Ahmedabad: "India would have been better equipped to deal with the coronavirus pandemic if it had followed a different economic policy than the one that is causing huge urbanisation and migration of farmers towards cities," said Mahatma Gandhi's grandson Gopalkrishna Gandhi.
He was speaking in Hindi through video conferencing at a function organised to mark the 101st Foundation Day of Gujarat Vidyapith here on Sunday. Gandhi called for the need to reconsider the country's economic policy for the one that encouraged industrialisation and urbanisation, causing "huge population unsettlement" and forcing farmers to migrate to the cities in large numbers which spurred the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Economic policy of liberalisation, privatisation, or globalisation, whatever we call it, caused a huge population unsettlement and not resettlement. The way the population is growing in cities is fanning today's (COVID-19) pandemic," he said.
"Will not the pandemic increase due to the movement of the population towards the city? It is more than necessary today to reconsider our economic policy," he said.
"Had we followed a different policy, we should have got more hospitals, hostels for nurses, lab technicians, and not giant industrial projects at government level, and large numbers of temples, mosques, at social level.Had we followed a different policy, we would have been much better equipped to fight the pandemic," said Gandhi, a retired diplomat who also served as West Bengal governor from 2004 till 2009.
Read:Indicators point to economic recovery, but recouping may be fragile: Report
Even when this pandemic goes away, the threat of a new pandemic will remain, unless issues of massive population displacement, urban squalor, lack of hygiene and negligence of people are addressed, he further said."This pandemic has come after 100 years, but who knows, a new virus may emerge every year," Gandhi said, adding that it is the poor who suffer because of those who during an outbreak forget the rules of social distancing, wearing masks, sanitisation in the name of festivals.