The Central Government failed to keep its promise by filing an affidavit in the court. About 20 million doses of the Doskovid vaccine were due to arrive in the country by July. Calling the event “unexpected” would be a no-brainer – instead, it would be surprising if the government could keep its promise. The government has failed on the issue of vaccination – raising concerns that the goal of vaccinating all citizens over the age of 18 will not be met by December. If the fear is true, then no one but the central government can be blamed. In the last seven months, the government has not been able to estimate how much vaccine is needed, how much is being produced and how much is in short supply in the country. What is needed to increase production in the country; Even after that, the countrymen did not know what the Center was thinking about this shortfall and what steps it should take to procure it from the international market. Judging from the actual situation, it can be assumed that there was no particular thought. In five cases where a mixture of half-truths and obvious lies are at work, the government fears that the same drug will suffice in the case of Kovid-Tika. For the time being, under the priesthood of Narendra Modi, India has fallen into the abyss between the false pretense of being a ‘world leader’ and the proper preparation. Can get up, and still that hope is weak.
Like the disorder of rhetoric and hollow arrogance, the practice of filtering out all sorts of petty politics has troubled India. There is a lot of talk about the number of vaccines that have been distributed so far in different states. In Gujarat, 54 per cent of people over the age of 18 have been vaccinated – only 30 per cent in West Bengal. The manner in which the Central Government or the BJP leadership frequently attacks West Bengal over the Kovid vaccine raises suspicions that this unequal distribution of vaccines is not a conscious attempt to create a political weapon. This question would not have arisen if the Central Government had adopted a transparent policy in the matter of vaccine distribution. Alas, government transparency was limited to a symbolic campaign to clean the streets on certain days of the year.
The “policy” introduced by the central government in June was used as an argument for the current distribution-inequality. Vaccination of a state is said to depend not only on the population of the state but also on the contamination of the vaccine and many other factors. Q. This policy has led to huge inequalities in the distribution of vaccines between the states of the country – is the lion’s share of the population in some states not receiving vaccines at all? Why has the government not discussed its sustainability policy with the states or the general public for so long? It is beyond doubt that this government is not interested in the democratic process. But even when the question of the literal existence of the citizen remains, if the rulers of the country cannot give up petty politics, mountain arrogance and ubiquitous rhetoric, is there no legitimacy for them as rulers?