Lighting or fanning a fire is a good way to consolidate power. Nero did it by blaming the Christians for the burning of Rome and persecuting them to to tighten his hold on the Roman empire. Hitler did it by arresting all Communists, Jews and "enemies of the state" after the fire in the Reichstag. The BJP government in Delhi follows this beaten track by its proven incompetence, if not worse, in the fires burning in Manipur, now in their sixth week. Of course, there is no proof that those who benefitted by these fires lit them, or at the least failed to douse them. But this is where the "smell test" comes into play, and my flared nostrils tell me that something here just does not smell right. And your olfactory sensory neurons, dear reader, should be telling you the same thing if Covid or "bhakti" has not destroyed your sense of smell completely. .
The BJP, as a party, suffers from pyro-mania on a psychopathic scale: it loves nothing better than to constantly light "big and small fires" (a phrase used by the RJD MP Manoj Jha in a recent open letter to the Prime Minister), and then dance around them like a dervish counting its votes. Currently, there are four big fires burning in this country, in Jammu and Kashmir, Kolhapur, Uttarakhand and of course Manipur. There are also innumerable small fires lighting up our darkening democratic twilight- the protests by the wrestlers in Delhi, the renaming of the Jawaharlal Nehru Museum and Library, the award of the Gandhi Peace Prize to an organisation which reportedly did not see eye to eye with Gandhi, the largesse shown to willful defaulters of public funds, a resurgent demand for a Uniform Civil Code, the rewriting of history text books These are as yet fires in a metaphorical sense only, but they can, and will, be fanned into flames at any moment by our elected pyromaniacs.
Pyrotechnics I can understand; what I can't wrap my ears around is the deafening silence of those who should be speaking out, if not shouting from the rooftops, about the attempted ethnic cleansing in Manipur. Every constitutional authority which should have spoken out has been silent. The Prime Minister's silence is understandable, for he finds his (forked) tongue only at election rallies and Man ki Baat recordings. But should the Supreme Court of India not have said something, even though it is on vacation? Will the court speak only when Mohammad comes to the mountain, when a petitioner approaches it on a specific plaint, and not otherwise, even though every law in the book is being splintered in Manipur? But wait a moment- there was a petition filed in the Supreme Court to send in the army to that ravaged state; that was the moment for our judges to have given the Deadly Duo a nudge, if not a shove. Not only did the court fail to do so, it also refused to order the army in, showing touching faith in the police which, by many press accounts, could not prevent over 4000 automatic guns being looted by the incendiarists.
And our revered President, should she not have spoken, not publicly of course, but in private to the Prime Minister or the Home Minister, or sent a note on that embossed letterhead? There are no reports that she did either. Did she not owe this to the people of Manipur, at least to the 150 odd killed and the 50000 displaced? Her conservative apologists will argue that she can only act on the advice of the Council of Ministers (read Prime Minister), and that the Constitution prevents her from playing a more active role. Being congenitally stupid, I'm confused by this argument.
She has sworn to protect the Constitution of India, right? She needs no advice from anyone to do so, right? So when she sees the same Constitution being torn to shreds, the "union of states" being put in danger, an elected state government appearing to be involved in the violence, a complete failure of the rule of law, the Centre standing by as a mute spectator- is she not obliged to give some advice to the union government in turn? I find farcical the suggestion that a constitutional authority can be constrained by that same constitution in performing her constitutional duty! Now, that is a non-sequitur, if ever there was one. It is also a paraprosdokian that should not take too much time to figure out.
Finally, of course, there is the silence of our Prime Minister, currently performing yogasnas in Washington while a near civil war has broken out in one of his border states. I personally never expected him to say anything: a person who said nothing when millions died in a pandemic is not likely to be impressed with the small change of a mere 150 deaths. But it does make me wonder- is he always silent as a matter of strategy, or is it because he is completely lacking in compassion? What kind of heartless strategy is it anyway if it prevents a leader from reaching out to his people, the same poor sods who voted for him?
Manipur has once again exhibited the two intrinsic characteristics of this govt.- administrative incompetence and inhumanity bordering on cruelty. This unusual twinning of traits has been very well explained by the Illinois Governor, JB Pritzker, in a speech he delivered at a convocation of North-Western university in the context of the Trump presidency. According to his theory, our humanoid ancestors were naturally suspicious of people who did not act, sound, live or look like them. This reaction was something rooted in fear or judgment, and was a natural survival response in an unsafe world. They survived as a species by being suspicious of things they were not familiar with. That was part of evolution. But evolution did not stop there. Man evolved further, learnt to shut down that animal instinct in order to be kind, tolerant of others, accommodative of differences. Empathy and compassion are evolved states of being, where the primeval urges are suppressed by an improved mental capacity. But some sections of society appear not to have followed this evolution pathway and have "weaponised cruelty" as a means to rule; they consider empathy and kindness as a weakness. They have not progressed beyond the primal animal instincts, and therefore lack imagination and creativity in problem solving- in effect, they have failed "the first test of an advanced society." Governor Pritzker's conclusion? Look for the kindest person in the room-he is usually the smartest too.
