Kashmir is burning in the North &
Bangalore burned for a day in the South, both gaining international headlines.
The game of musical chairs continues in Arunachal with 43 of the 44 MLAs
shifting allegiance from the Congress to the opposition; Centre throttled development
funds to the state forcing regime change, accuse the Congress. Earlier, article
356, was used with impunity to dislodge the Congress governments in Uttarakhand
& Arunachal till the Supreme Court intervened to make amends. The Patels in
Gujarat, Marathas in Maharashtra, Jats in Northern India & Kapus in AP are
up in arms demanding reservation. Campus eruptions abound; while the JNU
imbroglio raised the bogey of the real definition of “nationalism”, the actions
in the Rohit Vemula case in Hyderabad University, Periyar Study circle in IIT –
Chennai & the Una trashing incident perpetuated by the cow vigilantes, have
raised Dalit identity issues. Religious polarization is on the rise too. While
the riots in Western UP, in 2013, pitted the landed Jats against the Muslims, slogans
like “Love Jihad” & “Beef Ban” have continuously raised the temperatures; incidents
such as the lynching of Mohd. Akhlaq & the activism of “Gau Rakshaks” have
accentuated the divide between the 2 largest religious communities of the
country to precarious levels. Racism is reaching catastrophic levels; while
ethnic maltreatment of Africans & people of the NE, visible vide incidents
in Bangalore & NCR is deplorable, the “Insiders- Outsides” branding in the
NE is equally reprehensible. These schisms in our polity are a consequence of linguistic,
caste, ethnic & religious polarizations.
That raises the question: Has India regressed to the 1990’s? Is war
mongering being used to supress all these issues?
The 1990’s arguably were the most
trying times for the Indian polity. While the break-up of the Soviet Union
forced India to devise a new foreign policy in a unipolar world, financial
distress prompted us to initiate economic reforms. Kashmir was burning then too
with insurrection fronted by the JKLF & Hizbul Mujahedeen in the valley
with support from across the border & Kashmiri Pandits were forced to
become refugees in their own country.
Article 356 continued to be imposed with impunity with Karnataka, Tamil
Nadu, Rajasthan & states of NE being the significantly effected ones. The
acceptance of the Mandal Committee recommendations in1990, by Prime Minister VP
Singh, to shore up a support base for himself, at the expense of his deputy,
Devi Lal & to checkmate a rising BJP, unleashed in its wake a wave of
protests, largely led by the students, who felt their career ambitions
threatened. Forward castes reacted
violently & OBCs countered the protests creating a violent political
cauldron. A desperate BJP, finding its Hindutva base getting dispersed, raised
the “Kamandal” issue of Ram Janmabhoomi, which triggered the Babri Masjid
demolition, in 1992, leading to the Hindu-Muslim riots that were soon followed
by the Bombay blasts the next year. Are the events of today not ringing a
similar bell?
All political parties in India,
generally, ride on caste combinations & therefore it is in their interest
to further caste polarization. The core base of many regional parties is based
around a particular caste. Parties like the BJP, AIMIM et al, on the contrary, succeed
through religious polarization. Ethnic
& tribal polarization has frequently been employed in the NE. Raising
issues of Identity without resorting to violence is a legitimate political act
but unfortunately that has rarely been the case; polarization is seen as
assuring a more surer shot at political power. The scourge of polarization of
all hues, therefore, unfortunately, appears back on the horizon.
Mid 1990’s saw major problems
being addressed through political initiatives & Supreme Court judgements. The
Punjab problem was solved by PM Narsimha Rao who initiated a political process,
in 1992, in the state despite many odds & persuasions to the contrary; the
Mandal agitation was solved through a Supreme Court judgement in 1992, restricting
the reservation to 27% to ensure that overall reservation in India is under 50%.
Pragmatism defined the Kamandal forces resolve to lower the rhetoric in a bid
to win allies which they did & formed the govt. in 1998 post a short lived 13
day stint, earlier, in 1996. Sanity was restored in state legislatures vide the
Bommai Judgement of 1994 that ensured a drastic reduction in the misuse of Article
356. Hiteshwar Saikia’s able administration in Assam coupled with Operation
Rhino launched by the Army broke the back of ULFA in the early 90’s while the talks
initiated by Home Secy. Padmanabhaiah, in 1997, with the Naga outfits of the NE
ensured long lasting peace in the region. Vajpayee initiated the Kashmir peace
talks with Pakistan & Manmohan Singh took the same forward through a Track
II backchannel diplomacy. Regrettably, we seem to be squandering all these
gains.
Instead of solving the new
problems of pollution, climate change, abysmal social indicators et al we are
regressing & opening up old wounds, the solutions for which were arrived at
post intense debate & sustained through bipartisan support across the
aisle. The culprit as one can guess appears to be the lust for political power.
India needs leaders who display
vision & statesmanship in good measure, unwilling to enter into Faustian
pacts for political gains for whichever entity wins in this war of polarization,
India shall be a loser & that should be unacceptable to any “patriotic”
Indian.
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