This Week in Asia

Indian democracy can learn from Cummings' dissection of Britain's Covid-19 failings

Such was the box office pull of Wednesday's parliamentary testimony by Dominic Cummings, the Rasputin-like ex-aide to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, that what would otherwise have been a dreary affair has garnered headlines even here in Asia.

Some commentators likened the seven-hour proceedings before the House of Commons joint science and health select committees to a Netflix miniseries.

The former special adviser, asked to testify on the country's Covid-19 response thus far, painted a picture of blame-shifting, deceit and incompetence in the government and even said his old boss was "unfit for the job".

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

Cummings reserved the worst criticism for Health Secretary Matt Hancock, accusing him of repeatedly lying to the public.

With references to the 1996 film Independence Day, a Spider-Man meme and even an F-word (when he quoted someone else), it's tempting to say the hearing was entertaining.

Of course, the families of the 152,000 Britons who died in the pandemic would not have found any of this remotely pleasant.

We are likely to see intense discussions of Cummings' revelations, and the government will resist some of his claims.

The proceedings are a dress rehearsal of sorts for a public inquiry next year on Britain's Covid-19 response.

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Photo: Reuters alt=Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Photo: Reuters

While public opinion will be split on Cummings' stinging attack on his old allies, most Britons will have been impressed by the surgical manner in which their MPs quizzed him - prodding him for answers when he sought to squirm out of giving straight replies.

As a result of this and other select committee testimonies, the public has a fuller picture of what went wrong in the early months of the crisis now, and need not wait for the 2022 inquiry.

Hopefully, this will prove useful in holding the government to account.

There's a lesson here for India and other Asian democracies.

With much still at stake in the war against Covid-19, keeping the executive branch accountable should not be left to the end of the crisis as a Potemkin 'lessons learned' exercise. In New Delhi, parliamentary speakers of the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha have indicated they will not convene standing committee hearings for now.

Parliamentary speakers must be bold and resist the executive branch's rhetoric that holding inquests now will prove a distraction to dealing with the present emergency. Britain's experience suggests this is not so.

As Mallikarjun Kharge, the opposition leader in the Rajya Sabha put it, parliament "cannot and must not be a mute spectator" at an hour of collective crisis.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2021. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from This Week in Asia

This Week in Asia2 min read
In Bali's Battle With Badly Behaved Tourists, A Dos And Don'ts Nudge In The Right Direction
Indonesia's holiday hotspot of Bali has issued a fresh reminder for travellers to navigate the island's cultural landscape with "confidence and grace", as officials step up a campaign against misbehaving guests. The tourism-reliant tropical destinati
This Week in Asia4 min read
Nepal Rolls Out AI-powered 'Crystal Ball' To Predict Deadly Landslides
As monsoon rains pounded a hillside village in Nepal's Dolakha district in August 2018, an early warning system tested just months earlier sprang into action - sounding the alarm and helping nearly 500 people evacuate just minutes before a landslide
This Week in Asia6 min read
Why Is It So Difficult For The Philippines To Push Through A Divorce Law?
Nearly a quarter of a century ago, women's rights activist Elizabeth Angsioco and the Democratic Socialist Women of the Philippines, which she heads, invited Congressman Victor Ortega from the northern province of La Union to discuss a hot but forbid

Related Books & Audiobooks