Kejriwal’s Delhi Dharna – This is not anarchy, Mr Home Minister, This is 
Revolution
By Avay Shukla, Retired IAS
http://hillpost.in/2014/01/kejriwals-delhi-dharna-this-is-not-anarchy-mr-home-minister-this-is-revolution/97741/
What we are witnessing in Delhi today is historic – for the first time since 
Independence a legitimate political party has refused to play by the rules that 
all political parties in India have battened on for sixty-five years; for the 
first time a State Government has taken on the Central Government at its own 
doorstep; for the first time a Chief Minister and his entire Cabinet are 
sitting in protest in their own capital; for the first time their own police 
force is ranged against them in their thousands.
The immediate reason for this may be the demand for the suspension of five 
police officials, but the actual reason is more basic, and fundamental to any 
democracy — accountability of the rulers to the ruled.
The rulers are not just the politicians and the bureaucrats – they are also the 
larger constituency that benefits from the present status quo: the 
industrialists, the TV and news organisations, the “cognoscenti”, the 
“glitterati”, the South Delhi socialites, the “intelligentsia” that makes a 
nice living by appearing nightly on TV panel discussions: in short, all those 
who are comfortable with the status quo.
They have, with the assistance of disgruntled elements like Kiran Bedi and 
Captain Gopinath, unleashed a veritable barrage of abuse and condemnation 
against Kejriwal and his party over the last week, terming him a Dictator, 
Anarchist, Chief Protestor, Law-breaker and so on.
It is because they feel genuinely threatened by the forces that the AAP has 
unleashed, the ethical standards that it has prescribed and demonstrated, the 
personal examples that its leaders have shown. Because they know that if these 
paradigms become the norm of a new India then the sand castles that these 
privileged reside in shall come crumbling down in no time.
And so they accuse Kejriwal of not following prescribed conventions, protocol 
or procedure and thus encouraging anarchy. Let us look at just three of these 
alleged transgressions:
1. Law Minister Somnath Bharti asking for a meeting of judicial officers of 
Delhi. What is improper about this? Isn’t the judiciary a part of the 
government – funded, staffed, appointed by the state.
Yes, it is operationally independent of the government (as it should be) but it 
is certainly not a holy cow whose performance cannot be questioned, or 
monitored, by the people of this country through their elected representatives.
The judiciary is meant to serve the people, just as the bureaucracy is, and it 
cannot have internal accountability only. An elected government has to have the 
right to review its performance, especially given the pathetic state of the 
disposal of cases in courts.
 
In my view Mr. Bharti was within his rights to take a meeting of judicial 
officers to assess the shortcomings of the system (which is the first step to 
removing these shortcomings). Yes, he could have routed the request through the 
High Court, but this was a trivial error and certainly not the grievous 
violation that the media made it out to be. 
To the contrary, the Law Minister should be lauded for his initiative in 
seeking to address the issue instead of washing his hands of it as ALL LAW 
MINISTERS OF THIS COUNTRY HAVE DONE SO FAR, as if the collapse of the judicial 
redressal system was no concern of the government!
——-
2. Subsidies on water and power to small consumers in Delhi (something for 
which Kejriwal has been contemptuously branded a populist). Really?
The Central Government dishes out more than 160000 crores worth of subsidy 
every year on just three schemes (Mid-day Meals, MNREGA and Sarv Shiksha 
Abhiyan). Just about every state gives subsidies on water and power.
 
