Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Dead end

So, the prime minister visited dengue patients in AIIMS and he had no time for our ‘Nura Temsing-nabi’. It brings into focus the dead-end we are confronted with right at this moment.

We are in very unusual situation. We are not alone; in fact, most of the NE States are in such situations. We have no tax revenue. We are living on the current account subsidy pumped in from New Delhi.

This unusual situation has given birth to an equal unusual class of people here. They are born attuned for pocketing the subsidies from Delhi. They are now even leveraging insurgency to get more money from New Delhi. Unfortunately for the ordinary people here, this unusual class is also the political class here. Their main business is raking up their brains for innovative ways for pocketing this subsidy.

The irony here is that the political class in New Delhi is counting on such people for the feedback of the ground realities in the state. Naturally, the Delhi people have already lost contact with the aspirations and wishes of the ordinary people here. There is absolutely no hope if they continue to depend on such people. Personally, I have some opportunities to watch some of these people who are the emerging leaders of such class from a very quarters and I can assure you that they are worse than the present crop of leadership.

So, we have to continue living with the dead end for considerable time into the future.

Interestingly, I read the weekly column of Mr Sanjoy Hazarika in the Statesman today. He wrote that doctors actually gave only 3 days to the ‘Nura Temsing-nabi’ if she refused to eat after the discontinuation of the nose feeding. Only 3 days! That tenuous!! It’s extremely worrisome. Mr Hazarika wondered how they managed to put her in an air plane for nearly 10 hours of flying into Delhi.

I don’t know how he got the data here. I can’t tell you about the authenticity of the data either. I came to know of it from Mr Hazarika’s column.

Mr Hazarika concluded that any doctor in New Delhi would not recommend to any government agency for transporting the ‘Nura temsing-nabi’ to Imphal. Alternatively, any government agency would shy away from the job in the absence of a clear and official recommendation from a reputed doctor.

It seems that New Delhi is also sitting on a pretty tricky situation.

PS: Don’t you notice that I’ve been using name ‘Nura Temsing-nabi’ all over the place now? I can again tell you that I don’t like putting Sharmila on a pedestal. Still, I like these two words—they are so elegent.

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