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World's 5 worst pandemic leaders

All of them are men and the best pandemic leader has been Jacinda Ardern, who is a woman.

Nah she gets a bit too much credit. Managing the virus with just 5 million people in an island is a much much easier task when compared to other leaders that are responsible 100s of millions in population and with borders that are shared with other countries.
 
All of them are men and the best pandemic leader has been Jacinda Ardern, who is a woman.

And her being a women makes her special why? These are only the top 5 worst which means the others not on this list are also men. You sir need to stop going for agenda based posts.
 
All of them are men and the best pandemic leader has been Jacinda Ardern, who is a woman.

I think a better way to look at it would be that most of them are far right nationalist. It’s no surprise that far right populist couldn’t handle this crisis.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

Why isn’t Imran Khan on the list? How is it possible that he did better than geniuses like Modi?
 
World's 5 worst pandemic leaders:

  • Narendra Modi of India
  • Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil
  • Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus
  • Donald Trump of the United States
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico

https://www.yahoo.com/news/worlds-worst-pandemic-leaders-5-122547071.html

If we talk about the best ones, I think Imran Kahn has to be there. I have worked with his government during the first surge and they did a great job. Considering the limitation they had , including lack of funds, mostly uneducated and poor public and less we say about moulvis and opposition leaders and their public meetings , is better. Even then surviving through it is not less than a miracle and only a good leader can achieve that .
 
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IK has done very well in handling the pandemic. He deserves full credit for this.
 
World's 5 worst pandemic leaders:

  • Narendra Modi of India
  • Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil
  • Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus
  • Donald Trump of the United States
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico

https://www.yahoo.com/news/worlds-worst-pandemic-leaders-5-122547071.html

If it wasn't for Operation Warp Speed, we would still be dragging ourselves into dirt with FDA, and it will be months if not years before the vaccine could become available.
Not sure how Trump makes it to the list?
There is a reason why numbers are sharply going down in USA. Thanks to Trump's operation warp speed.

He pretty much made up for the mess he created, in this particular case.
 
All of them are men and the best pandemic leader has been Jacinda Ardern, who is a woman.

It's more to do with how people of the nation follow and cooperate with the govt's recommended SOP and protocols.

Make Jacinda Arden, the PM of Brazil or USA or even India, and then we will see.
 
Imran Khan should be on the list. He has done a despicable job. From first calling it a little flu to now asking people to follow SOPs, this man has truly reached the pinnacle of incompetency. Also, Imran Khan failed to make any comprehensive lockdown strategy; all lockdowns have been ad-hoc and confusing.

By letting people offer prayers in congregations and failing to close mosques, he further helped the spread of COVID-19.
 
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Boris Johnson has to be in the top five. Slowness to react and lock down - originally, and now to the Indian variant - had cost tens of thousands of British lives.

Money over people.

And a lack of science education in the Cabinet.
 
no debate required over this, Modi wins it for all 5 spots.
This!

Not just top-5, but next 5 as well for simply accounting for kind of destruction that's been unleashed in India especially in last 1.5 months!
 
Modi has to be on top of the list.


I would also add Trudeau to the list.

Trudeau has been pretty poor especially in his sluggishness in banning flights from hotspots like India but I don’t think he has been as bad as the five disasters listed in the article.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

Why isn’t Imran Khan on the list? How is it possible that he did better than geniuses like Modi?

Imran should be top of the list. He is the most incompetent PM in the world and his so-called leadership in handling the pandemic has been no better.

He is not on this list because this list is compiled looking at the actual date - number of positive cases, number of deaths, recovered patients, number of cases per capita etc.

On the statistical front, Pakistan has fared better than some countries but it had nothing to do with Imran’s leadership.

Pakistan has the slowest vaccination program in the world and the Sputnik-V vaccine costs 50% more than what its price should have been because of the “great leadership” of Imran Khan.
 
Imran should be top of the list. He is the most incompetent PM in the world and his so-called leadership in handling the pandemic has been no better.

