Hyderabad: It has been more than a year since the world has started going through an unprecedented crisis.
COVID-19 remains to be a pandemic before us, in a more contagious form in its second wave, despite all efforts to check it through vaccinations and other preventive measures.
Even as India ‘struggles to breathe’ owing to the lack of medical oxygen, and overwhelmed health facilities become a usual scenario in most Indian states, Kerala has heightened caution and intensified pandemic regulations in its desperate attempts to 'crush the curve'.
Kerala has faced Nipah, another deadly virus, well before COVID became a household name all over the world. The state had also survived two disastrous floods, one before and one after the Nipah outbreak. And, then came COVID-19.
The Left Democratic Front (LDF) government, which assumed power in 2016, was not put on the defensive by the allegations and controversies raked up by the Opposition. These were all behind the greater challenges - Nipah, floods, and COVID-19 - faced by the government.
It was this knack of the Pinarayi Vijayan-led Left government in Kerala - to defend and survive all the challenges posed by nature and by the viruses, come what may, and stand for the welfare of the people - that gained relevance for a second consecutive term of governance in a state that usually alternates between the two leading coalitions in a cyclical pattern.
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The government that stood by the people
When the Nipah virus started claiming human lives, Kerala's health department was quick to respond and intervene. The intervention was so effective that the department could thoroughly check any further spread of the virus and could also save lives.
In the 2018 floods, twelve of the 14 districts in Kerala were neck-deep in water. Continuous landslips and landslides were reported from the hilly regions in all districts. The death toll in floods and landslides rose to 483, besides other material losses. Kerala survived. But that was not the end. Severe flooding was reported in many parts of the state in the subsequent year. Twenty-two died again despite all efforts to rescue and evacuate people from vulnerable areas. The disaster caused by the landslides and the loss in the farm sector could not yet be evaluated. However, Kerala learnt a lesson from nature’s outburst.
The government could survive these disasters with its farsighted, people-centric development package - Nava Kerala Mission. Even though many governments had earlier made crucial interventions in the development of the state, the rebuilding initiatives and the developments that came after the floods could be more tangible and experienced by the people.
The Palarivattom bridge, Alappuzha - Kollam bypass road, GAIL pipeline and all such projects at the regional level also came to the credit of the Pinarayi government. The public schools were modernised and overhauled to match world-class education and the health system improved to keep up with world standards. A 'corruption-free' Public Works Department (PWD) finished all projects promised by the LDF during its campaign on or before time.
Despite all the criticisms, the press meets conducted by Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan right from the time of floods through the current COVID-19 had always been a relief and reassurance in times of crisis to the common people of Kerala. This reassurance from the leader governing the State would have been remembered by a large section of the Kerala society during the polls, beyond political and other differences.
A strong defence
It is natural that the Opposition rakes up controversies and raises allegations against the incumbent government in a democracy. Over the last five years, fresh allegations and accusations were raised by the Opposition led by Ramesh Chennithala against the chief minister and other ministers in the Pinarayi cabinet. The government had to set records straight on many of those later on. The chief minister and his colleagues did not respond to the allegations of nepotism, sprinkler scam, life mission, deep-sea fishing trawlers, gold smuggling, dollar smuggling and backdoor entry.
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Instead, they focussed on matters that needed the government's intervention. They stood by the people to solve the problems they faced and assured them that the government is with them. This was the assurance given by the LDF that was clearly conveyed to the people.
The CPM-CPI tiffs that used to be obvious earlier was never seen anywhere during this term. The CPI leadership always tried to be with the chief minister and the government over any issue. The unflinching support offered by Kanam Rajendran (CPI state secretary) and other CPI leaders, by reserving all contentions and things to be talked about, strictly to the bilateral meetings of the LDF, cannot be discounted. Even independent candidates who had won on the LDF label and with CPM’s support turned to be strong ‘defenders’ of the party later on.
Pinarayi's firm stands and grit to implement the decisions helped the government get over any crisis that came by. In certain important issues, despite facing criticism even from the court, the government did not waver, instead, found other ways to go about and tackle the situation.