Skip to main content

From 'Naatu-Naatu' to 'Nipah-Nipah': Dancing to the tune of western pipers?

By Dr Amitav Banerjee, MD* 

Some critics have commented that the ecstatic response of most Indians to the Oscar for the racy Indian song, “Naatu-Naatu” from the film, “RRR” reeks of sheer racism, insulting visuals and a colonial hangover. It was perhaps these ingredients that impressed the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, one critic says.
“Naatu-Naatu” isn’t just another peppy Indian movie song with colourful sets. If it were so it wouldn’t have fetched an Oscar the critic concludes. Instead, the song depicts a demeaning and dystopian colonial setting in which two of dark-skinned Indians are desperately trying to impress at an all-white English cocktail party. The five minute song conveys on how the West-admiring Indians obsequiously try to impress their Western counterparts.
As an epidemiologist and public health expert for over four decades, I am dismayed to see this obsequiousness among our public health experts, scientists, policy makers and politicians in matters concerning health of our people. This attitude generates greater acts of omissions and commissions than commercial movies. At stake are lives and livelihoods of Indians.
Present day scientists seek celebrity status at par with movie stars. When Nipah last emerged in Kerala, in 2018, scientists and policy makers claimed they controlled the virus by their efforts. Local film makers and musicians even made a celebratory music video out of it! This was perhaps a sign of things to come in the future. 
We have entered an era of commercial movies instead of serious science on matter of health and disease glossing over uncomfortable truths. Of course now we have a full fledged blockbuster on the Covid-19 pandemic –"The Vaccine War," which celebrates “Made in India” Covaxin for Covid-19, a vaccine which was hardly used in India, with only 16% Indians taking this vaccine.
Around 80% Indians were administered Covidshield which was developed by Astrazeneca in UK and Serum Institute of India was the sweatshop for mass production of the Covishield brand. A large number of countries had halted the rollout of Astrazeneca/Covishield due to Adverse Events Following Immunization (AEFI). 
There was nothing “Made in India” about Covidshield except for cheap Indian labour scaling up the production of a vaccine which was rejected by the West. Nothing to cheer about a “Lost Vaccine War” as our “India Made” Covaxin’s contribution to our vaccine rollout was a mere 16% compared to 80% by the British-Swedish Pharma giant Astrazeneca vaccine marketed as Covishield.
One who pays the piper calls the tunes. Western pharma giants find a vast market as well as cheap labour in India to scale up their sales and manufacturing.
The latest revived tune is “Nipah-Nipah.” We should not take any emerging or re-emerging infection lightly. Making movies and musical videos are not serious science. More pipers enter the fray. In addition to pharma giants and well meaning philanthropists with amateurish scientific insights, movie moguls eye the box office profits. 
Fiction and glamour overtake serious science. And of course career scientists who now have the incentive to become celebrities overnight in addition to promoting their careers. Let us examine the science of the Nipah virus sans the glamour of movies and music videos.
Nipah virus is a zoonosis, i.e. primarily an infection of animals. Humans can get accidently infected. The reservoir (where the virus thrives) is the fruit bat also called flying fox. Some of them may even enter human dwellings. Some fruit bats are even consumed as bushmeat by some communities. The virus was named after the village in Malaysia where it was first identified in 1999.
The virus crossed the animal barrier from bats and infected humans resulting in encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) with up to 40% mortality. The outbreak was first recognized in pigs that consumed fruits partially eaten by the fruit bats and transmitted the infection to humans.
In the same year, Nipah virus infection was confirmed in 11 male abattoir workers in Singapore out of which 1 died. His death was suspected to be due to handling imported pork from Malaysia. The outbreak in 1998-99 in Malaysia and Singapore resulted in 265 cases of acute encephalitis with 105 deaths and near collapse of the billion dollar pig-farm industry.
In 2004 Bangladesh confirmed its first Nipah outbreak by the presence of anti-Nipah virus antibodies in serum samples. Between the years 2004-2010, Bangladesh had nine outbreaks and another one in 2011 in a remote village in which 15 people died. In Bangladesh, the main source of transmission was eating raw date palm fruits.
In India the first outbreak of Nipah occurred in Nadia in West Bengal in the year 2007. Then in 2018, Nipah outbreak was reported in Kozhikode, Kerala with fruit bats as the source of the infection. During this outbreak most deaths occurred among health care workers in close contact with infected patients. A total of 60 infected people died. Another outbreak occurred in 2021 in Kerala and since then Nipah had claimed 20 lives and is reported to be spreading in Kerala.
Nipah virus infection in human has a range of clinical presentation from asymptomatic infection to acute respiratory infections, fatal encephalitis (brain inflammation), and severe neurological disease. The death rate is 40-75% according to reported outbreaks since 1998.
The high fatality rates is inversely related to its epidemic or pandemic potential as higher fatality translates to lesser transmission potential as reflected by R0. The R0 of the Nipah virus is less than 1 i.e. one infected person will transmit the infection to less than 1 person. Infections with R0 greater than 1 have higher chances to cause epidemics and pandemics. Nipah presently does not show that potential.
However, there is again hype of an emerging pandemic on occurrence of two deaths due to the Nipah virus in Kerala in the past few weeks. Only a handful of people have been found to be infected on contact tracing involving thousands of people.