He is not on this list because this list is compiled looking at the actual date - number of positive cases, number of deaths, recovered patients, number of cases per capita etc.

On the statistical front, Pakistan has fared better than some countries but it had nothing to do with Imran’s leadership.

Pakistan has the slowest vaccination program in the world and the Sputnik-V vaccine costs 50% more than what its price should have been because of the “great leadership” of Imran Khan.

Imran Khan is no genius but modi held political rallies in the middle of a pandemic then bragged about the size of the crowds in that rally lol. I don’t think even Imran Khan can match that level of sheer stupidity tbh.
 
Lol a few ignorants here with the same arguments as always. If things go in right direction, it has nothing to do with the PM, but if things get worse all blame is put on PM.
 
One thing I noticed about India.

First England test, stadium was empty. India lost the match.

Second test, stadium was packed to support India. I remember thinking this was a COVID super spreader event and levelling the series appeared more important to someone than Indian lives.
 
Imran Khan should be on the list. He has done a despicable job. From first calling it a little flu to now asking people to follow SOPs, this man has truly reached the pinnacle of incompetency. Also, Imran Khan failed to make any comprehensive lockdown strategy; all lockdowns have been ad-hoc and confusing.

By letting people offer prayers in congregations and failing to close mosques, he further helped the spread of COVID-19.

Any evidence that not closing mosques led to more cases?

We see Palestinians praying Jamaah the Sunnah way for weeks and yet you dont hear of a spike in deaths do you?
 
Lol a few ignorants here with the same arguments as always. If things go in right direction, it has nothing to do with the PM, but if things get worse all blame is put on PM.

People think with their emotions nd not logic. For e.g. I have lost count of how many people claim if Trump was not President and it was Hillary not a single American would have died of Covid. That is such a ** claim
 
Imran should be top of the list. He is the most incompetent PM in the world and his so-called leadership in handling the pandemic has been no better.

He is not on this list because this list is compiled looking at the actual date - number of positive cases, number of deaths, recovered patients, number of cases per capita etc.

On the statistical front, Pakistan has fared better than some countries but it had nothing to do with Imran’s leadership.

Pakistan has the slowest vaccination program in the world and the Sputnik-V vaccine costs 50% more than what its price should have been because of the “great leadership” of Imran Khan.

Doesn’t matter. Due to Modi, India has 4000+ official deaths a day (God knows how many more In Reality), people dying on streets gasping for breath, bodies lying abandoned on the river banks. It’s a literal apocalypse
 
Lol a few ignorants here with the same arguments as always. If things go in right direction, it has nothing to do with the PM, but if things get worse all blame is put on PM.

The losers wanted Lashay for their politics but so far they have nothing. These bitter losers are desperate.
 
So you're a convert too? I find so many converts in last 1 month alone in my acquaintances!

I don’t know what you mean by convert?

I’m calling out BJP and idiot Modi for endangering entire nation for political gains. However, it doesn’t mean I support congress. Both are evil and both needs to be banished. India needs youth to lead the nation, enough of these illiterate babus destroying everything.
 
I don’t know what you mean by convert?

I’m calling out BJP and idiot Modi for endangering entire nation for political gains. However, it doesn’t mean I support congress. Both are evil and both needs to be banished. India needs youth to lead the nation, enough of these illiterate babus destroying everything.
Who asked you to be a supporter of Congress, they've harmed India as we all know. However current regime has surpassed it in just 7 years in harming India, not just with their devil may care attitude in India's fight against Covid but on all possible fronts.

No need to be supporter of anyone, I support India, not any political ideology!
 
World’s worst pandemic leaders: 5 presidents and prime ministers who badly mishandled COVID-19

COVID-19 is notoriously hard to control, and political leaders are only part of the calculus when it comes to pandemic management. But some current and former world leaders have made little effort to combat outbreaks in their country, whether by downplaying the pandemic’s severity, disregarding science or ignoring critical health interventions like social distancing and masks. All of the men on this list committed at least one of those mistakes, and some committed all of them – with deadly consequences.

