---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Kasim Sait <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 22 Oct 2015 17:16:13 +0530
Subject: [progressive-interactions] The ‘state-issue’ excuse
To: Progressive <[email protected]>

The ‘state-issue’ excuse

Centre cannot distance itself from the rising intolerance by pointing
to the states.

   
<http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/the-state-issue-excuse/#comments>
   -
   
<http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/the-state-issue-excuse/99/print/>

Written by Kapil Sibal

<http://indianexpress.com/profile/columnist/kapil-sibal/> | Published:October
22, 2015 12:22 am

[image: Narendra Modi, Narendra Modi led BJP government, L K Advani, Advani
Modi, Advani Hindutva, Hindutva, Gau Mata devotee, Congress, Sikh riots,
Shah Bano case, Babri Masjid]
<http://images.indianexpress.com/2015/10/pm-modi-express-759.jpg>

At last, Prime Minister Narendra Modi
<http://indianexpress.com/profile/politician/narendra-modi/> spoke. On
October 14, he had this to say to Anandbazar Patrika: “The Dadri incident
or the opposition to Pakistani ghazal singer Ghulam Ali are sad and
undesirable. But what is the role of the Central government in these
incidents?”. Not surprisingly, he chose not
to condemn the forces and the mindset behind Dadri. He also chose not to
publicly silence his ministers who have been stoking the fire of
intemperance. Modi’s memory must be fairly selective, since he has
forgotten the number of times he and other senior leaders of his party
criticised the Central government and its leadership for what was happening
in the states.

Mr Prime Minister, what happened in Dadri was not just an attack on
Mohammed Akhlaq. It was an attack on our Constitution. We condemn it and
will leave no stone unturned to fight it. The forces that killed Govind
Pansare, Narendra Dabholkar and M.M. Kalburgi; the forces that beat up an
MLA in the legislative assembly in Jammu and Kashmir
<http://indianexpress.com/tag/kashmir/>; the forces that didn’t allow
Ghulam Ali to perform in Mumbai; which forced couples out of a hotel and
invaded their privacy are the same that brutally murdered Akhlaq.

The fabric of our Constitution and our civilisational culture is based on
tolerance. What Modi is encouraging by not openly reprimanding his
colleagues in the cabinet is the spirit of intolerance that seeks to divide
rather than unite. The debate on cow slaughter and the ugly incident at
Dadri are the result of a mindset and forces that support Modi. The prime
minister has forgotten what he said at Nawada on April 2, 2014 about cow
slaughter. He said: “The Delhi sarkar will not give out subsidies to
farmers or to Yadavs keeping cows but will give out subsidies to people who
slaughter cows, who slaughter animals, who are destroying our rivers of
milk, as long as they set up qatlkhanas”. He seems to have also forgotten
what he said in 2012 on the birth anniversary of Maharana Pratap. He
attacked the Central government by stating: “Rana Pratap dedicated his life
to gau raksha (cow protection). He fought wars and sacrificed young men to
protect the cow… The Centre’s dream is to bring about a Pink Revolution… To
make money, plans are being made to slaughter gaye maa (the mother cow) and
it is at moments like this that you remember Rana Pratap”.

There is no difference between what was said by Modi then and what is being
repeated by his Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma and some of his party
colleagues in Parliament. On October 4, referring to Akhlaq’s murder,
Sharma said: “Maar diya hoga kisi shaitaan ne”. The urban development
minister,Venkaiah Naidu
<http://indianexpress.com/profile/politician/venkaiah-naidu/>, said: “They
are local happenings… you have to understand the sensitivities, the local
situation, then come to conclusions”. Minister of State for Agriculture
Sanjeev Balyan said: “The issue should not be linked to communalism and to
any party base. Whatever happened was wrong and unfortunate. But why [do]
such incidents happen? Look at any district in the state, cow slaughter
houses are set up at every place… [A cow slaughter ban] is not the BJP
<http://indianexpress.com/tag/bjp/>’s agenda. This is an issue of the whole
Hindu community. Don’t link this issue with the BJP”. BJP MP Satyapal Singh
likened Dadri to a small incident, while BJP national secretary Tarun Chugh
termed it an isolated incident.

In his Independence Day speech in 2014, Modi had called for a 10-year
moratorium on communal issues. However, days after his speech, his MPs
started campaigning on the issue of “love jihad” and “ghar wapsi”. Amidst a
series of attacks on churches, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat questioned Mother
Teresa’s motives. Sakshi Maharaj called Nathuram Godse a “patriot”, and
called upon every
Hindu woman to produce four children to protect the religion. BJP MPs from
UP indulged in fear-mongering around the census data released in August.
They repeatedly made fiery speeches about proliferating Muslims and the
demographic threat to Hindus.

Ever since Modi became prime minister, he has given a free rein to his
ministers and BJP functionaries to create an environment of communal
tension and violence. After polarising the polity for political gain, he
then makes wishy-washy statements, talking of “akhandata and sadbhavana
(unity and goodwill)” to reap both harvests.

Even J&K Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed has expressed concern over
the rising intolerance.

The return of Sahitya Akademi awards by writers is a symbolic response to
the feeling that the liberal space in this country is fast eroding. But a
senior minister considers this to be a manufactured revolt.

The double standards adopted by Modi and his party are not new. While he
considers the Dadri incident a state issue, he forgets that he blamed the
Central government when Naxal attacks killed innocent victims in
Chhattisgarh. Mr Modi, it is the BJP government in Maharashtra that has
decided to give new permits for autorickshaws only to Marathi-speakers,
signalling that non-Marathi-speaking persons from, say, Bihar or UP cannot
be gainfully employed in the said vocation. Is it your position that you
have nothing to do with the blatant discrimination being exercised by your
party in Maharashtra?

You are the prime minister of India. You must represent the voice of sanity
and not obfuscate issues by absolving and distancing the Centre from the
incident at Dadri merely because it took place in the territorial limits of
a certain state. The state is merely an entity. The individuals behind
these incidents are real people who have a mindset that conforms to the
ideology of the party you stand for and the RSS, of which you are an
integral part. It is time to stand up for India and what it stands for.

You have a historic opportunity. Do not fritter it away by specious logic
in the hope of an electoral harvest. The mindset of a terrorist and the
mindset of intolerance know no territorial boundaries when individuals are
targeted either for their eating habits or for any other reason. That is a
matter of concern not just for the Centre, but for every citizen of India.

Mr Prime Minister, you are playing with fire. We should douse it before it
spreads.

*The writer, a Congress <http://indianexpress.com/tag/congress/> party
leader, is a former Union cabinet minister.*

- See more at:
http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/the-state-issue-excuse/#sthash.biDLMfPu.dpuf


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