http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060313/roy ________________________________

 Bush in India: Just Not Welcome
 by ARUNDHATI ROY
 [posted online on March 1, 2006]
 On his triumphalist tour of India and Pakistan, where he hopes to wave
 imperiously at people he considers potential subjects, President Bush
 has an itinerary that's getting curiouser and curiouser.

 For Bush's March 2 pit stop in New Delhi, the Indian government tried
 very hard to have him address our parliament. A not inconsequential
 number of MPs threatened to heckle him, so Plan One was hastily
 shelved. Plan Two was to have Bush address the masses from the
 ramparts of the magnificent Red Fort, where the Indian prime minister
 traditionally delivers his Independence Day address. But the Red Fort,
 surrounded as it is by the predominantly Muslim population of Old
 Delhi, was considered a security nightmare. So now we're into Plan
 Three: President George Bush speaks from Purana Qila, the Old Fort.

 Ironic, isn't it, that the only safe public space for a man who has
 recently been so enthusiastic about India's modernity should be a
 crumbling medieval fort?

 Since the Purana Qila also houses the Delhi zoo, George Bush's
 audience will be a few hundred caged animals and an approved list of
 caged human beings, who in India go under the category of "eminent
 persons." They're mostly rich folk who live in our poor country like
 captive animals, incarcerated by their own wealth, locked and barred
 in their gilded cages, protecting themselves from the threat of the
 vulgar and unruly multitudes whom they have systematically
 dispossessed over the centuries.

 So what's going to happen to George W. Bush? Will the gorillas cheer
 him on? Will the gibbons curl their lips? Will the brow-antlered deer
 sneer? Will the chimps make rude noises? Will the owls hoot? Will the
 lions yawn and the giraffes bat their beautiful eyelashes? Will the
 crocs recognize a kindred soul? Will the quails give thanks that Bush
 isn't traveling with Dick Cheney, his hunting partner with the
 notoriously bad aim? Will the CEOs agree?

 Oh, and on March 2, Bush will be taken to visit Gandhi's memorial in
 Rajghat. He's by no means the only war criminal who has been invited
 by the Indian government to lay flowers at Rajghat. (Only recently we
 had the Burmese dictator General Than Shwe, no shrinking violet
 himself.) But when Bush places flowers on that famous slab of highly
 polished stone, millions of Indians will wince. It will be as though
 he has poured a pint of blood on the memory of Gandhi.

 We really would prefer that he didn't.

 It is not in our power to stop Bush's visit. It is in our power to
 protest it, and we will. The government, the police and the corporate
 press will do everything they can to minimize the extent of our
 outrage. Nothing the happy newspapers say can change the fact that all
 over India, from the biggest cities to the smallest villages, in
 public places and private homes, George W. Bush, the President of the
 United States of America, world nightmare incarnate, is just not
 welcome.

 -------------------------------
 "Dictatorship and authentic literature are incompatible... The writer
 is the natural enemy of dictatorship." Ismail Kadare , Albanian
 Novelist.

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