Raj Thackeray – The Next "Bhindranwale" - Will the Congress never learn?
<http://unknownindianrantings.blogspot.com/2008/10/raj-thackeray-next-bhindranwale-will.html>

In the early 1980s, Indira Gandhi  propped up a charismatic extremist
regional leader in India's richest state to break to back of a regional
party that had emerged as the main competitor to the Congress in that state.
The hope was that the "regional" vote would be divided and that the
"nationalist" vote would have no where to go but the Congress – and that
this would help perpetuate Congress rule in that state.

The state was Punjab, the extremist leader was Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale,
and the regional party that the Congress hoped to break was of course the
Akali Dal. Bhindranwale took real and imaginary issues that the Akalis had,
out flanked them from the right, and forced the Akalis into a cycle of
competitive extremism. The Punjab agitation spun out of control, and became
a secessionist movement which threatened to divide India. Inevitably, Indira
was forced to act to tame the Frankenstein monster that she had created, and
the army (ironically led by a brave Maharashtrian General, A.S. Vaidya) was
forced to proceed against Bhindranwale's men hiding in the Golden Temple.
The deaths of Bhindranwale and also several other ordinary pilgrims in the
Golden Temple, as well as the destruction of its Sanctum Santorum led to
alienation among the Sikhs, Indira's assassination shortly thereafter,
followed by the Delhi riots, and a decade of violence that was finally tamed
by P.V. Narasimha Rao. The cost of this lost decade in Punjab was immense,
in terms of deaths, the division between a community that had always been
seen as amongst the most patriotic in India and the rest of the country, and
also in economic terms, with India' s richest state being unable to
contribute to the growth of the nation.

On would have thought that this episode would leave an indelible mark in the
minds of the Congress party, and that they would have realized the dangers
that arise from trying to outflank extremists. But alas, that is not the
case. Sonia Gaandi (or atleast her minions in Maharashtra led by that
incompetent shithead Vilasrao Deshfukh) seems to have decided that the only
hope of her party retaining power in Maharashtra after a decade of misrule
is to divide the "Marathi" vote in the urban areas of the state.

Some basic facts here – while Bombay has always contributed the bulk of the
revenue of the Government of Maharashtra, it has historically been a
political backwater. Bombay and urban areas of Thane have only 47 assembly
constituencies out of 289 in Maharashtra. The key to the Maharashtra
assembly has been in the sugar belt – with its 75 seats. But the Bombay
metro region's representation will increase to 60 in the next elections,
while the sugar belt will fall to 63 seats – making winning Bombay much more
important to be able to form the Maharashtra state government. The Congress,
with its litany of sugar baron politicians, who have been pillaging Bombay
to subsidise their rural vote banks is clearly at a disadvantage here. Hence
the efforts by the Congress to split the Shiv Sena (aided by discontent
within its ranks about the more moderate approach that Uddhav has taken
relative to his father). Initially, this seemed to be working very well.
Narayan Rane (who epitomized the lowest kind of Sena scum) was drafted into
the Congress, and his supporters managed to swing a large number of seats to
the Congress column. But the Rane effect soon ran out of steam, with the
Sena BJP managing to gain a majority in the Bombay Municipal Corporation
elections.

Hence, the Congress seems to have decided to move to Plan B, viz prop up Raj
Thackeray and his MNS (a bunch of losers who won just 7 seats in the BMC)
and turn them into a force that would outflank the Shiv Sena BJP from the
right for the "Marathi" vote. This Machiavellian strategy clearly has a high
potential to pay dividends. The Sena BJP combine traditional draws its
support from a combination of the Sena's core audience of working class
Marathi speakers in Bombay and the BJP's middle and upper middle class
dominated (and much more cosmopolitan even if Hindu) support base. Using the
MNS to divide the Marathi vote hits the Sena BJP in two ways – the Sena
would lose Marathi voters, and further any attempts by the Sena to compete
for Marathi votes would alienate the BJP supporters driving them into the
Congress' arms. This strategy seems to be working based on a dipstick survey
of opinions in "Chai stalls" across the city. But the longer term
implications of this are dire.