Ham-handed restrictive and draconian measures have become the protocol for all infections post Covid-19 pandemic. Studies have established that these crude unscientific measures caused more collateral harm with negligible benefit particularly in poor countries. Going against this evidence base, thousands of offices and schools have been closed in Kerala and containment zones have been established around nine villages. Such measures fracture society and are uncalled for. More rational would be preventive measures at individual level by proper awareness among the masses.
We have entered an era of commercial movies instead of serious science on matter of health and disease glossing over uncomfortable truths
This can be achieved in several ways. Social media platform and local television channels are important platforms for proper risk communication without causing panic. Others include FM radio stations and local newspapers and posters. Farm workers may be informed to avoid direct contact with farm animals, especially during slaughter and disposal, wearing appropriate personal protective clothing during hazardous tasks. Villagers may be told to avoid eating date palm fruits and drinking date palm juice that may be contaminated if fruit bats live on these palm trees.
These are similar to the simple measures we teach to avoid getting killed in road traffic accidents. We educate the public to follow traffic rules. In vain it seems in our country, and the police too is casual in penalising defaulters unlike the gusto they display in enforcing draconian measures like mask mandates and lockdowns! If media hypes each case of road traffic accident occurring on a daily basis, people can be psyched to stop using motorized transport and stepping out as well.
Daily around 422 people mostly young die due to road traffic accidents in India and many more get disabled for life. This is perhaps more than all the deaths due to Nipah virus since it was discovered in 1999 in Malaysia, almost 24 years ago! 
Imagine, and get the perspective – every day in India we lose more lives than the total lives lost due to Nipah virus in 24 years! It would save more lives if the policy maker and police came down more heavily on traffic rules violations than close schools and businesses due to viruses and pathogens which abound in nature and are not amenable to control by such unscientific interventions.
Even as infections go, over 1400 Indians succumb to TB daily, and dengue kills more in a year than Nipah has killed in 24 years just to give a couple of examples as data is not robust for communicable diseases that kill many time more than exotic infections. For example data on dengue is not current on the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare website. The latest figures are till 31 July 2023 and that too provisional.
We lose over 2,000 children daily from mundane preventable causes. Japanese encephalitis and Leptospirosis kill many times more than the sporadic Nipah and so on. A far deadlier zoonosis than Nipah, rabies with 100% mortality killed 307 people in India last year with 48 deaths in Delhi. 
Stray dogs still abound on Indian streets with frequent news report of a child or an elderly being mauled by them. How callous can our policy makers be – neglecting these obvious public health menaces and chasing an exotic virus with far less deaths at the population level!
Scientists should continue their research activities in the background without clamouring for immediate media attention. Media hype distorts the information and creates public panic which can be counterproductive. Besides, pharma and the pharma backed WHO are desperately on the lookout for the next pandemic so as to push through the Pandemic Treaty which will give extraordinary autocratic powers to an unelected body and deprive democracies of their autonomy.
Regrettably similar to colonial times we are dancing to the tunes of the strong Western dominated pharma lobby and Western powers and Western “philanthropists” with deep pockets. Any death is a tragedy, Nipah or otherwise. But public health demands setting health priorities which depend on the burden of mortality and morbidity. Certainly, Nipah comes low down on this criterion. Trying to chase this at huge cost will divert resources from our other pressing public health problems.
The National Institute of Health (NIH), USA, has already launched clinical trials of mRNA vaccines for Nipah virus. Some time back a private institute in South India, Manipal Centre for Virus Research, was surreptitiously collaborating with the US based Centre for Disease Control (CDC) for research on Nipah virus which has also been identified as a potential bio-weapon. 
The lab was being used without approval of the government of India to map the Nipah virus which can be used to develop the vaccine, the intellectual propriety rights of which will not be with India. Studying how the human host reacts to the virus can also potentially help in the notorious, “gain of function” research.
History repeats itself. We have modern versions of Mir Jaffars who dance to the tunes of their Western masters, be it Naatu-Naatu or Nipah-Nipah!
Private institutions are under immense pressure as well as career scientists and academicians to get “foreign” grants for their research to advance in their institutional rankings and careers, respectively. Alas in this desperation they are liable to sell their souls if not their country to Western powers.
---
*Epidemiologist, presently Professor in a Medical College at Pune; had served as an epidemiologist in the armed forces for over two decades; has written the book, Covid-19 Pandemic: A Third Eye

Comments

TRENDING

Loktantra Bachao Abhiyan raises concerns over Jharkhand Adivasis' plight in Assam, BJP policies

By Our Representative  The Loktantra Bachao Abhiyan (Save Democracy Campaign) has issued a pressing call to protect Adivasi rights in Jharkhand, highlighting serious concerns over the treatment of Jharkhandi Adivasis in Assam. During a press conference in Ranchi on November 9, representatives from Assam, Chhattisgarh, and Madhya Pradesh criticized the current approach of BJP-led governments in these states, arguing it has exacerbated Adivasi struggles for rights, land, and cultural preservation.

