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The Hindu Editorial Analysis | 13th August ’20 | PDF Download

The Hindu Editorial Analysis | 13th August ’20 | PDF Download_4.1

Mayhem in Minsk

  • Long-term President Alexander Lukashenko
  • Often touted as Europe’s last dictator
  • Dramatic political developments over the past few days in Belarus
  • Election Commission announced, Alexander Lukashenko was the winner of Sunday’s election.
  • His main rival, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, rejected the results and called for a recount.

The Hindu Editorial Analysis | 13th August ’20 | PDF Download_5.1

  • Ms. Tikhanovskaya entered the race after her husband and a popular YouTuber, Sergei Tikhanovsky, who was to contest against Mr. Lukashenko, was detained and barred from contesting for allegedly inciting unrest.
  • Protests broke out in the capital, Minsk, which was met with a violent security crackdown.
  • At least 2,000 people were detained and dozens injured.
  • Svetlana fled to neighbouring Lithuania.
  • There are serious doubts on fairness of election.
  • In recent years, Belarus, a geopolitical ally of Russia with cultural links, has shown a willingness to work closer with the West.
  • His bet was to raise the strategic profile of his landlocked country at a time when the contest for influence in Eastern Europe between Moscow and Washington was hotting up.
  • Moscow immediately sensed an opportunity to cement ties with Belarus, which is an important transit route of Russian gas to Europe as well as a buffer between Russia and European powers.

More than a vaccine, it is about vaccination

  • Everyone eagerly asks: will we get a COVID-19 vaccine this year or only next year?
  • During a pandemic, expecting vaccines the same year or the next, illustrates the power of technology, human hope, media hype — all at unprecedented frenzy.
  • In India, 2 candidates have advanced considerably.
    • Bharat Biotech
    • It is safe and immunogenic (stimulates anti-coronavirus antibody) in laboratory animals and humans, to be re-confirmed in a phase 2 trial; phase 3 will assess the vaccine’s safety and protective efficacy against COVID-19.
    • Pune’s Serum Institute of India (SII) is testing Oxford University-AstraZeneca’s vaccine using a Trojan horse approach
    • Spiking chimpanzee adenovirus type 5 with coronavirus spike glycoprotein genes.
    • When injected, adenoviruses are detected and devoured by immune system cells patrolling for invading microbes.
    • The smuggled genes force these cells to synthesise and spew out spike protein that is immunogenic.
    • This adenovirus is harmless in humans.
  • Both company-owners have invested heavily, without extramural research support, or advance purchase contract by the government.
  • Both seem to have the best interests of fellow Indians first in their hearts; profit comes second.
  • Some wealthy nations made bilateral financial agreements with manufacturers in order to hog vaccines.
  • Global public good should not be hijacked by wealthy nations.
  • Gavi, the global vaccine alliance, created COVAX — a funding facility to ensure up-scaling vaccine production and its access to low income countries as soon as regulatory approvals emerge.
  • COVAX will support the SII with funds to bring down selling-price to $3 per dose.

The Hindu Editorial Analysis | 13th August ’20 | PDF Download_6.1

  • With good news on supply side, what about the delivery side?
  • India’s Universal Immunisation Programme is a vaccine-delivery platform for children and pregnant women, funded by the central government but implemented by State governments.
  • However, the COVID-19 vaccine is for all age groups, necessitating an innovative platform, prioritised on the basis of need.
  • The first step is policy definition leading to a plan of action blueprint.
  • The time to create them is now it costs nothing, but will save time when a vaccine becomes available.
  • Vaccine availability will be limited at first
  • Priority: senior citizens, those with medical co-morbidities, front-line workers.
  • Area-wise estimates of the numbers who need vaccination on a priority basis are necessary.
  • Now is the time for State governments to capture all such data.
  • All those who must rebuild essential activities, i.e. economic, educational, trade, transport, sociocultural and religious, must be protected.
  • A more ambitious aim is to break the novel coronavirus transmission and eradicate the disease altogether.
  • With India’s notable representation in decision-making bodies of the World Health Organization, India is uniquely positioned to play a crucial role in advocating global eradication of COVID-19.
  • A practical method is vaccination camps, supervised by a medical officer, staffed by health management and local government, and having the list of people who need vaccination.
  • Enumeration and registration of eligible persons can be started now.
  • Vaccination by appointments will ensure that vaccination is without overcrowding and with minimum waiting time.
  • Post-injection, vaccinated subjects should wait for half-an-hour in case of immediate side effects; emergency drugs to tackle side effects should be readily available.
  • As it would be a new vaccine, all side effects must be documented for first and second doses; medical events during the month following each dose must be captured through phone calls, and analysed to check full safety of the vaccine.
  • In India, careful documentation of all side effects in all individuals, senior citizens, those with co-morbidities, and children must supplement trial data on vaccine safety.

Shutting the door on Huawei

  • The U.K. has finally decided to ban the Chinese company.
  • UK has banned all mobile providers from buying new Huawei 5G equipment after the end of this year as well as removing all of Huawei’s 5G kit from their networks by 2027.
  • U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo praised the U.K.’s decision
  • China “strongly opposed” the U.K.’s “groundless” ban and warned that it would “take measures to safeguard” the “legitimate interests” of Chinese companies as “any decisions and actions must come at a cost”.
  • Trump administration had made it clear that the U.K.’s “special relationship” with the U.S. was under the scanner.
  • Not only would their security and intelligence ties have been in jeopardy but crucial trade negotiations would have been hampered too.
  • For the Trump administration, the U.K.’s change of stance is a major diplomatic win as it might also convince fence sitters to make a final decision.
  • For Huawei, a domino effect across Europe might pose a serious challenge given that almost a quarter of its sales come from the European market.
  • So what once looked like a battle which the U.S. was waging on its own has suddenly been joined by a number of other players.
  • The Indian response is being closely watched.
  • Last year, India had allowed Huawei to participate in 5G trials which could not happen because of the disruptions caused by the pandemic.
  • India is signalling that it is willing to bear economic and technological costs if it means limiting Chinese involvement in critical infrastructure.

