amidst all the clapping and showering of petals. Didn’t the government promise an insurance scheme of Rs 50 lakhs for frontline workers?

The pandemic does discriminate. Remember the lakhs of migrants who had to walk back home after losing livelihoods in the metropolitan cities. Only public outrage compelled state governments and the Centre to arrange for transport. What a mess it was! While many of us worked from the comfort of our homes, imagine having to walk for kilometers and kilometers to reach your village. No struggle is small, I agree. But imagine having to fight for a packet of Parle-G biscuits because you and your family have had nothing to eat for days. The image of the baby trying to wake up his dead mother still sends a shiver down my spine. Wonder whether these stories have slipped out of the public conscience. The pandemic does discriminate, not because it wants to, but because the society is designed unequally.

I write this at the cost of sounding cynical. But I appreciate the countless citizens who rose up and did their part in supporting those who were hit hard by the lockdown and the pandemic. I appreciate those who did not resort to social media activism but made an impact on the ground. I personally know some of them and I salute them.

Some people who are part of the system did their best. But at the end of the day, if the poorest of the poor go to sleep on empty stomachs, nothing else matters…nothing!

P.S. Meanwhile, hoping trolls don’t troll the Bachchan family anymore.

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Sarah Elizabeth Jacob

Grace and strength | Occasional writer | Social media & comms professional