http://www.rediff.com/news/slide-show/slide-show-1-analysis-why-narendra-modi-is-on-the-defensive/20110902.htm

Analysis: Why Narendra Modi is on the defensive
Last updated on: September 3, 2011 09:54 IST

*Sheela 
Bhatt*<http://mypage.rediff.com/profile/getprofile/Sheela%20Bhatt/8551169>in
New Delhi

*Modi has a real challenge if the allegations of corruption pick up
momentum. Modi was struggling to improve his image with the minorities but
now he will have to convince the majority that his deals were clean and he
is above board, says Sheela Bhatt.*

Two days back, L K Advani led the protest in the parliament complex against
the appointment of former judge R A Mehta as the Gujarat lokayukta by
Governor Kamla Beniwal.

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi has deployed the Bharatiya Janata
Party's top leadership in New Delhi to argue his case in the political arena
but he is doing few things in Gandhinagar that exposes his vulnerability.

He has written a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh requesting him to
recall the Governor. In a sensational act, Modi in his letter has made many
serious charges against Judge Mehta. If any court approves Mehta's
appointment then Modi will have egg on his face.

The BJP's contention is that for the first time, a Governor has acted
arbitrarily while appointing the lokayukta without consulting the
government. The BJP is calling it a murder of democracy. But now the
Congress party is claiming that on August 18, Modi was all set to 'murder'
democracy by bringing an ordinance that would have hurt the ethos behind the
office of the lokayukta.

As per the Congress allegations, Modi wanted Governor Beniwal to sign the
ordinance that would have changed the composition of the panel that appoints
the lokyaukta in the state. According to Arjun Modhawadia, president of the
state Congress, "Modi wanted to bring 'sarkari panel' to appoint the
lokayukta. The double standard of the BJP is shocking."

State Law Minister Dilip Sanghani was not available for comment. In the
Rajya Sabha BJP leader Arun Jaitely gave a spirited speech against the
Manmohan Singh government's attempt to bring a weak Lokpal bill in which the
government will have a majority say in the panel that would appoint the
Lokpal.

The United Progressive Alliance government is facing the people's ire for
trying to control the appointment of the Lokpal under the proposed act, but
now, allegedly, Modi wants to do exactly same thing.

Modi claims that Governor Beniwal should have acted on the advice of the
government before appointing the lokayukta. Shaktisinh Gohil, leader of the
Opposition in Gujarat, says, "We have no doubt that the Governor is right in
her action. The last three appointments of the lokayukta were done without
the advice of the government. Why is Modi questioning it this time?"

"Modi, wants to do exactly the opposite of what Jaitley recommends Dr Singh
to do in New Delhi," says the Congress leader.

Modhawadia says, "Modi is against Judge Mehta, who is an independent judge.
He wants to appoint a judge who can be influenced by him."

But the Modi government, allegedly, wants to drop the chief justice's role
in the process and have a role for the chief minister. The Modi government
has neither denied nor confirmed the allegation.

Here, the significant issue is regarding following procedures set for the
appointment of the lokayukta where Modi may have a valid point that can be
sorted out by the courts. But why is Modi protesting so much against the
violations of procedures only?

"The people of Gujarat are waiting for the lokayukta to be appointed by the
constitutional functionary in accordance with the law," says lawyer Anand
Yagnik. He says, "People don't want any further delay on account of the
political war between Modi and the Governor."

Currently in Gujarat, the Congress party has become active and aggressive
while Modi is on the defensive. His supporters are unable to answer why Modi
is overreacting for violations of procedures?

What else is discomforting Modi?

Many of his critics say that thanks to the Right to Information Act, Modi
and his government are facing many uncomfortable questions for allotting
land to industry in Gujarat. One glance at local newspapers gives an idea
that 'corruption cases' of the Modi government are in news, which was not
the case since the last nine years.

At such a sensitive time, with assembly elections are just a year away, when
the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team report on the
involvement, if any, of Modi and his government in the communal riots of
2002 is with the court, when anti-incumbency has started setting in certain
areas of the state and when Modi is doing everything to improve his image
amongst the Muslims, he is determined to ensure that his political position
remains strong to combat freshly-emerging charges of favours done to his
favourite industrial houses.

His government's only defence against these charges so far is that the Modi
government largesse is much less compared to what late Chimanbhai Patel-led
government gave. Patel had formed government with the support of the
Congress and later he joined the party.