Narendra Modi of India


India is the new epicenter of the global pandemic, recording some 400,000 new cases per day by May 2021. However grim, this statistic fails to capture the sheer horror unfolding there. COVID-19 patients are dying in hospitals because doctors have no oxygen to give and no lifesaving drugs like remdesivir. The sick are turned away from clinics that have no free beds.

Many Indians blame one man for the country’s tragedy: Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

In January 2021, Modi declared at a global forum that India had “saved humanity … by containing corona effectively.” In March, his health minister proclaimed that the pandemic was reaching an “endgame.” COVID-19 was actually gaining strength in India and worldwide – but his government made no preparations for possible contingencies, such as the emergence of a deadlier and more contagious COVID-19 variant.

Even as significant pockets of the country had not fully suppressed the virus, Modi and other members of his party held jampacked outdoor campaign rallies before April elections. Few attendees wore masks. Modi also allowed a religious festival that draws millions to proceed from January to March. Public health officials now believe the festival may have been a superspreader event and was “an enormous mistake.”

As Modi touted his successes last year, India – the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer – sent over 10 million vaccine doses to neighboring countries. Yet just 1.9% of India’s 1.3 billion people had been fully inoculated against COVID-19 by early May.

Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil

Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro did not just fail to respond to COVID-19 – which he derides as a “little flu” – he actively worsened the crisis in Brazil.

Bolsonaro used his constitutional powers to interfere in the Health Ministry’s administrative matters, such as clinical protocols, data disclosure and vaccine procurement. He vetoed legislation that would have both mandated the use of masks in religious sites and compensated health professionals permanently harmed by the pandemic, for example. And he obstructed state government efforts to promote social distancing and used his decree power to allow many businesses to remain open as “essential,” including spas and gyms. Bolsonaro also aggressively promoted unproven medicines, notably hydroxychloroquine, to treat COVID-19 patients.

Bolsonaro used his public profile as president to shape the debate around the coronavirus crisis, fostering a false dilemma between economic catastrophe and social distancing and misrepresenting science. He has blamed Brazilian state governments, China and the World Health Organization for the COVID-19 crisis, and has never taken responsibility for managing his own country’s outbreak.

In December, Bolsonaro declared that he would not take the vaccine because of side effects. “If you turn into a crocodile, it’s your problem,” he said.

Bolsonaro’s pandemic mismanagement created conflict within his government. Brazil cycled through four health ministers in less than a year. Brazil’s uncontrolled outbreak gave rise to several new coronavirus variants, including the P.1 variant, which appears more contagious. Brazil’s COVID-19 transmission rate is finally starting to drop, but the situation is still worrisome.

Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus


Many countries around the world have responded to COVID-19 with tragically inadequate policies. However, we argue that the worse pandemic leaders are those handful who chose total denialism over ineffective action.

Alexander Lukashenko, the longtime authoritarian leader of Belarus, has never acknowledged the threat of COVID-19. Early in the pandemic, as other countries were enforcing lockdowns, Lukashenko opted not to implement any restrictive measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Instead, he claimed the virus could be prevented by drinking vodka, visiting the sauna and working in the fields. This denialism essentially left preventative measures and pandemic aid to individuals and crowdfunding campaigns.

Over the summer of 2020, Lukashenko stated that he had been diagnosed with COVID-19 but that he was asymptomatic, which allowed him to continue insisting that the virus was not a serious threat. Allegedly thwarting the disease and visiting COVID-19 hospitals without a mask also supported his desired image of a strong man.

Belarus has just started vaccination efforts, but Lukashenko says he won’t get vaccinated. Currently, fewer than 3% of Belarusians are inoculated against COVID-19.

Donald Trump of the United States


Trump is out of office, but his mishandling of the pandemic continues to have devastating long-term consequences on the United States – particularly on the health and welfare of communities of color.
Trump’s early denial of the pandemic, active propagation of misinformation about mask-wearing and treatments and incoherent leadership harmed the country as a whole – but the outcome was much worse for some groups than others. Communities of color suffered disproportionate illness and deaths. Although African Americans and Latinos make up only 31% of the U.S. population, for example, they account for over 55% of COVID-19 cases. Indigenous Americans were hospitalized 3.5 times more and suffered 2.4 times the mortality rate of whites.

