Friday, 19 November 2021

FOOT IN MOUTH OR STRAWS IN THE WIND ?

   Over these last seven years we have become used to our saffron eminences and their intellectually challenged acolytes spouting all kinds of asinine nonsense: Einstein discovered gravity, Darwin was wrong because no one witnessed an ape turning into homo sapiens, Chandragupta defeated Alexander, India invented plastic surgery and in-vitro fertilisation procedures, Haldighati was a victory for Maharana Pratap, cow urine cures Covid, India achieved independence in 2014 and not in 1947. If these statements did not educate us they at least added a little levity to our despondent existence. But two recent statements, equally bizarre, may give us cause for concern. They come close on the heels of Justice (R) Arun Mishra, Chairman of the NHRC ( National Human Rights Commission) who is unable to control his admiration for the Prime Minister even at international fora,  organising a debate on the subject " Are human rights a stumbling block in fighting evils like terrorism and naxalism ?" In legal parlance this was the ultimate " leading question". We thought that things couldn't possibly get worse, but we were quickly proved wrong.

  Mr. Ajit Doval, the National Security Advisor and India's third most powerful person, told IPS probationers at a passing out function that the new frontier of war was civil society, it was the " fourth generation" of warfare, that it can be suborned, manipulated, subverted and divided to " hurt the interests of a nation", and that the police are " there to see that the land is fully protected." He went on to further expound on his doctrine of democracy ( I am paraphrasing here): that the electoral process is not paramount, what is important are the laws made by lawmakers and the police must enforce them ruthlessly.

  The other declaration, even more alarming, was by the Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat who opined that it was a " good thing " that the public of Jammu and Kashmir was now ready to lynch terrorists. He did not see the necessity of making a distinction between suspected, hybrid and genuine terrorists. Presumably, the good citizens of J+K would make this judgment themselves just before they strung up these individuals on the nearest lamp-post. He also seemed to forget that there are laws in place to deal with terrorists, and that lynching is not yet an approved form of justice.

  These statements fall into a different category from the Kangana Ranaut and Satyendra Singh ones, and have to be taken more seriously, because they have been made by the two senior most officers of our most important uniformed forces- the police and the army. These two gentlemen are  acknowledged to be very close to the ruling dispensation and never speak out of turn. They are also good weather vanes. That is why the two statements need to be taken seriously and condemned unequivocally.

  The import of Mr. Doval's exhortation goes far beyond a few dozen IPS probationers: it is an attack on civil society, a warning to the govt's critics and an incitement to the police to target dissidents and liberals. I do not know whether his choice of words was deliberate or just unfortunately random, but to term civil society as a frontier of war is shocking, it equates citizens with an "enemy". And to elevate any peaceful confrontation between a government and its citizens to a " fourth generation warfare" is an astounding militarisation of dissidence. It is also a very innovative doctrine: most military strategists will tell you that the new generation of warfare consists of cyber, asymmetrical or algorithmic war. For Mr. Doval to add " civil society" to this list would be inviting ridicule. But somehow I don't think he was being facetious or stupid; he appears to have chosen his words carefully, and his messaging is deliberate.

  For me, this is confirmed by Gen Rawat's statement, which, shorn of its uniformed origin, is nothing but an incitement to vigilantism and mob violence. That the senior most defence officer in the country can say this publicly is condemnable but no longer surprising, for new furrows of illegality are being carved out everyday in this country these days.

  Both prescriptions are in direct contradiction with , and a violation of,  our Constitution and the law of the land. They criminalise freedom of speech, the right to disagree with the govt., the right to protest peacefully. As Aruna Roy points out in a recent article, Mr. Doval is short circuiting the democratic, social and developmental safeguards assured us by the Constitution, and is maliciously painting civil society as a force which is undermining development and nationalism. Moreover, it is clear that he is referring to the " other " civil society which protests the govt's excesses, and not the one represented by the Kapil Mishras, Kangana Ranauts and Swami Narsinghanands, all supporters and purveyors of hate and intolerance.

  In fact, one would have expected these two senior functionaries of the govt. to have done just the opposite of what they did. Given the manner in which most police forces in the states- not excluding opposition ruled states- have run amock of late, using UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act) and sedition laws with gay abandon, arresting anyone who writes against the govt. on trumped up charges, defying court orders, being selective in their policing, the correct counsel to the IPS probationers should have been one which enjoined on them to work within the limits of the Constitution, abide by the judgments of the courts, respect the rights of citizens and the values of our democratic traditions and history, treat everyone equitably. General Rawat could have redeemed his rapidly shrinking reputation by denouncing vigilantism, reminding his audience that the sovereign right to violence belongs only to the state, and that too only after a due process of law is followed.