Modi's critics say the Congress had also showered favours to attract
investments. Then, the 'state favours' given to attract industrialists in
late 1980s and early 1990s had crossed all limits. That time the allegation
was that sum of Rs 50,000 crore was given as hidden favours in form of tax
holidays to a handful of industrialists. The charges were discussed in the
assembly too.

Now the Congress leaders are claiming that, "In the BJP rule, Gautam Adani,
Sudhir Mehta of Torrent and Ratan Tata have benefited the most."

It's not that only the Congress leaders that are criticising Modi these
days. Bhola Bhai Patel, president of the Gujarat Sahitya Parishad, also
blasted Modi recently.

In an interview to a Surat-based daily, he said, "The rulers have become
kings." Patel, a highly respected writer, says that in Modi's rule
corruption is rampant (*Anhi ketlu badhu khavay che*). He has accused Modi
of behaving like the dictator Napoleon. Patel has accused Modi of suffering
from narcissism.

The irony is that the Modi government wants to blunt the attack on him, for
favouring Adani and Tata, by taking shelter behind Chimanbhai Patel's
policy, against whose corruption people had launched the Navnirman Andolan.

Pressure is slowly building up on the Modi government to give a convincing
reply to the charges of making policy that favoured industrialists outright.

Gujarat Congress leaders have submitted a memorandum to President Pratibha
Patil on issue of 'corruption by the government of Gujarat and more
particularly, chief minister of Gujarat' amounting to staggering Rs 1 lakh
crore.

Modhwadia and Gohil have alleged that Modi and his government are indulging
in rampant corruption that includes favouring industrialists by allotting
them government properties at a huge loss to the exchequer, giving
favourable business deals to industrialists and giving valuable land at
cheap rates to builders and industrialists.

Modi has been accused of misuse of power and corruption running into
hundreds of crores of rupees. The details were procured using the Right to
Information Act.

Jainarayan Vyas, spokesman and a senior minister in the Modi cabinet,
refused to comment on the issue saying that, "he doesn't have a brief on
it."

Jagdish Thakkar, Modi's public relations officer, also said he is unaware of
the subject and he speaks only when he is given a brief.

Modhwadia thinks Modi is, "liable for criminal acts and deserves to be
prosecuted. The state machinery will not be able to investigate Modi and his
offices. It should be investigated by Central Bureau of Investigation."

Modhwadia regrets that Gujarat, like Karnataka, didn't have a lokayukta for
seven years.

He says, "Even the lokayukta will not be able to function independently
because the position of the lokayukta in Gujarat is by nature of an advisory
body which has no power except that of an inquiry commission."

Modhwadia alleges that some bureaucrats are, "acting as the personal
employees of the state ministry."

The list of allegations against Modi submitted to President Patil runs into
many pages. Some of the highlights deserve the Modi government's official
response.

In the charge-sheet against Modi, the most prominent allegations are about
cheap land allotment, a nationwide epidemic for various governments.

To avoid giving any official response to the people and to the
newly-appointed lokayukta, Modi voluntarily announced a commission to
inquire into the charges against him. It will be headed by Judge M B Shah.
The only problem with the commission is that it has no powers as the state
lokayukta has.

It's a political move by Mr Clean to save himself from being tainted. But
it's a defensive move by the leader who is perceived as the strongest leader
of the BJP.

The political strategies available to Modi to combat serious charges of
corruption may not be many. It's more or less accepted that Modi is unlikely
to resort to Hindutva again to counter his political adversaries. In the
last two years, Modi has sent many positive signals to the minorities in
Gujarat. In fact, Hindu groups are complaining that Modi is protecting
cow-slaughters -- a highly sensitive issue in the state.

Modi is ambitiously going ahead to get minority support and his charisma has
not waned, yet. The secular lobby could not dent his image in spite of
providing robust legal challenges.

But the charges of corruption can truly hit him where it hurts. The Gujarati
people inspired even Jaiprakash Narayan to launch the movement for Sampoorna
Kranti in Bihar. Gujaratis have a history of reacting violently to
corruption in governance. Ask the Congressmen in Gandhinagar. The taint of
corruption has been so deep on them that they have been kept out of power
since 1995.

Modi has a real challenge if the allegations of corruption pick up momentum.
Modi was struggling to improve his image with the minorities but now he will
have to convince the majority that his deals were clean and he is above
board.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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