http://www.tehelka.com/story_main45.asp?filename=Ne030710salmankhurshid.asp


*From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 7, Issue 26, Dated July 3, 2010**CURRENT AFFAIRS
*
*Ministry Tussle- Minority Affairs*

*THE LONELINESS OF SALMAN KHURSHID*

*Out of the blue, a campaign has picked up speed to displace the minister of
minority affairs because he may be too secular.VIJAY SIMHA reports*
*[image: image]**Typecast *Many colleagues but few friends: Khurshid with
Prithviraj Chavan, Mukul Wasnik, Sachin Pilot and Ashok Gehlot during a trip
to the Ajmer Dargah in Rajasthan
*Photo: *DEEPAK SHARMA

ONE OF the more liberal minds in the United Progressive Alliance (UPA)
government, Minister of State (Independent charge) for Corporate Affairs and
Minority Affairs Salman Khurshid, is in a state of worry these days.
Baffling him is a turn of events he barely anticipated: a campaign against
him for ‘betraying Muslims’ has reached the Prime Minister, and Khurshid is
worried this might cost him half his job and set the cause of progressive
Muslims back.

So upset is Khurshid that on June 19, he is believed to have told the Prime
Minister’s Office he could not tolerate the campaign anymore and that the
people behind it must be restrained. “I was startled. All kinds of things
have been said. How did this happen?” Khurshid asks.

The issue is this: the Ministry of Minority Affairs is seen as a high
profile perch from where political clout can be gained among the minorities,
principally the Muslims. Therefore, the minister for minority affairs is a
key entry in the wish list of several Muslim politicians. Khurshid is an
author, media contributor, educationist, sports lover, and a deep friend of
the canines. He is not known to have said or done anything regressive in
public life, especially on Muslims. In short, Khurshid is seen as too
secular.
*A fear is being whipped up that Khurshid would, somehow, lose the Babri
Masjid case*

Among those apparently desiring to be India’s minority affairs minister is K
Rahman Khan, Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. Khan is believed to be the
force behind the campaign against Khurshid though the two were friends once.
Khan is a businessman-politician from Karnataka who has spent long years in
electoral and Muslim politics. He, say people in the know, is keen to move
from a constitutional post with no powers to an executive post with power.

“Khurshid and I meet on and off, as we are friends. But I have never
discussed minority issues with him. I have nothing to do with it (the
anti-Khurshid campaign),” says Khan. But the gloves are off for a while now

The specific issue on which Khurshid is being criticised is the Wakf
(Amendment) Bill, 2010, which the Lok Sabha passed on May 7. The Bill seeks
to make Wakf properties more secure so they are not easy targets of
poachers. For that, the Bill says Wakf properties must be registered. In
India, where land ownership is rarely transparent, this is a daunting task.
Wakf properties in many places are virtually hand-me-downs with no paper
records of ownership.

The case being built up against Khurshid is that the Babri Masjid, which was
demolished by rightwing supporters on December 6, 1992, was not registered.
Therefore, Khurshid’s Wakf Amendment Bill would mean that Muslims cannot
prove the Masjid existed. This, in turn, would hand over the Babri Masjid
legal case to the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and other fundamentalist rightwing
groups.
*[image: image]**Better times* Khurshid (L) and his critic Rahman Khan (R)
with Vice-President Ansari

This is a tricky campaign to run. If it works, it could drive the Muslim
community into rage, which might then be targeted at the person considered
responsible: Khurshid. This is Khurshid’s main worry: a false case gaining
mileage by exaggeration and destroying secular, progressive thought in the
Muslim community. “The core issue is Section 87 of the Bill, which is on
registration. If Wakf properties are not registered, we cannot fight cases
as Wakf. Litigation will be superficial and fought on an individual basis.
The chances of losing Wakf property are high then,” says Khurshid.

“Also, Babri Masjid is registered as Wakf property. When we said so, a smart
alec said the court did not accept the registration. If that were so, it
would have prevented Wakf from coming to court all these years.”

ALL THIS reached Prime Minister Manmohan Singh when a group of Rajya Sabha
members and a group of Muslim clerics met him separately and complained that
the Wakf Bill was a betrayal of Muslims. The campaign said Khurshid and, by
extension, the Congress had deliberately passed the Bill on a Friday when
most Muslims would be praying. “It was called a betrayal of Muslims by the
Congress party. That it was a Friday and that we pushed through something
harmful for Muslims while they would be praying. In order to say something
else, an exaggerated charge was being laid,” says Khurshid.

The attack on Khurshid is coming largely from the Rajya Sabha because the
Wakf Bill has to be passed by them before it becomes law. Rahman Khan is
Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. “As a person of a minority community, I
give my opinion when it is sought. There is definitely scope for improvement
in the functioning of the Minority Affairs Ministry. It was established for
the development of minorities, but there is general discontentment that
government schemes are not reaching the beneficiaries. There is a need for
close monitoring of the ministry.”

Khurshid has an opposite view. “Why is this being called a betrayal of
Muslims? Is someone trying to create an issue where there is none? They are
feeling frustrated that the government is doing a great job. So, they say
let us create a distraction and a controversy. There is more than meets the
eye here. You come to me if you differ and explain why Section 87 should be
taken back. The positive work is hurting someone who doesn’t want minorities
to acknowledge the work. It is sad that this is weighing heavily on the
heart of someone.”

Another issue on which the PM has to take a side on.

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