www.countercurrents.org/baruah290514.htm

*Gujarat: Politics of "Development" or Politics of "Erasures"?*

*By Mitul Baruah *

29 May, 2014
*Countercurrents.org*

If chai was our national addiction previously, the 2014 election has
changed it. Now our new addiction is to a chaiwala called Narendra Modi, at
least that is what appears from the unprecedented coverage of Modi and his
politics in Indian media. But because any addiction has serious long-term
consequences, it is important that we do some critical reflection about
this one now before it is too late. In what follows, I demonstrate how,
contrary to the popular rhetoric of "development", Modi's politics is a
politics of "erasures" - one that erases ecologies, social fabric, certain
histories, and diversity.

*The "Gujarat model" of development and socio-ecological erasures *

While the BJP/Modi PR machinery has made the so-called "Gujarat model" seem
like a new development paradigm, several scholars have already demonstrated
that the Gujarat model is a myth. Jean Drèze, for example, demonstrates how
the "Gujarat model" is actually a case of "Gujarat middle", as some of the
southern states have consistently performed better than Gujarat in GDP as
well as various 'human development' indicators (see Jean Dreze, The Hindu,
May 10, 2014). But even if we consider this "middle" as a "model", it is
relevant to examine what this "model" is all about. Based on a careful
reading of the Modi supporters' claims and my first-hand experience of
engaging with NGOs in Gujarat, I fail to see anything novel about the
so-called "Gujarat model". Instead, the Gujarat model of development or
Modinomics, much like Manmohanomics, is a classic on-the-ground translation
of neoliberalism - one that is characterized by, among others, rampant
privatization, free markets, de-regularization, re-scaling of the state,
and uneven development; all of these guided by the principles of
"efficiency" and "[individual] freedom" (see David Harvey's A Brief History
of Neoliberalism for more details).


*Mundra - showing an active process of de-watering of mangroves to dry up
those areas and build SEZ (photo- author)*


*Mundra- temporary settlements of displaced fishing communities (photo-
author)*

The socio-ecological costs of such a model are irreversible, as exemplified
by the case of Adani port & SEZ in Mundra, Kutch. This largest private port
in India and one of the largest SEZs in the country did not emerge out of a
peaceful process, as the Modi-ites would want us to believe. Instead, it
was a result of violent processes in which certain ecologies, social
fabric, and local livelihoods were erased for ever. Massive swathes of
mangroves were chopped off, drained out, and converted to SEZ (see pictures
taken by this author in 2006), thereby erasing an entire ecological system.
In the context of climate change and increased natural disasters, the role
of the mangroves ecosystems along the coastal belt of the country is
invaluable. But a "Gujarat model", which best fits what many radical
geographers describe as a process of "neoliberalization of nature",
prioritizes "private profit" over environmental concerns. Hence, it is not
a coincidence that Gujarat was declared the most polluted state in the
country in the Central Pollution Control Board's 2010 report. At the same
time, the violence caused on the social front was as astounding. As I had
witnessed during my 2006 visit to Mundra, large-scale displacement of the
fishing communities and the Maldharis took place and their ties with the
traditional livelihoods were permanently severed. Worth remembering in this
context is the fact that it was on the Adani group's private flight that
Modi had travelled the length and breadth of the country during the
election campaign, which suggests us enough about the dirty side of
neoliberal governance.

If there is one thing that qualifies the neoliberal development in Gujarat
for a "model", that is the intimate relationship between 'development' and
'violence' that the Gujarati state has successfully established, with the
possibilities of its replication at the national level now. Neoliberal
development and violence are not separate processes; rather they are
dialectically linked, and the Gujarat model stands as the best proof of it.
Thus, what happened in Gujarat in 2002 was both a part of and a way towards
a violent process of development: one that had very successfully erased the
vital issues of inequities, exploitation, and rights from the agendas of
popular discourse, and had, instead, constructed a different reality.
"Communal divide" is the new real. So, while the largest section of the
population finds itself preoccupied with fighting the Muslim "other",
capital and a capitalist/neoliberal state find it most conducive to move
ahead with their agendas. If this is the "model" we are aspiring for, we
are certainly not heading towards "ache din" (good days).

*Erasing histories*

Growing up in Assam during the thick of the Assam student agitation and
having lived there through a good part of the early phase of ULFA and the
SULFA (i.e. surrendered ULFA), I had witnessed the messy role that the
state can play in erasing certain histories, certain memories if that
protects the state and its leaderships.

Too much bloodshed had happened in Assam during the student movement, with
Nellie massacre being one of the darkest chapters in the history of Assam.
However, once the agitation was over and Assam got a new government under
the leadership of the erstwhile student leaders, the violent past was
conveniently erased from popular discourses and the legal purview. In the
1990s, Assam went through another violent phase of "secret killing".
Selective killing of Assamese youth who were either directly involved in
ULFA or were family members of ULFA cadres was carried out for a few years
in the dark of the nights. A whole generation of Assamese children, much
like the Muslim children of Gujarat in 2002 and the subsequent era, grew up
with the nightmare of "gupta ghatak" (secret killers). Although there is no
evidence of who the perpetrators were, it is an open secret that the whole
operation of "secret killing" was carried out by some SULFA cadres,
supported by the state. Once again, no investigation ever took place and no
one was punished. While the families of the victims might be haunted every
moment by the memories of those days, this phase, too, will be erased from
public memories sooner or later.

Given such historical precedents, it is a matter of great concern as to how
the case of Gujarat 2002 will unfold from now on and how that might impact
communal harmony (and divide) in the country. Modi may be clean, at least
thus far, in front of the law, but he still carries the baggage of 2002 and
his critiques have argued persistently that Modi should be held responsible
- directly or indirectly - for 2002 since the whole pogrom took place
during his tenure as the CM. The critiques further believe that the Modi
administration had manipulated the system to be able to avoid any charges.
Whatever the truth may be, now that Modi occupies the highest office in the
country and his party an absolute majority, the fear of erasing even the
slightest trace of the Modi administration's involvement in the 2002 pogrom
was never higher. And with the rhetoric of "nationalism" and
"anti-Bangladeshis" that the BJP election campaign has further popularized
and deepened in the country, there are serious matters to worry.

In a nutshell, what is being popularized as a politics of "development" by
the Modi supporters can be instead read as a politics of "erasures". If
there is a "Gujarat model", it is about erasing ecologies, traditional
livelihoods, social fabric, and, above all, certain histories. Finally,
with the Sangh Parivar's well-known stand on the questions of 'Uniform
Civil Code', 'Article 370', and 'Hindu Rashtra', there is enough reason to
fear that the very defining characteristic of India - its "diversity" - may
soon be a thing of the past.

*Mitul Baruah* is a doctoral Candidate, Maxwell School of Citizenship and
Public Affairs, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY.




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Peace Is Doable

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