Amit Sengupta | SabrangIndia https://sabrangindia.in/content-author/amit-sengupta-0-18488/ News Related to Human Rights Thu, 21 Oct 2021 09:05:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Amit Sengupta | SabrangIndia https://sabrangindia.in/content-author/amit-sengupta-0-18488/ 32 32 Hate Speech: Abbas Siddiqui does it again! https://sabrangindia.in/hate-speech-abbas-siddiqui-does-it-again/ Thu, 21 Oct 2021 09:05:51 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/10/21/hate-speech-abbas-siddiqui-does-it-again/ Will the West Bengal government take action against the serial hate offender?

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religious fundamentalistImage Courtesy:english.newstracklive.com

Once a religious fundamentalist, always a religious fundamentalist. Hate speech is a habitual offense and an addiction which keeps returning for those who are extremists across the religious spectrum. And in a recurring atmosphere of intolerance and polarisation, this is a vicious cycle waiting to be repeated. 

Pirzada Abbas Siddiqui of the famous and secular bastion of Furfura Sharif has yet again put his foot in his mouth with violent and aggressive hate speech. He has stoked widespread controversy on a delicate and sensitive subject now stalking various districts of Bangladesh, where the communal fault-lines have been sharpened and intensified by fundamentalist forces. 

The Bangladesh government has declared that those who were against the liberation of the country in 1971 are actually behind the violence unleashed against the minority Hindu community during the Durga Puja festival. This clearly points fingers at Islamic fundamentalists who have been pushed to the backfoot by the current Awami League government led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. 

Abbas Siddiqui has said that the man who placed a copy of the Quran in a Durga Puja pandal in district Comilla should be beheaded. A video doing the rounds shows him using this language. He was apparently addressing a religious gathering in North 24 Pargana. Earlier he had passed derogatory comments against some secular initiatives in Durga Puja pandals in West Bengal. 

Siddiqui had founded the Indian Secular Front (ISF) in alliance with the CPM and Congress in the recently held assembly elections in West Bengal. Even at that time, he was accused of inflammatory speeches and the Left was criticised for aligning with him. The CPM had countered by arguing that the ISF comprises minorities, Adivasis and Dalits, among others, and is essentially secular. The alliance got drubbed. Even a young rabble-rouser with apparent vociferous and loud supporters could not translate this support into votes. Even his own uncle, the senior Pirzada, refused to align with him. 

Earlier, his sexist and abusive speech against a Muslim MP from Trinamool Congress, who is also a famous film actress in West Bengal, was criticised widely. He, however, seemed unrepentant.

As SabrangIndia had reported from the ground in Furfura Sharif during the election campaign, even secular Muslims in his own bastion seemed reluctant to vote for Siddiqui, while, later, they overwhelmingly voted for Mamata Banerjee and Trinamool Congress to defeat the BJP across the state. Despite his rabble-rousing skills, there was transparently lukewarm support for him in Furfura Sharif. Indeed, Muslim women, like most women in Bengal, especially in rural areas and among the economically weaker sections, voted for ‘Didi’. 

Since then, Siddiqui has been lying low while his alliance partners are still rubbing their wounds. The communal flare-up in Bangladesh has given him a chance to spread his wings yet again, it seems, as it has done to various hues of fanatics and fundamentalists across both sides of the border. 

Apparently triggered by inflammatory content on social media and crass propaganda, Durga Puja pandals have been attacked in multiple locations across various districts of Bangladesh, including in Comilla, Chittagong, Noakhali, among other locations. Hajiganj in Chittagong witnessed widespread arson and police opened fire on a violent mob which was attacking a temple. Four persons have reportedly died in the firing, while around seven Hindus have been reportedly killed. 

Even in Dhaka which witnessed over 200 Durga Pujas, the police had to intervene when a crowd gathered to protest the ‘sacrilege’ in Comilla. Five people were arrested. Despite fears of violence, all the immersions of the goddess were conducted peacefully with heavy police protection. 

