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" In the face of the calamity, the Modi government froze.
In the seven months from March to September 2020, Modi made 82
public appearances—physical as well as virtual. In the next four
months, he made 111 such appearances. From February to 25 April
2021, he clocked 92 public appearances. From 25 April, after he
called off the Kumbh and his Bengal rallies, Modi disappeared. He
made no public appearance for 20 days.147 The prime minister of
India fled the field when his people needed the government most.
Through all of April and much of May, upper class Indians
flooded Twitter with calls for help to find hospital beds, oxygen
cylinders, drugs like Remdesivir and ventilators.148 The Union did
not think to set up a helpline to guide those who needed this help.
Into this space strode the youth Congress leader B.V. Srinivas
(@srinivasiyc) who, with a team of volunteers, began to help people
reaching out for aid on Twitter. He was so effective in the absence of
the State and any government presence that even the embassies of
New Zealand and the Philippines contacted him for help when
staffers fell ill with Covid.149 Focussed on the government’s image,
Jaishankar tweeted: ‘This was an unsolicited supply as they had no
Covid cases. Clearly for cheap publicity by you know who. Giving
away cylinders like this when there are people in desperate need of
oxygen is simply appalling.’ The New Zealand embassy staffer who had received oxygen
from Srinivas on 2 May died 18 days later. "

, Price of the Modi Years


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 quote : In the face of the calamity, the Modi government froze.<br />In the seven months from March to September 2020, Modi made 82<br />public appearances—physical as well as virtual. In the next four<br />months, he made 111 such appearances. From February to 25 April<br />2021, he clocked 92 public appearances. From 25 April, after he<br />called off the Kumbh and his Bengal rallies, Modi disappeared. He<br />made no public appearance for 20 days.147 The prime minister of<br />India fled the field when his people needed the government most.<br />Through all of April and much of May, upper class Indians<br />flooded Twitter with calls for help to find hospital beds, oxygen<br />cylinders, drugs like Remdesivir and ventilators.148 The Union did<br />not think to set up a helpline to guide those who needed this help.<br />Into this space strode the youth Congress leader B.V. Srinivas<br />(@srinivasiyc) who, with a team of volunteers, began to help people<br />reaching out for aid on Twitter. He was so effective in the absence of<br />the State and any government presence that even the embassies of<br />New Zealand and the Philippines contacted him for help when<br />staffers fell ill with Covid.149 Focussed on the government’s image,<br />Jaishankar tweeted: ‘This was an unsolicited supply as they had no<br />Covid cases. Clearly for cheap publicity by you know who. Giving<br />away cylinders like this when there are people in desperate need of<br />oxygen is simply appalling.’ The New Zealand embassy staffer who had received oxygen<br />from Srinivas on 2 May died 18 days later.