I/II.
http://www.indiaresists.com/those-saying-modi-has-nothing-with-dadri-killing-should-see-this/

Those saying Modi has nothing to do with Dadri killing must see this
October 4, 2015

Kumar Sundaram

The series of beef bans and the atmosphere of polarisation on beef and
meat has resulted in a mob lynching in Dadri, at just 60 kms from
Delhi.

While it is true that the UP govt needs to be hold accountable for
immediate action, especially in the wake of the news from Dadri that
the local police has tried to threaten the suffering family against
naming local BJP leaders, the whole incident should be seen in the
context of Modi’s own vitriolic against beef-eating, in the run up to
the 2014 elections and before that.

Here are two videos where Modi is seen speaking on the issue of beef.
And he is no different from Sadhvi Prachi and Mahesh Sharma, who are
called ‘fringe’ elements despite their repeated communal exhortations
that goes unchecked by Modi.

[Video]

“Let’s make no bones in saying that Modi himself is the engineer of
the beef ban gimmick. Okay, debate the beef ban, but violence? Who
instigated BJP-RSS workers? Can Modi’s role in turmoil be ignored?

Today, the renowned columnist and author, Tavleen Singh, has written
an OpEd in Indian Express. In it she comes down heavily against the
Dadri incident with a warning in the, saying, “if he (Modi) fails to
give India change, development and prosperity, it will be because of
enemies inside his own house”. The enemies who according to her (BJP
CMs) are occupied with inconsequential beef bans.

Well, this is a classic case of ‘selective amnesia’. Perhaps, Tavleen
Singh forgot PM Modi’s ‘Pink Revolution’ rhetoric in his election
speeches.”

– comment by Gaurav Pandhi on Facebook

II.
http://www.dailyo.in/politics/narendra-modi-shiv-sena-godhra-riots-dadri-murder-ghulam-ali-sudheendra-kulkarni-pseudo-secularism/story/1/6800.html

Shiv Sena is right: No Godhra means no Modi

Had it not been for the carnage and the riots that followed the BJP
would not have returned to office as resoundingly as it did in 2002.

NILANJAN MUKHOPADHYAY

If Narendra Modi the prime minister is a product of the United
Progressive Alliance's policy paralysis, the politico Modi remains the
progeny of the Godhra carnage. Back in December 2012, after securing
his third successive victory in Assembly elections in Gujarat, Modi
would not have delivered his victory speech in Hindi (and not in
Gujarati) - and in a sense announce his arrival on centre stage to the
rest of India - had it not been for the way in which the dice rolled
his way once coach number S-6 in Sabarmati Express was attacked on the
morning of 27 February 2002.

But, the past always catches up peculiarly with the best and Modi is
surely the finest in many facets of the activity. The Shiv Sena has
made a highly spiced comment. One of its leaders has said that the
world knew Modi "due to Godhra and Ahmedabad" and that the Sena
respected him for this. "If the same Narendra Modi has called the
controversy surrounding Ghulam Ali and former Pakistan minister,
Khurshid Kasuri as unfortunate then it is indeed unfortunate for all
of us," said the leader.

The comment may have been made in the backdrop of the competitive
Hindutva politics that the Bharatiya Janta Party and its ally are
locked in, but there is an element of truth in the statement. Had
there been no truth in this, Modi would have been more forthcoming in
chastening the so-called fringe elements in his political fraternity.

Supporters of Modi may dispute this, but the fact of the matter is
that barely a week before the Godhra carnage, Modi had barely been
able to win his first ever election. In the by-polls held for three
assembly seats in February 2002, the BJP won just one - where Modi was
victorious - but lost the other two to the Congress party. Even Modi's
seat was bagged by the party with a significantly reduced margin.
Assembly polls were due in Gujarat in early 2003 and Modi who had been
sent in October 2001 to salvage the party and state government, was
yet to come up with a magic wand to enable the party to return to
victory. There was no certainty that the BJP would have returned to
power.

But this changed within hours of the Godhra carnage and the reaction
that followed. One is not remotely suggesting that the state
government or Modi had a direct hand in organising the riots that
polarised the state so bitterly. Yet, it is common knowledge that the
administration did not probably respond with the alacrity with which
it should have. But more importantly, in the aftermath of the riots
and the politics that was spawned by Modi, he clearly harvested the
social animosity and prejudice that the riots left in its wake.

Let there be no doubt that had it not been for Godhra carnage and the
riots that followed the BJP would not have returned to office as
resoundingly as it did in 2002. The election had been replete with
Modi at his venomous extreme. Mention of relief camps as baby making
factories, giving the "Mian" prefix to the Pakistan President, Pervez
Musharraf as an analogy for all Muslims, and embarking on Gaurav Yatra
to restore lost Gujarati Asmita, were just some of his ploys. At the
end of the campaign, these arguments neatly converted into state
policy as Modi went about becoming the undisputed Hindu Hriday Samrat.

In the run-up to the Lok Sabha polls, the economic rightwingers, eager
for change, rooted for Modi and argued that he had outgrown his
Hindutva core. This assessment however turned out to be premature as
within weeks of forming the government, Modi made no effort to check
the rush of aggression by lawmakers like Yogi Adityanath. Over the
past seventeen months there have been several instances when Modi
could have acted more firmly against communal forces in his own
brigade. By not acting as sternly and at the opportune time, he has
actually indicated that his past was never past.

In the wake of public display of intolerance beginning with the Dadri
incident, Modi erred at two levels. Firstly, he spoke belatedly and
that too because further silence following President Pranab
Mukherjee's observation would have made his position completely
untenable. Secondly, Modi made no effort to either check discreetly or
publicly criticise his party leaders for justifying the incident. It
however is indicative of the type of politics he has spawned and
partnered with, that the Sena found even his inadequate comments to a
journalist as an affront to the Hindutva agenda.

Come to think of it, Modi used wishy-washy words - "sad" and "non
desirable" - for the Dadri incident and other episodes like preventing
the Ghulam Ali concert or even the attack on Sudheendra Kulkarni. His
main target still remains chadm sekularwad which can be loosely
translated as pseudo-secularism. This indicates that Modi's basic
lingo and his political credo has undergone no change.

The Sena is bang on target: Modi would not have become what he is now,
had it not been for Godhra carnage and riots that followed. Because
this remains intrinsic to his rise, the discourse that it spawned will
remain part of his basic social construct.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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