The Bangladesh government, from day one, has moved with decisive intent and speed. The most elite and special forces were deployed to protect the Durga Puja pandals. Violent extremists were nipped in the bud even as they went on a spree of arson and attacks on the pandals. 

Sheikh Hasina called upon the Hindus to feel totally safe and secure in her secular country and said that the government stands with them and will not tolerate any violent extremism from any quarter. She instructed Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan to take quick and effective action. She also asked the Puja Committees, including the small ones, to inform about their location etc. to the administration and police so that they can be protected from the rowdy elements. She and her home minister have appealed to the people to not believe anything on the social media without fact-checking; they have categorically declared that rumour-mongering on social media and hate speech will be dealt with an iron hand. 

“A thorough investigation is under way on the incidents in Comilla. Nobody will be spared. We are getting a lot of information about the incident. It does not matter which religion they belong to. They will be hunted down and punished,” said Sheikh Hasina. She was addressing worshippers at the historic Dhakeshwari temple in Dhaka during the festive days via a virtual speech. 

The police have meanwhile narrowed down on one man who apparently did the act. He is currently on the run. Besides, activists and leaders of the Awami League party have been holding harmony and peace rallies and processions across the country. “Do not fear, Hindu brothers and sisters. Sheikh Hasina and the Awami League are with you. Sheikh Hasina’s government is a minority-friendly government,” Awami League General Secretary Obaidul Quader is reported to have said at a rally at the party’s office on Bangabandhu Avenue in Dhaka. “Resist the communal forces on the streets,” he has appealed to his party workers. 

Civil society groups, artists, writers, academics and students too have joined in the peace process while restoring old cultural and social ties of friendship and harmony with the minority community. Bangladesh has an ancient and inherited tradition of celebrating Durga Puja across communities, and this communal violence seems instigated by fundamentalist forces out to create polarisation, especially since they have been effectively marginalised in recent times. 

Bangladesh has around 10 percent Hindus who live as dignified citizens observing their cultural, social and religious beliefs in a largely secular society, which has been strengthened under the Awami League government. There have been no cases of any discrimination against them in the recent past. 

The Indian Ministry of External Affairs has appreciated the support of the Bangladesh government and the large majority of the public which has helped in conducting the Durga Puja celebrations peacefully. Its spokesperson said that the Bangladesh government has promptly dealt with the disturbing events. 

The question however remains is: Will the West Bengal government act against the hate spewed by Abbas Siddiqui?

Related:

Furfura Sharif cleric Pirzada Abbas Siddiqui adds fuel to communal fire
Battleground Bengal: Notes from Furfura Sharif and village bylanes

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Who is Cheering for ‘Modicare’? https://sabrangindia.in/who-cheering-modicare/ Wed, 07 Feb 2018 05:39:34 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/02/07/who-cheering-modicare/ Hyperboles are the hallmark of the Modi Government, especially empty hyperboles that are passed off as public policy.   Newsclick Image by Sumit Kumar   Hyperboles are the hallmark of the Modi Government, especially empty hyperboles that are passed off as public policy. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s announcement during his budget speech, of the world’s […]

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Hyperboles are the hallmark of the Modi Government, especially empty hyperboles that are passed off as public policy.
 

Newsclick Image by Sumit Kumar
 

Hyperboles are the hallmark of the Modi Government, especially empty hyperboles that are passed off as public policy. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s announcement during his budget speech, of the world’s “largest government funded health care programme”, outdid all previous records of the Modi Government in making inflated claims. Quickly named ‘Modicare’ by the spin doctors of the BJP, the announcement was lapped up unquestioningly by sections of the corporate controlled media. The programme announced proposes to cover 10 crore families through an insurance programme that promises to reimburse expenses incurred on hospital care up to 5 lakhs per year for a family. It is further proposed that 40% of the expenses will be borne by states.

Given the hype surrounding the announcement it is necessary that we try to make sense of what is being proposed. Public memory is short, and that is probably why few remember that a similar announcement was made in 2016! The difference only lies in that in 2016 the limit of reimbursement for a family of five was placed at 1.5 lakhs and the 2018 announcement has raised this to 5 lakhs. The raising of the ceiling is likely to benefit very few if the scheme is ever rolled out, as most reimbursements in current insurance schemes are below one lakh. The mere raising of the ceiling will not mean everyone will suddenly start receiving 5 lakhs, but it’s a nice vision to dangle before the public.