Unemployment rates are also disproportionate. During the worst of the U.S. pandemic, they soared to 17.6% for Latino Americans, 16.8% for African Americans and 15% for Asian Americans, compared with 12.4% for white Americans.

These crushing gaps amplified existing inequities such as poverty, housing instability and quality of schooling – and will likely continue to do so for some time to come. For example, while the overall U.S. economy shows signs of recovery, minority groups have not made equivalent progress.

Finally, Trump’s blame of China for COVID-19 – which included such racial epithets as calling the virus the “kung flu” – immediately preceded a nearly twofold increase in attacks on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the past year. This disturbing trend shows no signs of abating.

The Trump administration supported the country’s initial development of the vaccine, an achievement few world leaders can claim. But the misinformation and anti-science rhetoric he broadcast continues to compromise America’s path out of the pandemic. Latest polling suggests 24% of all Americans and 41% of Republicans say they will not get vaccinated.

Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico

With 9.2% of its COVID-19 patients dying from the disease, Mexico has the highest case fatality rate in the world. Recent estimates show that it has likely suffered 617,000 deaths – on par with the U.S. and India, both countries with much larger populations.

A combination of factors contributed to Mexico’s prolonged, extreme COVID-19 outbreaks. And inadequate national leadership was one of them.

Throughout the pandemic, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador sought to minimize the gravity of the situation in Mexico. In the very beginning, he resisted calls to enact a nationwide lockdown and continued holding rallies nationwide before eventually, on March 23, 2020, Mexico shuttered for two months. He frequently refused to wear a mask.
Having inherited an underfunded patchwork of health services when he took office in 2018, López Obrador increased health-related expenditures during the pandemic only slightly. Experts said hospital budgets are insufficient to the enormous task facing them.

Even before the pandemic broke out, López Obrador’s policy of extreme fiscal austerity – in place since 2018 – had made tackling a health crisis much more difficult by significantly limiting the COVID-19 financial aid available to citizens and businesses. That, in turn, aggravated the economic shock caused by the pandemic in Mexico, feeding the need to keep the economy open all last year, well into the ferocious winter second wave, from which Mexico is only beginning to emerge.

Eventually, another lockdown became inevitable. Mexico shut down again briefly in December 2020.

Today, mask-wearing is up and Mexico has fully vaccinated 10% of its population, compared with 1% in neighboring Guatemala. Things are improving, but Mexico’s road to recovery is long.

https://theconversation.com/worlds-...inisters-who-badly-mishandled-covid-19-159787
 
Its not surprising to see some well known anti-IK people writing against IK. You can criticize IK for many things , he gives you lots of reason for that but please be honest and realistic, he has done a great job in saving the country from disastrous outcome of covid pandemic .

I'm saying as I was member of task force of Pakistani American doctors which worked with government of Pakistan during the first surge last years and I was very impressed with outstanding job his government did .

IK should be included in the best leader for covid pandemic in the world.

But if IK bashing is your favorite pastime, no one can stop you, enjoy.
 
Its not surprising to see some well known anti-IK people writing against IK. You can criticize IK for many things , he gives you lots of reason for that but please be honest and realistic, he has done a great job in saving the country from disastrous outcome of covid pandemic .

I'm saying as I was member of task force of Pakistani American doctors which worked with government of Pakistan during the first surge last years and I was very impressed with outstanding job his government did .

IK should be included in the best leader for covid pandemic in the world.

But if IK bashing is your favorite pastime, no one can stop you, enjoy.

Oh nice, an actual doctor. May your work be blessed.

[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION], which taskforce were you on?
 
Its not surprising to see some well known anti-IK people writing against IK. You can criticize IK for many things , he gives you lots of reason for that but please be honest and realistic, he has done a great job in saving the country from disastrous outcome of covid pandemic .