  By branding civil society as internal enemies of the state, however, the two have now given a license to the police and other coercive agencies to be even more ruthless and brutal in their treatment of those members of society who incur the govt's wrath and displeasure, including journalists, human rights activists, students, writers, liberal intellectuals, workers, farmers, artists. This is no longer just a dog whistle, it is sounding the bugles for a new war on the most fundamental of  democratic values- the right to disagree. Disagreement is the bulwark of democracy- to crush it is to crush democracy itself. 

  It is difficult to explain why Messers Doval and Rawat have decided to open another front at this time, considering their dismal performance on all other fronts- Kashmir, the Naga Peace Accord, Afghanistan, Ladakh, Arunachal Pradesh, Nepal, CAA, Pegasus, to name just a few. Moreover, the BJP ruled undisputed over social media till just about a couple of years ago, successfully drowning out the voice of civil society. So why now ? My guess is that, as repeated failures of the government in all areas of governance pile up, a significant back lash is building up among the public. The hold and influence of the sold out mainstream media is also diminishing, with independant portals and Youtube channels garnering huge viewership running into millions. The results of the recent by-elections seem to bear this out. Crucial elections in five states are due in just a few months. It is therefore time for desperate measures to instil more fear among members of the civil society, to fire up the vigilantes, and to convey the desired signals to the police. This will be the new template in the coming days. The barometer is falling and the wind is picking up.

  It's an ill wind that blows no good.

30 comments:

  1. For now suffice it to say, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”

    Let us see anon what recourse there may yet be left.

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    1. Kabir Sahib, what eloquence. Some parts are from a Tale of Two Cities - brilliant all the havesame.You another career awaiting you.

      I agree wholeheartedly with Avay' Shukla ji. The recent Kissan Andolans victory and Bengal elections do bring some hope.

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    2. Each word put in such a chronological order. Hope, voters understand the reality without fear or favour

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  2. (Apologies but credit for the above quote was left out. It is of course, from A Tale Of Two Cities by Charles Dickens).

    I said to a friend, something seems to have shifted, this Gurpurab...
    for better or worse I'm sure I don't know but there are motes of change in the air.
    And, well, there was an apology and statement of repeal.
    It is no exaggeration to say now, "The hold and influence of the sold out mainstream media is also diminishing, with independent portals and Youtube channels garnering huge viewership running into millions."
    An admonitory Supreme Court has, it seems, given courage and strength to its lesser Courts and their Judges of honour; so innocents are less vilified; the brute police less complacent; their political minders more thwarted; and conscience less quiet even among and within party lines in the ruling Centre & States....
    A vicious court-battle was suddenly resolved. Amicably.
    And even I have the courage now to repeat a 162 year old motto: 'Be not overcome with evil but overcome evil with good.'
    More prayers for more grace are in order.

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    1. Even better! How beautifully you bring hope to the fore...

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    2. You do sound like a cottonian Kabir Sahib

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    3. That's some nuance to being in, @Viswas!
      It certainly is frightening to see everything happening today being straightway boxed into either being intentionally 'good' or 'bad' without a moment's pause.
      The fact is that a whole universe exists within this continuum of so called 'good' and 'bad'.
      I wonder if taking polar positions and jumping to conclusions is any better than being part of a camp that has a unipolar agenda.
      Only is we could pause to see good in the 'bad' and bad in the 'good', like it appears you just seemed to do!
      Stay there...

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  3. I will prefer to give leeway to the remarks of the two men. I will in all hope stretch their words to the limit and search for comfort, even if illusory. Simply because not doing so portends very ominously as caveated by Avay Shukla. And that is not the desired course the nation wishes to tread.
    The Chief of Internal Security made his remarks perhaps more to inspire the passing IPS cadre to be extra-observant to the threats from lumpen elements within. But being a man used to maintaining stoic silence over soundbytes - as a function of his espionage career - he was probably unable to put his point across clearly, to our concern. Let us hope he was extolling the virtues of vigilance and alertness for the good of the citizenry. Not in order to scuttle dissidence with baton and prison.
    The Chief of Defence Staff's inclination to permit the locals to espouse vigilantism was perhaps the excited outburst of a gun-brandishing militaryman to first fire, then fume. He was probably - I pray - indicating that the locals had over years given up fear for resilience to terrorists, and that was manifesting itself in the form of standing up to them.
    We witnessed yesterday how a year's arrogance by the ruling regime genuflected before the might of the people's power. Such watershed events though few and far between are the re-establishers of democracy whenever it is challenged by the power hungry.