A self-reliant foreign policy

  • Self-reliance is the theme of India’s 74th Independence Day.
  • This concept is commonly associated with the economy and production of key goods and services within the country in light of the global ‘supply shockcaused by the pandemic.
  • From the foreign policy point of view it is about time-tested axiom of ‘strategic autonomy’.
  • India has historically prided itself as an independent developing country which does not take orders from or succumb to pressure from great powers.
  • The need for autonomy in making foreign policy choices has remained constant.
    • Bipolar: 1947 to 1991
    • Unipolar: 1991 to 2008, when the U.S. entered a long cycle of economic crises and China caught up with it in overall power
    • Multipolar: present times
  • In moments of crisis, India has reinterpreted freedom and shown flexibility for survival.
  • During the 1962 war with China, the high priest of non-alignment, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, had to appeal to the U.S. for emergency military aid to stave off the Chinese from “taking over the whole of Eastern India.”
  • In the build-up to the 1971 war with Pakistan, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had to enter a Treaty of Peace, Friendship and Cooperation with the Soviet Union to ward off both China and the U.S.
  • And in Kargil in 1999, India welcomed a direct intervention by the U.S. to force Pakistan to back down.
  • In all the above examples, India did not become any less autonomous when geopolitical circumstances compelled it to enter into de facto alliance-like cooperation with major powers.
  • Rather, India secured its freedom, sovereignty and territorial integrity by manoeuvering the great power equations and playing the realpolitik game.
  • Non-alignment 2.0 with China and the U.S., as they slide into a new Cold War, makes little sense when India’s security and sovereignty are being challenged primarily by the former rather than the latter.
  • Fears in some quarters that proximity to the U.S. will lead to loss of India’s strategic autonomy are overblown because independent India has never been subordinated to a foreign hegemon.
  • Diversification is the essence of self-reliance.
  • A wide basket of strategic partners, including the U.S., with a sharper focus on constraining China, is the only viable diplomatic way forward in the current emerging multipolar world order.

How the tiger can regain its stripes

  • On International Tiger Day, July 29, authorities proudly declared that India should “celebrate” the increase in tigers from about 2,000 in 1970 to about 3,000 now.
  • This is an annual growth rate lower than 1% after 50 years of incredible, sometimes heroic, efforts.
  • Even a back-of-the-envelope calculation can show that India has the potential to hold 10,000 to 15,000 wild tigers.
  • What is lacking is a pragmatic plan to get to that goal.
  • Malenad landscape of about 25,000 sq km in Karnataka.
  • There were only around 70 tigers in this landscape in the early 1970s. There are now about 400 wild tigers in Malenad.
  • The substantial increase of tigers that followed, against all odds, was due to the work of dedicated foresters and conservationists under the leadership of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
  • Two legal instruments that enabled tiger recoveries in India were the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972 and the Forest (Conservation) Act of 1980, which reinforced Project Tiger.
  • Around 2000, things began to change.
  • This mission drift in tiger protection overlapped with the upsurge of emancipatory political movements for the release of wildlife habitats for cultivation and exploitation by loosely defined “forest-dwellers”.
  • The tiger extinction in Sariska Reserve caused a public outcry in 2005, leading to the appointment of a Tiger Task Force (TTF) by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
  • Excessive funding of a few reserves while neglecting large areas with greater recovery potential became the norm.
  • Another feature of this emergent government monopoly over tiger management was the lack of data transparency and rigorous, independent tiger monitoring.
  • The tiger was fully bound in red tape.
  • India needs to get out of this tiger circus.
  • The role of the forest bureaucracy should be once again restricted to wildlife law enforcement.
  • Merging Project Tiger with other Central schemes for wildlife conservation would be a good first step.
  • The vast reservoir of talent and energy in society should be drawn in to engage with these diverse domains, by involving private enterprises, local communities, NGOs and scientific institutions.
  • India’s tiger conservation needs a reboot to match the scale of the country’s aspirations in other domains — a new vision that encompasses the talents and aspirations of a growing number of citizens who want to save tigers without turning the clock back on material progress.

NEWS

  • PM Modi launches ‘Transparent Taxation – Honoring the Honest’ platform
  • Better road engineering and increased public awareness will reduce road accidents by about 50 pct: Nitin Gadkari
  • Electric mobility gets a boost; Govt allows registration of electric vehicles without pre-fitted batteries
  • Assam govt to roll out Arunodoi scheme to provide financial assistance to around 17 lakh families from Oct 2
  • Bangladesh to get largest ever dollar 3.1 billion loan package from Japan
  • Full dress rehearsal at Red Fort today for 74th Independence Day celebrations
  • Govt distributes over 3 Cr N95 masks, 1.28 Cr PPE kits to states, UTs, Central Institutions
  • Ayush Minister Shripad Naik tests positive for coronavirus
  • Air India stops flights to Madrid, Milan, Copenhagen, Vienna & Stockholm
  • Russia, Brazil agree to cooperate in production & marketing of world’s first registered coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V

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The Hindu Editorial Analysis | 13th August ’20 | PDF Download_4.1

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