Here’s something Mr. Arnab Goswami and his kind should consider: the Golf Club 
in New Delhi which has about 4000 privileged members (all of whom are now 
arraigned against Kejriwal) has been given 250 acres of the most expensive real 
estate in the country worth 60000 crores for a paltry lease of about Rs. 15 
lakhs per annum. 
The annual return on Rs. 60000 crores should be at the very least Rs. 6000 
crores: in effect, what this means is that every member of the Golf Club is 
being given a subsidy of Rs. 1.50 crores every year! The same is the case with 
the Gymkhana Club, another watering hole for the rich, the famous, and the now 
scared.
According to the latest report of the RBI, the total non-performing assets 
(NPA) of the Banks in India is more than Rs. 1.60 lakh crores.
NPA is just a euphemism for what the Vijay Mallyas and the Captain Gopinaths of 
the world owe to the aam aadmi (and refuse to pay) while flying all over the 
world in their private jets and pontificating in TV studios on the correct form 
of governance. Is it “populism” if indulged in by Kejriwal, and “entitlement” 
and “economic surge” when practiced by others ?
——-
3. Somnath Bharti’s (Kejriwal’s Law Minister) mid-night visit to Khirkee 
village has generated so much misinformation, ignorance of the law, reverse 
racism and hypocritical harangues that it is sickening. 
Shorne of all this, what does the entire incident amount to? Merely this: a 
Minister, in response to complaints by residents (which are on record, as is 
the police inaction on them for months) of a locality personally visits the 
spot and asks the police to take immediate action by raiding the building where 
illegal activities are taking place.
The police refuse and insult the Minister. This is the essence of the matter.
All the rest – search warrants, lack of female police, racism, urinating in 
public, cavity search(!) [the latest addition to the shrinking vocabulary of 
Ms. Meenakshi Lekhi] etc.- are red herrings and a smoke screen which no doubt 
the judicial Inquiry Commission shall see through.
How was the Minister wrong in asking the police to take action? Is it a 
Minister’s job to simply sit in an air-conditioned office and write on files? 
(a question which Kejriwal has asked and to which we are still waiting for an 
enlightened response from Ms. Barkha Dutt and gang).
 