    The barometer is falling and the wind is picking up.
    The wind that blows the candles out kindles the fire.
    Let there remain hope...

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    1. It's not just once that these two have expressed such sentiments. They are basically what they say .... they do not believe in democracy, do not accept different points of view ... and are in a hurry to stamp their authority over whatever confronts them. So, whatever else we may do, let's not cut them any slack

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    2. My contention is that we stay resolute to our beliefs, disallowing us to interpret jingoistic discourse verbatim. If we subaltern them to uniformist theories as postured by the two men, then we fan the embers of suppression into a conflagration sooner than later. To oppose this, retaining 'hope' - to me - is "sine qua non". Else, what Mr. Shukla inferences so precisely is inescapable.

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    3. I am not sifting through the bad to locate the good Ms. Puri. The speeches were sinister as they sounded. I am trusting the people to take cognisance of what was remarked, but lend elasticity sufficient to not come over with unwarranted trepidation.
      Such utterances should be heard with a margin, yet remembered with caveats.

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    4. Vishwas - like your response.

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  4. Its possible that the military top gun and the super cop having at last got a chance to actually say something of their own (without briefs), could think of nothing and ended with their foot in the mouth in the process of trying to become historical. Fully agree though that what was said portends a bleaker democracy ahead.

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  5. Again well articulated. Our military man was a mediocre general - relegated in NDA for possibly lacking some basic qualities. Superseded two more qualified seniors - distantly related to Focal. So he must keep pricing his loyalty to get an extension or Governor ship or better CM of his State.

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  6. Doval, not Focal - wretched Spellcheck.

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  7. Sad state of affairs! All institutions and even important persons are corrupted with wrong ideas!!!

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  8. What did Ajit Doval mean?

    Underlining the importance of internal security, National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval recently pointed out that the new frontiers of war is the civil society that can be manipulated to hurt the interests of a nation. On 12-11-2021, he made the following remarks while addressing the passing out parade of the 73rd batch of IPS probationers at Sardar Vallabhai Patel National Police Academy in Hyderabad:

    “Wars ceased to become effective instruments to achieve political and military objectives. They are too expensive, unaffordable and there’s uncertainty about the outcome. It is the civil society that can be subverted, divided and manipulated to hurt the interest of the nation. You are there to see that this land is fully protected.”

    I found interesting comments by some prominent members of the civil society.

    Rajmohan Gandhi, in an NDTV opinion piece (Why Ajit Doval Should Be Thanked) – “Thank you, Doval-ji, for reminding us of the power of civil society, which is no external power. Its real strength is internal.”

    Aruna Roy, writing a column in the Indian Express (Civil society is not the enemy) – “NSA Ajit Doval’s theory about 'fourth generation warfare' undermines Constitution, will do great harm to the nation’s security. … Doval neither bothered to define the civil society he wants his officers to be at war with, nor explained what gave him the authority to declare a “fourth-generation war” on our own people.”

    T. N. Ninan, writing his weekend column in the Business Standard (Survival of the friendliest) – “It is hard to think of another time, post-Independence, when a Cabinet-ranked official would ask police officers to go to war against civil society. The only exception would be the period of Indira Gandhi’s Emergency rule.”

    Is there a contradiction between what Rajmohan Gandhi has said and the other two? While Rajmohan Gandhi has thanked Ajit Doval, Aruna Roy and TN Ninan think that Ajit Doval is urging police officers to go to war against the civil society. A plain reading of Doval’s statement seems to suggest that he is urging the police officers to defend the civil society from fourth generation warfare, and not to wage a war against the civil society.

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  9. It is no contradiction Sir.
    Rajmohan Gandhi remindes the internal security chief tongue-in-cheek of the real power that lies with the indigenous population.

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    1. All these noises are on paper - just like Kangana the other extreme. They are together trying to subvert the attention of people from the real issues. They are worried for the fires that have already caught in their tails and have started burning uncontrollably- threatening to engulf them wholly eventually. Given them a free hand, they would like India to become another China or North Korea. Indira Gandhi couldn't. The same is difficult here since BJP is no match for INC at its high days. IG also failed. India's diversities is the best guarantee against a totalitarian regime and is an impediment to any such wishful misadventure if any serious attempt is ever made on the strength of absolute majority in the parliament. Congress in its imposing days had a much better all India support base than what BJP has today. Still INC was no match for CCP - so, let's not talk about BJP/RSS. After all permutations and combinations, BJP is basically a party of india's cow belt. I think they are today in an ideological as well as electoral crises. That's why we're hearing these incoherent voices/ speeches. As we will be nearing 2024 thru 2022, insanity will be soaring to the peak.