So what happened between 2016 and 2018? Actually nothing happened, no new scheme was rolled out. So much so that of the meagre 1,000 crores allocated for the existing Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY), only about half was actually spent in 2017-18. But such is the power of rhetoric that the new announcement is being hailed as a bold move and even as a ‘game changer’. If and when the new insurance programme is rolled out, it will merely be a refurbished version of the RSBY and many other state level insurance programmes that have done little to address the growing crisis in healthcare in India.

Less finances for Health in 2018-19 Budget
Forgotten is the fact that in real terms (that is after adjusting for inflation) the health budget for 2018-19 is lower than the revised estimates of the 2017-18 budget. Compared to Rs.53,198 crores in the revised estimates allocated to health in 2017-18, this year’s allocation is Rs.54,667 crores – an increase that is lower than the inflation rate. Importantly the government’s principal health programme – the National Health Mission – receives, even in real terms, less money. The allocation of Rs.30,634 crores in 2018-19 is lower than Rs.31,292 crores spent in 2017-18.

The ability of the Modi Government to replace policy with empty promises is phenomenal. The 2017 National Health Policy, announced with much fanfare a few months back, claimed that spending on health would increase to 2.5% of GDP by 2025 as compared to around 1.2% currently. This requires an increase in allocation by about 20% every year. Yet, as we discuss earlier, there has been a compression in funds allocated to health in 2018-19. In fact, since the Modi Government assumed office, there has been no significant increase in the allocation on health.

Financing the Insurance Scheme
So we are now being led to believe that the world’s largest health programme will be magically financed in a situation where overall allocation to health has been reduced in the current budget, and which includes a mere Rs.2,000 crore allocation for the proposed insurance scheme that would cover 50 crore people. Realisation regarding the incongruity of this situation appeared to have dawned. Thus Finance Secretary, Hasmukh Adhia, in an interview with Bloomberg Quint hastened to clarify: “…the scheme has to be operationalised. The contours of this scheme have to be worked out by the health ministry along with the state governments”. He goes on to claim that real allocation for the scheme will commence in 2019-20 (it is of course anybody’s guess who will be in government then!). Clearly it is easy to label something as the world’s largest programme as long as it remains a figment of imagination. It is anybody’s guess why this government believes that people will accept that the programme will actually be rolled out and not provided a silent burial soon. While different government sources claim that a per annum allocation of around 10,000 crores can fund the programme, more realistic estimates would place this figure at between 50,000 to 1.2 lakh crores per annum. This however shouldn’t trouble the government as the primary intent behind the announcement of the insurance scheme (that is unlikely to ever see the light of day) was to take the spotlight away from what should have been read as the main feature of the 2018-19 Budget – a decline in the health budget while the country is faced with a severe crisis in access to healthcare services.

Do Insurance Programmes Benefit Public Health?
There are several other imponderables. How will states, especially poorer states find the money to co-fund the programme. But suppose a miracle does happen and the money is found to finance the scheme. What will it mean for the country’s health system. What does our past experience with public funded health insurance schemes indicate?

In 2009 the Indian Government launched the nationwide health insurance scheme called the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) designed to protect patients from the ‘catastrophic’ impact of out-of-pocket expenses incurred on hospital care, as modelled on Andhra Pradesh’s Rajiv Arogyasri scheme. In addition to the national insurance scheme there are several state-level health insurance schemes that are in operation. Currently they cover a third of the country’s population. This coverage is, however, notional. Data from the NSSO (2014) shows that only 12-13% of the potential beneficiaries are actually covered.