Promoting love or instilling hate and fear: Why is RSS seeking a meeting with Rahul Gandhi?

By Ram Puniyani*  India's anti-colonial struggle was marked by a diverse range of social movements, one of the most significant being Hindu-Muslim unity and the emergence of a unified Indian identity among people of all religions. The nationalist, anti-colonial movement championed this unity, best embodied by Mahatma Gandhi, who ultimately gave his life for this cause. Gandhi once wrote, “The union that we want is not a patched-up thing but a union of hearts... Swaraj (self-rule) for India must be an impossible dream without an indissoluble union between the Hindus and Muslims of India. It must not be a mere truce... It must be a partnership between equals, each respecting the religion of the other.”

Right-arm fast bowler who helped West Indies shape arguably greatest Test team in cricket history

By Harsh Thakor*  Malcolm Marshall redefined what it meant to be a right-arm fast bowler, challenging the traditional laws of biomechanics with his unique skill. As we remember his 25th death anniversary on November 4th, we reflect on the legacy he left behind after his untimely death from colon cancer. For a significant part of his career, Marshall was considered one of the fastest and most formidable bowlers in the world, helping to shape the West Indies into arguably the greatest Test team in cricket history.

Andhra team joins Gandhians to protest against 'bulldozer action' in Varanasi

By Rosamma Thomas*  November 1 marked the 52nd day of the 100-day relay fast at the satyagraha site of Rajghat in Varanasi, seeking the restoration of the 12 acres of land to the Sarva Seva Sangh, the Gandhian organization that was evicted from the banks of the river. Twelve buildings were demolished as the site was abruptly taken over by the government after “bulldozer” action in August 2023, even as the matter was pending in court.  

Swami Vivekananda's views on caste and sexuality were 'painfully' regressive

By Bhaskar Sur* Swami Vivekananda now belongs more to the modern Hindu mythology than reality. It makes a daunting job to discover the real human being who knew unemployment, humiliation of losing a teaching job for 'incompetence', longed in vain for the bliss of a happy conjugal life only to suffer the consequent frustration.

A Hindu alternative to Valentine's Day? 'Shiv-Parvati was first love marriage in Universe'

By Rajiv Shah  The other day, I was searching on Google a quote on Maha Shivratri which I wanted to send to someone, a confirmed Shiv Bhakt, quite close to me -- with an underlying message to act positively instead of being negative. On top of the search, I chanced upon an article in, imagine!, a Nashik Corporation site which offered me something very unusual. 

Will Left victory in Sri Lanka deliver economic sovereignty plan, go beyond 'tired' IMF agenda?

By Atul Chandra, Vijay Prashad*  On September 22, 2024, the Sri Lankan election authority announced that Anura Kumara Dissanayake of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led National People’s Power (NPP) alliance won the presidential election. Dissanayake, who has been the leader of the left-wing JVP since 2014, defeated 37 other candidates, including the incumbent president Ranil Wickremesinghe of the United National Party (UNP) and his closest challenger Sajith Premadasa of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya. 

Will Bangladesh go Egypt way, where military ruler is in power for a decade?

By Vijay Prashad*  The day after former Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina left Dhaka, I was on the phone with a friend who had spent some time on the streets that day. He told me about the atmosphere in Dhaka, how people with little previous political experience had joined in the large protests alongside the students—who seemed to be leading the agitation. I asked him about the political infrastructure of the students and about their political orientation. He said that the protests seemed well-organized and that the students had escalated their demands from an end to certain quotas for government jobs to an end to the government of Sheikh Hasina. Even hours before she left the country, it did not seem that this would be the outcome.

A Marxist intellectual who dwelt into complex areas of the Indian socio-political landscape

By Harsh Thakor*  Professor Manoranjan Mohanty has been a dedicated advocate for human rights over five decades. His work as a scholar and activist has supported revolutionary democratic movements, navigating complex areas of the Indian socio-political landscape. His balanced, non-partisan approach to human rights and social justice has made his books essential resources for advocates of democracy.

Tributes paid to pioneer of Naxalism in Punjab, who 'dodged' police for 60 yrs

By Harsh Thakor*  Jagjit Singh Sohal, known as Comrade Sharma, a pioneer of Naxalism in Punjab, passed away on October 20 at the age of 96. Committed to the Naxalite cause and a prominent Maoist leader, Sohal, who succeeded Charu Majumdar, played hide and seek with the police for almost six decades. He was cremated in Patiala.