I find this a fascinating thesis. It explains a lot about our present government, its leaders and their blind acolytes. It explains the regressive nature of the BJP's ideology, its constant fixation with the past, the distrust of scientific and rational thought, its hostility to progressive liberalism, the tribal instinct for cronyism, and the utter lack of compassion for the most vulnerable. It's a party which is not evolving but is retrogressing. Sadly, it is taking the nation down the same slippery slope.
One crucial point avay sir. Large section of society (95% I think )actually doesn't care what's happening in Manipur. Or the wrestlers protesting or all the points that you mentioned.And several others.
ReplyDeleteI think for the very first time we have got a government that we actually deserve. This is gonna continue for a long time.
that the supreme court of india be expected to suo moto take cognizance of a breakdown in law and order, act on a petition for the military forces to be sent in, presumably, to restore law and order are interesting conceits. will the court act in its original jurisdiction, or will this be as per its appellate jurisdiction. there is provision under art.139 of the CoI, 1950, for the supreme court to issue writs, viz. directions, orders, in the nature of mandamus, habeas corpus, certiorari, quo warranto, prohibition. however for the writ to be issued a petition is to be moved. to wit - a petition that the court may issue a mandamus ordering the district magistrates, district's police superintendents to do their duty, as mandated in the provisions of the code of criminal procedure, penal code. organised crime syndicates have their enforcers and bruisers. that in too many instances the indian administrative servants are functioning as enforcers of the politician syndicates, and the superior grade indian police servants as their bruisers, has become the norm. it is all very well for 'anguished' superannuated babus, darogas, faujis to hand over to their journalist and public relations cronies, jointly signed letters purportedly addressed to the rashtrapati, pradhan mantri, pompous observations on something rotten in the state of denmark, but as is common in honour among thieves are silent on the reality that it is their in-service colleagues who, to echo lal kishen advani in the course of the shah commission hearings, when required to bend choose to crawl. all that is required is for a big name lawyer with a multi crore rupees annual practice and posing as taking up pro-bono cases in public interest to on behalf of these serial signers of anguished scribbles file a writ of mandamus in the supreme court, requiring the civil administration to do its duty, without fear or favour, affection or ill will, independent of political interference.
ReplyDeleteThat the rot runs deep is now a given. That Nero is busy 'fiddling' while a state burns appears to be a well crafted destructive strategy. The list is endless and can go on and on.
ReplyDeleteIn all this, what is most dangerous and destructive is the final comment in the article that "..... not evolving but is retrogressing. Sadly, it is taking the nation down the same slope." Nothing could be more telling.
And yet I and loads like me life in hope.
When winter comes, can spring be far behind?
Am a retired army officer who has commanded a unit in Manipur. I know that this situation will be exploited so much by China (and Pak) that Manipur will soon exceed the uglinesses of Kashmir, Uttarakhand and Kolhapur put together.
ReplyDeleteAlready, even army units are unable to operate effectively in Manipur.
What a guy we have in Delhi - or Egypt!
If the ruling regime has perfected the act of igniting a pyre under every potentially combustible issue (even a non-issue if it has the capacity to light up), the brittle Opposition has lowered itself by its inefficacy to douse such a blaze. With 2024 just round the corner, it is still unable to cobble a minimum unification that can make the voters pause on their way to the election booth. One hopes the Opposition meet at Patna was a cohesive step taken towards a meaningful unity, besides being a shout out to a Congressman to abandon his bachelorhood.
ReplyDeleteThe cautionary nudge by Barack Obama to Modi on the anti-minority exploits of the BJP government was perfectly and purposefully timed. What could not be addressed by the President was voiced by the ex-President. The mandarins in Delhi must have squirmed at the simultaneity of the posturing, despite being dazzled by the extravagance of the honour accorded to the Prime Minister.
To have the Supreme Court take suo moto or petitioned action frequently over what the government does (or does not) would alter the inherent functionality of the institution. Exceptional intervention apart, does it need to press itself into service in the governance of the country. The people need to take matters into their hands when they go to ink their finger.
Wonder why the President's can't rise to the occasion when they have already reached the pinnacle of political appointment.
ReplyDeleteNever seen a Bureaucrat worrying about country,
ReplyDeleteAll the ills in this country originate from the bureaucracy .
They are only worried about themselves and their class....
I my life of 59 year I have found very few civil servants doing at least what is required...
Civil servants do not like strong and Majority Government because their plunder gets halted and they are questioned...
Whereas in a coalition government polititians get busy in saving their own chair and don't bother these blood sucking leaches.
Try to keep the rebel artist alive in you, no matter how attractive or exhausting the temptation.” ~ Arthur Miller
ReplyDeleteI feel if the civilians keep quite the fire spreads to every corner. The southern states are trying to keep themselves away from the clutches of the P,M, and his hindutva philosophy.
ReplyDelete