I'm saying as I was member of task force of Pakistani American doctors which worked with government of Pakistan during the first surge last years and I was very impressed with outstanding job his government did .

IK should be included in the best leader for covid pandemic in the world.

But if IK bashing is your favorite pastime, no one can stop you, enjoy.

May Allah bless you for your hard work. Its you guys that are the real heroes
 
World’s worst pandemic leaders: 5 presidents and prime ministers who badly mishandled COVID-19

COVID-19 is notoriously hard to control, and political leaders are only part of the calculus when it comes to pandemic management. But some current and former world leaders have made little effort to combat outbreaks in their country, whether by downplaying the pandemic’s severity, disregarding science or ignoring critical health interventions like social distancing and masks. All of the men on this list committed at least one of those mistakes, and some committed all of them – with deadly consequences.

Narendra Modi of India


India is the new epicenter of the global pandemic, recording some 400,000 new cases per day by May 2021. However grim, this statistic fails to capture the sheer horror unfolding there. COVID-19 patients are dying in hospitals because doctors have no oxygen to give and no lifesaving drugs like remdesivir. The sick are turned away from clinics that have no free beds.

Many Indians blame one man for the country’s tragedy: Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

In January 2021, Modi declared at a global forum that India had “saved humanity … by containing corona effectively.” In March, his health minister proclaimed that the pandemic was reaching an “endgame.” COVID-19 was actually gaining strength in India and worldwide – but his government made no preparations for possible contingencies, such as the emergence of a deadlier and more contagious COVID-19 variant.

Even as significant pockets of the country had not fully suppressed the virus, Modi and other members of his party held jampacked outdoor campaign rallies before April elections. Few attendees wore masks. Modi also allowed a religious festival that draws millions to proceed from January to March. Public health officials now believe the festival may have been a superspreader event and was “an enormous mistake.”

As Modi touted his successes last year, India – the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer – sent over 10 million vaccine doses to neighboring countries. Yet just 1.9% of India’s 1.3 billion people had been fully inoculated against COVID-19 by early May.

Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil

Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro did not just fail to respond to COVID-19 – which he derides as a “little flu” – he actively worsened the crisis in Brazil.

Bolsonaro used his constitutional powers to interfere in the Health Ministry’s administrative matters, such as clinical protocols, data disclosure and vaccine procurement. He vetoed legislation that would have both mandated the use of masks in religious sites and compensated health professionals permanently harmed by the pandemic, for example. And he obstructed state government efforts to promote social distancing and used his decree power to allow many businesses to remain open as “essential,” including spas and gyms. Bolsonaro also aggressively promoted unproven medicines, notably hydroxychloroquine, to treat COVID-19 patients.

Bolsonaro used his public profile as president to shape the debate around the coronavirus crisis, fostering a false dilemma between economic catastrophe and social distancing and misrepresenting science. He has blamed Brazilian state governments, China and the World Health Organization for the COVID-19 crisis, and has never taken responsibility for managing his own country’s outbreak.

In December, Bolsonaro declared that he would not take the vaccine because of side effects. “If you turn into a crocodile, it’s your problem,” he said.

Bolsonaro’s pandemic mismanagement created conflict within his government. Brazil cycled through four health ministers in less than a year. Brazil’s uncontrolled outbreak gave rise to several new coronavirus variants, including the P.1 variant, which appears more contagious. Brazil’s COVID-19 transmission rate is finally starting to drop, but the situation is still worrisome.

Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus


Many countries around the world have responded to COVID-19 with tragically inadequate policies. However, we argue that the worse pandemic leaders are those handful who chose total denialism over ineffective action.

Alexander Lukashenko, the longtime authoritarian leader of Belarus, has never acknowledged the threat of COVID-19. Early in the pandemic, as other countries were enforcing lockdowns, Lukashenko opted not to implement any restrictive measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Instead, he claimed the virus could be prevented by drinking vodka, visiting the sauna and working in the fields. This denialism essentially left preventative measures and pandemic aid to individuals and crowdfunding campaigns.