Does the police require a search warrant to enter a place where they have 
reason to believe that illegal activities are going on? Really, Mr. Salve?
If so, then how do you explain their barging into the house in the Batla House 
encounter and shooting three people, WITHOUT A SEARCH WARRANT? Or their 
constant nocturnal forays into the poor whore-houses of GB Road whenever they 
are short of spending money? ——-
No, sir, the opposition to Kejriwal from the BJP and the Congress, from the 
Arnab Goswamis, Rajdeep Sardesais, the Barkha Dutts, the Kiran Bedis, from the 
Editors of English dailies, from the captains of industry, from the Single 
Malts and Bloody Marys of Gymkhana and Golf Clubs, does not stem from any 
illegality or impropriety on his part, or from any ideological differences 
between them.
It stems from their complete and total failure to comprehend what Kejriwal is 
and what he stands for. It stems also from the deep social divide between the 
upper crust of society( who are happy with the status quo where their money, 
power and contacts can ensure them a comfortable life) and the masses below 
them who have to daily bear the brunt of the system inspired corruption, 
harassment, inconvenience and indignity that the present dispensation 
guarantees them.
This (hitherto unacknowledged and invisible) divide becomes clear when we 
compare the editorial slants of the English and Hindi channels in the coverage 
of the ongoing protests: the former are virulently anti AAP and only pop up 
panelists who support that view, while the latter appear to be more 
understanding of what AAP is trying to do.
Those who are denouncing Kejriwal for being an autocrat, anarchist, activist 
and for protesting at Raisina Road are missing the most obvious point of his 
movement – THAT KEJRIWAL WILL NOT PLAY BY THEIR RULES ANY MORE.
As they say in Las Vegas – you can’t beat the house, because the dice are 
loaded against you. Everyone wants him to play with their set of dice  which 
they mysteriously call the Constitution and the CRPC!) but Kejriwal wants to 
play with his own dice, hence the confrontation.
They want him to pass a joint resolution of the Assembly for bringing the 
police under the Delhi govt.-he’s smart enough to see that the resolution will 
be thrown into the same waste paper basket where presumably the Ordinance on 
protecting convicted MPs was consigned by Rahul Gandhi.
They want him to be a good boy and take his dharna to Jantar Mantar where all 
civilised protests begin and inevitably end, while the govt. of the day can get 
on with its gerrymandering uninterrupted-he knows that unless he disrupts the 
comfortable existence of the bourgeois he may as well relieve himself in the 
Yamuna for all the difference he will make.
They want him to sit in the Secretariat and be guided by his bureaucrats and 
lose all touch with reality- he won’t fall for this Pavlovian routine. They 
desperately want him to become one of them, red light, siren, gun-toting 
commandos, Lutyen’s bungalow and all- he knows that if he falls for this he 
loses his USP and becomes just an intern in this hoary club of gnarled sinners.
They want him to follow the script co-authored by all the political parties of 
the day, not one excluded, because this script contains an agreed-upon plot, 
wherein politicians make noises but don’t act against each other, wherein 
corruption is just a sound-bite, where dynastic succession is a silently 
accepted sine qua non, where no one is interested in finding out whether the 
hundreds of proved Swiss bank accounts contain anything other than Swiss 
chocolates – Kejriwal, however, wants to write his own script with substantial 
inputs from the aam aadmi, not from the Ambanis or the Radias or the Shobhna 
Bhartias.
They want him to talk about corruption but not do anything about it, something 
Manish Tewari’s poetic flair would term “willing to wound but afraid to 
strike”, an attitude as old as Chanakya and Kautilya which offers all of us a 
catharsis via the good offices of Arnab Goswami and little else- but Kejriwal 
is no respecter of Machiavelli or Chanakya, his vocabulary is limited because 
he can only call a spade a spade, he is colour blind because he can only see in 
black and white (the shades of greys can be left for the likes of Manu 
Singhvi), and therefore he insists on striking, not just talking.
Is there any cause for surprise, therefore, at why the present dispensation, 
both in and out of government, is rattled by this five foot four inch “insect” 
from Ghaziabad? He is neither fish nor fowl, he defies understanding.
The establishment has made the supreme mistake of trying to counter him by 
quoting the rules of the game (loaded in the former’s favour, naturally!) they 
are past masters of- but Kejriwal has changed the rules, and now they don’t 
know how to control him or neutralise him.
For the time being only Kejriwal knows the new rules, and he is springing them 
on the carpet baggers one by one, catching them by surprise all the time.
Forget the English TV channels-they rarely get anything right. Forget the 
Manish Tewaris, the Kiran Bedis, the FICCI spokespersons, the Minakshi Lekhis- 
they are either scared witless or rank opportunists. What they all do have in 
common, however, is that they have failed to see how the common man-the aam 
aadmi-are gathering behind this dimunitive man with the perpetual cough.
The sincerity, integrity and commitment of this man is phenomenal, his capacity 
to harness the anger and frustration of the people is limitless. His defiance 
of accepted conventions and interpretations is not anarchy – it is nothing 
short of a revolution. When the people have had enough of injustice, 
callousness and indignity, they will not play by the rules of the rulers-they 
will make new rules.
The French Revolution would not have happened if the existing rules had been 
followed. Tehrir Square would not have happened if everyone swore by the old 
rules. Changing the rules, Mr. Home Minister, is not anarchy – it is the 
beginning of a people’s revolution.
The sooner we realise this the less pain in the transition, the less violence. 
No matter how the stand-off in Delhi ends – capitulation by the Home Minister 
and the Police, withdrawal of support by the Congress, imposition of 
President’s Rule, police violence on the protesters and their eviction – one 
thing is certain: Kejriwal is going nowhere.
He, and his paradigms, are here to stay and haunt our rulers. With his uncanny 
understanding of the pulse of the people he has re-written the rules of 
politics and governance.
There are now only two options Kejriwal has left the ruling class – either they 
change, or the people will change them.
Avay Shukla retired from the Indian Administrative Service in December 2010. He 
is a keen environmentalist and loves the mountains- he has made them his home.

 
Joseph Fernandes
Mumbai


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