>"With the arrest of Arvind Kejriwal, the hugely popular serving chief
minister of Delhi, Narendra Modi has crossed the *lakshman rekha *– that
uncrossable, invisible line* – *betweenthe Rule of Law and the rule of a
tyrant."

>"Now, with his third election battle imminent, he has finally crossed the
line. Modi had shown scant regard for this line even when he was the chief
minister of Gujarat, where he shored up his popularity by constantly
stoking communal tension in the state.

Modi has used democracy to capture power – only in order to destroy it.
Hitler had done the same thing in Germany in 1933, Mohammed Morsi in Egypt
in 2012, and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey in 2016."

>"Modi broke one opposition party after the other, till there were only
regional parties left relatively unscathed. The sole exceptions were the
Congress, the Trinamool Congress in Bengal, and the Aam Aadmi Party. Now
Modi has turned his guns upon these last holdouts for democracy."

>"Kejriwal’s courage in confronting Modi’s tyranny has provided a torch
with which to light the fire of battle in the rest of democratic India. And
it seems as if non-BJP parties are responding."
---------------------------------------------

By: Prem Shankar Jha
Published in: *The Wire*
Date: March 24, 2024
Source: https://thewire.in/politics/arvind-kejriwal-arrest-modi-rule-of-law
Only a united opposition that uses every medium to reach the people and
inform them of the danger they are in, will help.

With the arrest of Arvind Kejriwal, the hugely popular serving chief
minister of Delhi, Narendra Modi has crossed the *lakshman rekha *– that
uncrossable, invisible line* – *betweenthe Rule of Law and the rule of a
tyrant.

He has been edging towards this, step by step, ever since he came to power
in 2014.

Now, with his third election battle imminent, he has finally crossed the
line. Modi had shown scant regard for this line even when he was the chief
minister of Gujarat, where he shored up his popularity by constantly
stoking communal tension in the state.

Modi has used democracy to capture power – only in order to destroy it.
Hitler had done the same thing in Germany in 1933, Mohammed Morsi in Egypt
in 2012, and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey in 2016.

Modi moved cautiously during his first term in office, consolidating his
none-too-strong support base within the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh by
taking up long cherished programmes of the latter such as the crusade
against the bogey of love jihad, the ruse of *ghar**wapsi* and the law to
abolish triple talaq.

In his second term, he pushed the Citizenship Amendment Act, the abolition
of Kashmir’s special status under Article 370 in 2019 and a uniform civil
code for all Indians, regardless of their religious affiliation.

These achievements should have sufficed, but paranoia is an incurable
condition.

In 2019 Modi won 303 seats against 282 in 2014, making the BJP the first
non-Congress dominant party in the Indian political system. But this did
not assuage his gnawing insecurity. In the succeeding four years he turned
the National Investigation Agency, the Central Bureau of Investigation, and
above all the Enforcement Directorate into weapons for use against the
leaders of all the main opposition parties, giving them the choice of being
sent to jail without trial and with little hope of bail, often without
framing a single actual charge against them that they could bring to a
court of law, or joining the BJP.

Also read: The Great Crossover: Opposition Leaders Who Joined the BJP After
Action by Central Agencies
<https://thewire.in/politics/the-great-crossover-opposition-leaders-who-joined-the-bjp-after-action-by-central-agencies>

By this stratagem, Modi broke one opposition party after the other, till
there were only regional parties left relatively unscathed. The sole
exceptions were the Congress, the Trinamool Congress in Bengal, and the Aam
Aadmi Party. Now Modi has turned his guns upon these last holdouts for
democracy.

Though that was not their intention, by answering the summons of the ED and
allowing themselves to be questioned for over several hours
<https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/ed-conducting-raids-on-national-herald-headquarter-1982768-2022-08-02>,
Rahul Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi have implicitly accepted Modi’s supremacy.
Now Modi has turned his guns on the last but-one holdout, Arvind Kejriwal.

Kejriwal has fought Modi tooth and nail since his first day in office after
his party’s sensational victory in 2015, in which it garnered 53% of the
votes and won 67 out of 70 Vidhan Sabha seats. To further sharpen the
contrast between itself and the BJP, AAP has projected an image of having
done a lot for the people with little money.

To Modi this was unacceptable. Since then Kejriwal has been his bête noire,
to be destroyed by any means possible.

As I have noted before
<https://thewire.in/politics/the-hounding-of-the-aam-aadmi-party>, AAP’s
new liquor policy – the case over which Kejriwal is arrested – made the
government *get out of the liquor trade altogether*. The government decided
the number of retail locations and principalities in each zone and put
these up for auction. The retail locations were evenly spaced to ensure
that every mohalla, and every section of the population, had equal access
to a liquor shop. It then auctioned the liquor shop locations.

In the first auction, the government garnered Rs 5,300 crore from the
auction of locations in the more affluent 20 zones, and Rs 3,180 crore from
the auctions in the remaining 12 zones. The lower paying capacity of the
poorer areas was automatically reflected in the lower bids for these
locations. The government expected
<https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/delhi-excise-revenue-set-to-double-after-licence-auctions-under-new-liquor-policy-101628274483032.html>
 to garner over Rs 10,000 crore a year from the sale of liquor in the
capital. This was almost double the average of Rs 5,500-crore recorded in
the previous three years.

If the entire liquor trade was privatised, and all allotments were made
through public auction, where did the space remain for graft and
favouritism?

Modi’s godi media are putting the blame on Kejriwal for his arrest. If the
Gandhis were willing to suffer hours of interrogation, why did Kejriwal
refuse to heed seven summons from the Enforcement Directorate? Kejriwal’s
reason should have been obvious: he was elected by the people of Delhi to
govern them and look after their welfare. Within the sphere of his duties
he had done so. In matters that did not involve policing law and order, he
did not have to answer to any higher authority than the people who elected
him.

Kejriwal’s courage in confronting Modi’s tyranny has provided a torch with
which to light the fire of battle in the rest of democratic India. And it
seems as if non-BJP parties are responding. The Biju Janata Dal in Odisha
has decided against an alliance with the BJP. The INDIA coalition has
sprung to life again in defence of Kejriwal. What is more important is that
the Congress and other members of the Alliance have realised at last that
the crucial challenge before them is not the allocation of seats in each
state but the framing of a national policy that will give the assurance of
jobs, and greater job security to the 80 million persons who have dropped
out of the labour force in sheer despair after the onset of global
recession in 2010-11 when they rejoin the labour force. Modi has found no
solution. That is why he has fallen back on stirring communal prejudice and
animosity to shore up his support base for the next election.

The victory that he expects in June will enable him to achieve this
lifelong ambition – to get there he has been destroying every
constitutional safeguard that Indian governments and lawmakers have
painstakingly created since the first day of Independence. Only a united
opposition that uses every medium to reach the people and inform them of
the danger they are in, will suffice. Even then one can only hope that it
will not be too little, too late.

*Prem Shankar Jha <https://thewire.in/author/prem-shankar-jha> is a veteran
journalist.*

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