Over the summer of 2020, Lukashenko stated that he had been diagnosed with COVID-19 but that he was asymptomatic, which allowed him to continue insisting that the virus was not a serious threat. Allegedly thwarting the disease and visiting COVID-19 hospitals without a mask also supported his desired image of a strong man.

Belarus has just started vaccination efforts, but Lukashenko says he won’t get vaccinated. Currently, fewer than 3% of Belarusians are inoculated against COVID-19.

Donald Trump of the United States


Trump is out of office, but his mishandling of the pandemic continues to have devastating long-term consequences on the United States – particularly on the health and welfare of communities of color.
Trump’s early denial of the pandemic, active propagation of misinformation about mask-wearing and treatments and incoherent leadership harmed the country as a whole – but the outcome was much worse for some groups than others. Communities of color suffered disproportionate illness and deaths. Although African Americans and Latinos make up only 31% of the U.S. population, for example, they account for over 55% of COVID-19 cases. Indigenous Americans were hospitalized 3.5 times more and suffered 2.4 times the mortality rate of whites.

Unemployment rates are also disproportionate. During the worst of the U.S. pandemic, they soared to 17.6% for Latino Americans, 16.8% for African Americans and 15% for Asian Americans, compared with 12.4% for white Americans.

These crushing gaps amplified existing inequities such as poverty, housing instability and quality of schooling – and will likely continue to do so for some time to come. For example, while the overall U.S. economy shows signs of recovery, minority groups have not made equivalent progress.

Finally, Trump’s blame of China for COVID-19 – which included such racial epithets as calling the virus the “kung flu” – immediately preceded a nearly twofold increase in attacks on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the past year. This disturbing trend shows no signs of abating.

The Trump administration supported the country’s initial development of the vaccine, an achievement few world leaders can claim. But the misinformation and anti-science rhetoric he broadcast continues to compromise America’s path out of the pandemic. Latest polling suggests 24% of all Americans and 41% of Republicans say they will not get vaccinated.

Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico

With 9.2% of its COVID-19 patients dying from the disease, Mexico has the highest case fatality rate in the world. Recent estimates show that it has likely suffered 617,000 deaths – on par with the U.S. and India, both countries with much larger populations.

A combination of factors contributed to Mexico’s prolonged, extreme COVID-19 outbreaks. And inadequate national leadership was one of them.

Throughout the pandemic, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador sought to minimize the gravity of the situation in Mexico. In the very beginning, he resisted calls to enact a nationwide lockdown and continued holding rallies nationwide before eventually, on March 23, 2020, Mexico shuttered for two months. He frequently refused to wear a mask.
Having inherited an underfunded patchwork of health services when he took office in 2018, López Obrador increased health-related expenditures during the pandemic only slightly. Experts said hospital budgets are insufficient to the enormous task facing them.

Even before the pandemic broke out, López Obrador’s policy of extreme fiscal austerity – in place since 2018 – had made tackling a health crisis much more difficult by significantly limiting the COVID-19 financial aid available to citizens and businesses. That, in turn, aggravated the economic shock caused by the pandemic in Mexico, feeding the need to keep the economy open all last year, well into the ferocious winter second wave, from which Mexico is only beginning to emerge.

Eventually, another lockdown became inevitable. Mexico shut down again briefly in December 2020.

Today, mask-wearing is up and Mexico has fully vaccinated 10% of its population, compared with 1% in neighboring Guatemala. Things are improving, but Mexico’s road to recovery is long.

https://theconversation.com/worlds-...inisters-who-badly-mishandled-covid-19-159787

Some great characters on that list :)
 
May Allah bless you for your hard work. Its you guys that are the real heroes

Thanks , really appreciate it. There are millions of heroes who fought and still fighting in the war against corona and those are not limited to doctors and nurses. I particularly give great credit to doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers in Pakistan who saved innumerable lives in Pakistan with limited resources.
 
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