Raj Thackeray clearly seems to have touched a chord at least among the
lumpen, incompetent, unemployed, Marathi speaking youth in and around
Bombay. His supporters have been indulging in wanton acts of violence, with
kid glove treatment from the Maharashtra government only serving to embolden
them further. Each incident is worse than the previous one. What started as
random attacks against poor taxi drivers, has now turned into organized
violence such as the attacks on the candidates for the railway recruitment
board exams, and has led to at least 2 murders so far. Thackeray's rhetoric
also gets worse by the day – the worst example being a comparison of India
with Europe and talking of the need to learn Marathi to live in Bombay on
the same basis as the need for other Europeans to learn French to live in
France! If this is not secessionist talk, I don't know what is!!

In response to outrage across the country, the Maharashtra Government staged
a farcical "arrest" of Raj Thackeray, freeing him in less than 24 hours –
its amazing how the Maharashtra police was unable to find sections to hold
him in jail after Thackeray has provoked massive violence and murders, when
they could hold an innocent techie like K Lakshmana for 55 days on the
specious charge of publishing an image that defames Shivaji! What is even
more disconcerting is that some middle class and affluent Marathi speakers
(including ministers in Maharashtra's Congress government) seem to be
adopting a stance a "soft" support to Raj Thackeray, saying that his "cause"
is right but his methods are not. This is the same problem that we faced in
Punjab in the 1980s – even "moderate" Sikhs felt rightly (in my view, in the
case of alleged murderers like HKL Bhagat and Jagdish Tytler becoming
ministers) or wrongly (on issues like the division of water from Punjab's
rivers) that they were being discriminated against, and that the militancy
was a genuine if somewhat extreme expression of their sentiments. This
clearly bodes ill for the status of India as a united country.

So how will things pan out going forward? One clearly does not know. The one
positive is that the Shiv Sena under Uddhav has so far refrained from trying
to out Marathi the MNS. Will this strategy continue? I certainly hope so.
One early test will be in the forthcoming general and state assembly
elections. Perhaps the people of Bombay and Maharashtra will respond to
these events effectively through the ballot box – and display their
displeasure with both the MNS and the Congress for launching such a divisive
movement by ignoring the one, and voting out the other (more so for the
gross incompetence of its state government for the last 10 years). But the
danger is that the MNS may get sufficient votes to act as a spoiler for the
Sena BJP or perhaps even a king maker in the assembly. This can then
degenerate into cycles of competitive populism – complicated further by the
fact that Marathi speakers account for only 35% of Bombay's population,
triggering the risk of a violent response from the majority non Marathi
population of the city. One can easily imagine a scenario in which Raj
Thackeray turns into a Marathi Bhindranwale, launching a movement for the
secession of Maharashtra from India – perhaps ending in a violent standoff
at Shivaji Park, with all the associated problems that will bring.

At a time when India faces considerable challenges on every front (with
today's Assam blasts seemingly being the latest manifestation of militant
Islam's war on India), problems in Bombay, the city that epitomizes
Indian-ness more than any other, is certainly something we can do without.
And by encouraging a rabble rousing goon like Raj Thackeray, Vilasrao
Deshfukh and Sonia's other cohorts in Maharashtra are doing a grave
disservice to the nation.

P.S.

As a lifelong Bombayite, I too am concerned about the proliferation of slums
and the growth of population without commensurate infrastructure investment.
But the problem lies with the politicians who have failed to make even a
minimal investment in this city in lieu of the taxes it pays both the
central and state governments. This is further complicated by dumb rent
control laws, and the barriers such as artificially low FSI and needless
PILs that delay all construction projects.

Anyone who tries to say that Bombay (or any other Indian city for that
matter) belongs to one state or community and that the city would be a
better place without migrants is talking crap. Cities grow and succeed by
attracting and retaining talent, and poorer people who provide services such
talent. Successful cities like New York, London and Singapore are magnets
for people from around the world, which is why they are far superior to
equally rich but ethnically homogenous places like Tokyo and Frankfurt. Let
Bombay remain a magnet for the best and brightest (and also hard-working
poor people) from all over India.

My solution based on the relative success of Delhi vis a vis other cities –
turn all cities in India with a population above 2 million and a buffer zone
of 30 kms around them into self governing city states – so that no ethnic
group can claim that such cities belong to them alone.

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