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  11. Josy Joseph has just published a book 'The Silent Coup - A History of India's Deep State' where he expands on this even further. He says that the elites, government machinery, and security establishments no longer think of working within the Constutition, but due to the system of perverse incentives that they work under, they bear loyalty to the State, and not to the Constitution. Hence they treat citizens as enemies. Hence the militarization, nationalisation, and securitization of simple political problems, thus making even simple dissent as out to be against the 'national' interest. Further, he goes on to say that the media, which should normally be more loyal to the citizen and protect the interests of the citizen, has become almost completely subservient to the State. It's an all-out assault on the constitution and the citizenry. Looks like the only organ of our system that is starting to become vigilant again is the judiciary. Let's hope it fulfills its constitutional charter.

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  12. It is either amok or amuck. Not amock! Beautifully written,as always!!

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  13. OH NO, not another Shashi Tharoor ! But thanks for pointing out the error, Unknown at 18:18.

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  14. किसी का हुक्म है सारी हवाएँ

    हमेशा चलने से पहले बताएँ

    कि उन की सम्त क्या है

    किधर जा रही हैं

    हवाओं को बताना ये भी होगा

    चलेंगी अब तो क्या रफ़्तार होगी

    हवाओं को ये इजाज़त नहीं है

    कि आँधी की इजाज़त अब नहीं है

    हमारी रेत की सब ये फ़सीलें

    ये काग़ज़ के महल जो बन रहे हैं

    हिफ़ाज़त उन की करना है ज़रूरी

    और आँधी है पुरानी इन की दुश्मन

    ये सभी जनते हैं

    किसी का हुक्म है दरिया की लहरें

    ज़रा ये सर-कशी कम कर लें अपनी हद में ठहरें

    उभरना फिर बिखरना और बिखर कर फिर उभरना

    ग़लत है ये उन का हंगामा करना

    ये सब है सिर्फ़ वहशत की अलामत

    बग़ावत की अलामत

    बग़ावत तो नहीं बर्दाश्त होगी

    ये वहशत तो नहीं बर्दाश्त होगी

    अगर लहरों को है दरिया में रहना

    तो उन को होगा अब चुप-चाप बहना

    किसी का हुक्म है

    इस गुलिस्ताँ में बस इक रंग के ही फूल होंगे

    कुछ अफ़सर होंगे जो ये तय करेंगे

    गुलिस्ताँ किस तरह बनना है कल का

    यक़ीनन फूल तो यक-रंगीं होंगे

    मगर ये रंग होगा कितना गहरा कितना हल्का

    ये अफ़सर तय करेंगे

    किसी को ये कोई कैसे बताए

    गुलिस्ताँ में कहीं भी फूल यक-रंगीं नहीं होते

    कभी हो ही नहीं सकते

    कि हर इक रंग में छुप कर बहुत से रंग रहते हैं

    जिन्होंने बाग़-ए-यक-रंगीं बनाना चाहे थे

    उन को ज़रा देखो

    कि जब इक रंग में सौ रंग ज़ाहिर हो गए हैं तो

    कितने परेशाँ हैं कितने तंग रहते हैं

    किसी को ये कोई कैसे बताए

    हवाएँ और लहरें कब किसी का हुक्म सुनती हैं

    हवाएँ हाकिमों की मुट्ठियों में हथकड़ी में

    क़ैद-ख़ानों में नहीं रुकतीं

    ये लहरें रोकी जाती हैं

    तो दरिया कितना भी हो पुर-सुकूँ बेताब होता है

    और इस बेताबी का अगला क़दम सैलाब होता है

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    1. History is witness that the end of every such extremism will be a revolution. It will come sooner or later. Butcitcwill surely come

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  15. This debate has been raging over two weeks now. As I delve deeper, I can see where Mr. Shukla is trying to take us. My earlier response to give margin to the comments made by the two chiefs needs revision, as it dawns upon me that they did not make speak in isolation. Nor did they speak in the excitement of the occasion. Prior to them, the prime minister himself questioned in Parliament the "societal parasites" and "social disturbers" of peace within the country. Then came the revelation of Pegasus spyware that was being used to snoop upon a few. Coincidentally those few are all disliked by the ruling regime. If this was the slant of the internal chief of security while inspiring the passing IPS cadre, if this was the intent of the chief of defence staff while encouraging locals to lynch those who they perceived as terrorists, it portends ill for a democracy. Mr. Shukla and others of his profession have read the writing on the wall and its translation is perturbing. While raising my concern up a few notches, I reiterate we should hold firmly to our beliefs and not subaltern them to marauding forces by displaying unwarranted anxiety.

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