Harvesting Lies And Hate In High Octane Elections
BY
R.K.MISRA
India’s
ruling party has perfected a formula to win elections and master the mandate.
Every
politically important poll you have variations of this theme dished out in
myriad forms and features. The formula is simple. Use symbolisms. Flail at
Pakistan, muddy the minority and harvest the hindu. Cite muslim mobilization to
seek hindu voter consolidation. Many times it works as in Gujarat, Uttar
Pradesh and the north-eastern states and sometimes it does not as in Bihar.The
by-election results declared May 3I are
further cause for saffron concern. The cleaver failed to cut in Kairana, UP lok
sabha seat as the jats, muslims and dalits forged a front to frustrate the BJP.
The
controversy stirred up around the portrait of Mohammed Ali Jinnah at the Aligarh
Muslim University falls in this category. It was part of the saffron poll
programme, aimed at the hindu voter in Karnataka.
The
BJP, MP from Aligarh, Satish Gautam who raised the issue in a letter to the AMU
vice-chairman on may I this year was among the members of the university court
who had been informed of the existence of the portrait almost a year ago. The
MP did not raise the matter at the appropriate academic body all this time. Why
now.
The
implication is obvious. Soon after, activists from the Hindu Yuva Vahini,
founded by present UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, who had been campaigning
in Karnataka, were upon the scene clashing with the students, stoking the fires;
grist for the media mill, job done for the saffronistas. Rake an issue in a
distant north Indian town and turn it into nation-wide news to cleave
communities for majority community votes in election-bound Karnataka.
Interestingly
such a political poll experiment was first conducted by Narendra Modi who took
charge as chief minister of Gujarat in October 200I.
The statewide ‘gaurav-yatra’ by the chief
minister in the aftermath of the 2002 communal riots that followed the godhra
train carnage was the first of such cleaving exercises.
Come elections and the
formula surfaces with religious regularity. Prime Minister Modi and his party
chief Amit Shah have no qualms about leading from the front. In the Bihar
elections three years ago, Modi gave a communal swing at a Buxar rally, charging
chief minister Nitish Kumar and RJD leader Lalu Yadav with conspiring to take
away five per cent reservation from OBCs, EBCs and dalits and give it away to
muslims. In UP early last year it was the ‘kabristan-shamshan’ controversy and
in Gujarat later the same year he went to the extent of accusing the former Prime
Minister Man Mohan Singh of hobnobbing with Pakistan to ensure ‘his’ defeat.
Brazenly, in your face and without batting an eyelid.
In
Karnataka this last election, the Prime Minister again stated ‘untruths’. He is
on record saying in an election rally at Kalburgi that after defeating Pakistan
in nineteen forty eight,General Thimayya was insulted by Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru and defence minister Krishna Menon. Mr Prime Minister Sir,
Thimayya became the army chief of India nine years after that event.
There
were numerous other lies that the Prime Minister peddled during this last
elections. These included that Congress leaders had no time to visit
revolutionaries like Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt who were in jail but
they have time to meet leaders jailed on corruption charges, alluding to the
visit of Rahul Gandhi with Lalu Yadav at AIMS. Mr Modi could do with reading
Jawaharlal Nehru’s autobiography and the reference thereon to his visit to
Lahore jail to meet them.
In
Gujarat critics gleefully remember the public function at Siddhpur in 200S when
chief minister modi had ‘magically’
revived the Saraswati river in a highly publicized state event through the
convenient ruse of diverting Narmada waters.Thirteen years later, the mystical
river is nowhere in sight though the chief minister who propagated a myth- and
saw thousands carrying bottles of muddied water as precious ‘prasad’ -has now
been the Prime Minister for over four years.
This
brings us to the all important question whether those holding exalted national
positions should be sullying public discourse to such abysmally low levels that
things can never be the same again. The Prime Minister sets standards for
others to emulate. The depths that he plumbs today will set the benchmark for
those who succeed him. Modi has ensured that public discourse in India is
plunged into a jousting journey to the centre of the earth. If a Prime Minister
with just four years in the saddle seeks to lampoon the country’s first
executive head who ruled for almost I7 years at a stretch, he can rest assured that
those who succeed him will put him through the shredder as well. After all, the
Congress ruled India for three straight decades with king-sized repeat mandates
from countrymen while the BJP which is into a scattered second term should
remember that it came to power the first time only because the nation wanted
the gentleman-politician Atal Bihari Vajpayee rewarded.
With
just one more year for elections, enhanced exactitude and oratorial civility
now may save future soiling.
Remember,
overflowing trash cans only head to garbage dumps.
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