https://scroll.in/article/896091/amit-shahs-migrant-termites-speech-echoes-leaders-around-the-world-who-orchestrated-mass-violence

Amit Shah’s ‘migrant termites’ speech echoes leaders around the world who
orchestrated mass violence
It also signals the Indian elite’s willingness to use hate as a political
ideology, and strategy.
Amit Shah’s ‘migrant termites’ speech echoes leaders around the world who
orchestrated mass violence

Twitter/Amit Shah

Yesterday · 08:00 am

Suchitra Vijayan

Speaking at rallies in Rajasthan and Delhi this month, Amit Shah called
Bangladeshi migrants “termites” that are eating away at India. “Are you
bothered because of illegal immigrants in Delhi or not?” the Bharatiya
Janata Party president asked. “Should they be thrown out or not? One
hundred crore infiltrators have entered our country and are eating the
country like termites. Should we throw them out or not?”

Shah’s spiteful rhetoric echoes authoritarian leaders, genocidaires and war
criminals who not only orchestrated mass violence, but destroyed nations
through dangerous speech for petty political ends. Dangerous speech and
ideology that catalyse mass violence are strikingly similar across the
world and through time. What is now being referred to as the Rohingya
genocide started with a similar process. Ashin Wirathu, a monk who leads
the Buddhist nationalist 969 Movement, in an interview characterised
Muslims as “a mad dog” and “troublemaker”. He has consistently defended the
use of violence against Myanmar’s Muslim minority, stating, “If we are
weak, our land will become Muslim.” Recently, Greece, Israel, the United
States, Hungary, Ukraine and Nigeria have witnessed dehumanising rhetoric
and inflammatory speech by their political leaders sparking immense
violence.

Dehumanisation is the process of denying humanity to other people. The
denial is almost always followed by violence, destruction and suffering of
the dehumanised. Victims of the holocaust, the conflicts in Darfur and
Cambodia, the Balkan wars, and Tutsis in Rwanda were all dehumanised by
their perpetrators who called them vermin. In the process of
dehumanisation, both the perpetrators and the victims become caught in a
hubris of decay. The afterlife of violence that begins with dehumanisation
outlives the people it devours.

Susan Benesch, who founded the Dangerous Speech Project, argues that
calling humans vermin is a prelude to violence. In 1994, broadcasts from
Radio Rwanda labeled Tutsis as inyenzi, or cockroaches, and ibinhindugemb,
or heinous monsters, who consumed the organs of Hutus. Similarly, during
the Armenian genocide, the Armenians were called “invasive infection in
Muslim Turkish society” and “parasites outside the confines of their
homeland, sucking off the marrow of the people of the host country, before
moving onto another host country”. What is striking in all these cases is
not the horror of the violence, but the gradual, systematic, planned
process of legitimising hate, xenophobia and bigotry that both justifies
and rewards violence against those who are considered the other. This
violence is deemed acceptable and, in many ways, is enabled and legitimised
by the state and its ruling elite. In India, the normalisation of the most
inhumane of prejudices is not only tolerated but celebrated as the marker
of a strong and aggressive Hindu nationalist identity.

Culture of fear
Since Shah’s speech, commentators, rights groups and activists, and some
journalists have pointed out the dehumanising nature of his rhetoric. Such
rhetoric is neither new nor isolated. India has witnessed many systematic
instances of priming that led to massacres, pogroms and riots. Atal Bihari
Vajpayee, former prime minister, spoke of “levelling the ground” the day
before the Babri Masjid was demolished. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in
his book on the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s ideologues, praised MS
Golwalkar’s ideology of hate. More recently, in January, BJP legislator V
Sunil Kumar declared at a rally in communally-sensitive Coastal Karnataka
that the then impending Assembly election was a “fight between Allah and
Ram”. He was later booked for “inflammatory speech”. Earlier this year, the
Association for Democratic Reforms, a non-profit election watchdog, and the
National Election Watch reported the BJP has the most lawmakers with hate
speech cases against them. BJP-ruled Uttar Pradesh recorded the highest
number of communal incidents in 2017, an increase of 17% over the previous
year.

Shah’s speech should thus be seen as a part of a continuum. Killings
justified in the name of cow and “love jihad”, the saffronisation of
textbooks, and the politics of beef have all cumulatively played and
continue to play a key role in transforming personal prejudices into
organised collective hatred for the other, and subsequent violence.

Hearing Shah’s speech was witnessing history repeat itself with all signs
of preparing a population for violence. While the speech itself was crude
and despicable, its construction and the strategic use of lies achieved the
desired polarisation. From his pulpit of hate, Shah constructed a
nonexistent threat that squarely outsourced the problem of ineffective
governance to “crores of illegal immigrants”. The language he used – “shall
we throw them out?” – instantly destroyed any possibility for empathy or
amnesty to those labeled “illegal”. Finally, Shah valorised violence and
presented it as inevitable.

Taken together with the recent spate of lynchings, the compilation of the
National Register of Citizens in Assam that excluded four million people,
rising anti-minority sentiment and the proposed citizenship bill, the BJP
chief’s speech was lethal both in its capacity to mobilise grievances into
violence and create a culture of fear.

Trickle-down hate
In India, wealth has not trickled down in the last four years of the BJP’s
rule but hate definitely has. Shah’s speech needs to be seen as a powerful
mobilising tool. It signals the elite’s willingness to use hate as a
political ideology, and strategy. It tacitly empowers the countless local
and petty sovereigns of the BJP, the RSS and other groups of Hindutva
extraction that take cues from such utterances. Addressing the BJP’s social
media workers in Rajasthan, Shah boasted about the party’s “WhatsApp group
with over 32 lakh people” and that the ruling party’s workers are “capable
of delivering any message to the public”, regardless of whether it is “true
or false”. Shah recounted how a party worker sent out a fake message
claiming former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav had slapped his
father Mulayam Singh Yadav. “There was no truth to this message but it went
viral,” the BJP president is heard saying in a video of the speech.

The BJP has blurred the distinction between the legitimate (state
institutions) and the illegitimate (mobs, both real and virtual) to
mobilise the state’s resources for actively creating incentives for
producing more violence. On July 9, three months after India witnessed the
first conviction in a case of cow vigilantism, the Jharkhand High Court
released eight men, including a local BJP leader, who were part of the mob
that killed Alimuddin Ansari, on bail. Union minister Jayant Sinha invited
the men home and garlanded them. Last week it emerged that Shambhulal
Regar, who murdered, on camera, Muslim labourer Mohammed Afrazul in
Rajasthan last December, will likely contest the 2019 general election. As
will Rupendra Rana, an accused in the horrific 2015 lynching of Mohammad
Akhlaq in Uttar Pradesh’s Dadri. The production and orchestration of
violence is no longer an aberration, it is integral to electoral politics
and a means of policing minority and marginalised communities. The BJP has
been rewarded electorally every time it has employed violence against
minorities. It has learned and perfected the lesson that violence can
substitute for governance – and now employs violence as an important
political tool.

What does all this mean for India and its future as a republic? The
violence that follows hateful rhetoric is the violence that births
political fragmentation. Democracies can die, and riotous republics wither
away. The global history of violence and state demise can teach us
something. While the present looks bleak, defending our Constitution
through the electoral process and fighting to protect and preserve
institutions remain crucial. This demands that we do not elect old and new
murderers to power.

Suchitra Vijayan is a barrister and writer. She previously worked for the
War Crimes Tribunals for Yugoslavia and Rwanda, and ran a legal aid clinic
for Iraqi refugees in Cairo. She currently heads The Polis Project, a
humanities collective and research center in New York.

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Peace Is Doable

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