These insurance schemes, just like the present proposal, are meant for hospital care only and cover a specific list of procedures. Two fundamental pillars support these kinds of health insurance schemes. First, they operate on the logic of the ‘split between financing and provisioning’. While financing comes from public resources (central or state government funds), treatment can be provided by any accredited facility, public or private. In practice, when it comes to provisioning a large majority of accredited institutions are in the private sector. For example, in the case of the Arogyasri scheme in Andhra Pradesh, the total payments to facilities accredited under the scheme from 2007 to 2013 amounted to Rs 47.23 billion, of which Rs 10.71 billion was paid to public facilities and Rs 36.52 billion went to private facilities.

The second pillar of these schemes is that beneficiaries are insured against a set of ailments that require hospitalization at secondary and tertiary levels of care. Excluded are almost all infectious diseases that are treated in out-patient settings, such as tuberculosis that requires prolonged treatment, most chronic diseases (diabetes, hypertension, and heart diseases) or cancer treatments that do not call for hospitalization. To take the Arogyasri example again, studies indicate that the scheme draws 25 per cent of the state’s health budget while covering only 2 per cent of the burden of disease. Such skewed priorities end up distorting the entire structure of the health system and public money is squandered to strengthen the already dominant corporate health sector.

In theory, good health systems are like pyramids: the largest numbers can be treated at the primary level where people live and work, some would need to be referred to a secondary level such as a community health centre, and few would require specialized care in tertiary hospitals. Better primary and secondary level care ensures that fewer patients end up in more expensive specialty hospitals to undergo major procedures. Health insurance schemes invert this pyramid and starve primary care facilities.

What is even more worrying is that these social health insurance schemes, largely implemented through partnerships with private providers, have been indicted in several states for defrauding the system. There have been several reports of unscrupulous private facilities milking these insurance schemes by conducting unnecessary procedures. Horrific incidents have been reported, for example, of unnecessary hysterectomies conducted on women as young as twenty-two.

Neoliberal logic supports insurance schemes
So the moot question is why do governments in India (both the current and previous governments) like to promote insurance schemes that essentially involve partnerships with private providers? This preference for health insurance schemes is embedded in the neoliberal approach to public services. Insurance schemes channel public money into private facilities. Public facilities are further weakened in a situation where private providers are already dominant. On the other hand private providers are assured of a steady clientele. The dominance of the private sector is particularly worrying in a situation where neither quality of care nor its costs are regulated.

If the government is truly interested in advancing public health it could have enhanced allocations to strengthen public services that are currently in shambles. Repeated episodes, such as the child deaths in Gorakhpur, cry for attention and point to the dire situation that public hospitals face because of gross under funding and decades of neglect. But the neoliberal logic argues that public services are, by definition, inefficient. Yet all the success stories of healthcare lie in countries that primarily depend on public services – UK and its NHS, Sri Lanka, Thailand, France, Cuba. After waxing eloquent on its ‘flagship’ program of building ‘Health and Wellness Centres’ (a new name for what were called sub-centres earlier) Mr.Jaitley chose to allocate a mere 1,200 crores for the programme, which is about 5% of the requirement for building primary level centres across the country.

Vast tracts of the country have no recognizable primary care services. That is what requires immediate attention. Without access to primary care, patients in most parts of the country will never have the possibility of getting to hospitals and avail of Modicare in plush private hospitals.

Look who is celebrating!
Before we end let us look at who is celebrating the announcement of Modicare. Naresh Trehan, perhaps the best known face of India’s burgeoning private healthcare industry had this to say: “Full marks should be given on coming up with budget so focused on health and also covering the rest of the sector. The government was being questioned if it is addressing the needs of the poor but with budget focusing not only making the country healthy but also giving weaker sections the means to be part of the cycle, it already has addressed the issue. No prizes for guessing why private industry is ecstatic. Till now the corporate chains – Max, Fortis, Apollo, Medanta, etc. – had kept away from the public funded insurance schemes as they felt the picking were not enough. Remember the Fortis case where the hospital shamelessly extorted Rs.18 lakhs for the treatment of a young girl who died of dengue fever. Or Max, who declared a live baby as dead because they couldn’t extort more money from the patients. One can almost see them rubbing their hands in glee at the prospect of a bonanza when the enhanced 5 lakh limit allows them to access a new avenue for profiteering.

Courtesy: https://newsclick.in

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