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VOLUME 33

ASSE M B L Y E L E C T I O N S

NUMBER 10

MAY 14-27, 2016

ISSN 0970-1710

WWW.FRONTLINE.IN

UR B AN I S S UE S

C O V ER S T O RY

Justice & the ideas of India

Tamil Nadu:
Complex scene
Flood of troubles
Money & politics
Interview: Rajesh Lakhoni
Battle for Puducherry
West Bengal:
Nervous phase
Kerala: Uncertain state
CONT R O V E R S Y
Manufactured anger
Bhagat Singh on terrorism
Wakf property scam in
Karnataka
Some of the
encroachments
WOR L D A F F A I R S
Brazil: Coup begins
Unrest in Mexico
Saudi Arabia in a bind
India-China visa row

19
28
31
32
35

The fundamental struggle between two


conicting visions for Indiaa progressive constitutional one and a conservative onehas profound implications for
the countrys judicial system. 4

36
40
44
46

97

S OC I A L I S S UE S
Karnataka:
Dalits entry into temples 101
LI TE R A TUR E
Interview:
Sukrita Paul Kumar

106

LAB OUR I S S UE S
Resisting reforms

108

ESSAY

59
61
48
51
54
57

DR OU G H T

RELA T ED S T O RI ES
Telanganas thirst

Killer lifeline of Mumbai

63

H E R IT A G E

Pendency of cases: Beyond rhetoric 9


T.S. Thakur: New look, old style 12
A case for appeal courts 14
Interview: K.K. Venugopal 16

Roots of the Kashmir


dispute

111

S P OTLI G HT
Innocents of Malegaon
The scapegoats
Double betrayal

123
124
126

M OVE M E N TS
JNU: Witch-hunt
& protest

128

C OLUM N
Jayati Ghosh:
Societal involution

104

BOOKS
LE TTE R S
Yoga: Ancient gift for
the modern world
67
Rashtrapati Bhavan:
A peep into the past
90
Interview: Thomas Mathew 94

83
130

On the Cover
The corridor of a court in Dharwad, Karnataka.
COVER DESIGN: T.S. VIJAYANANDAN
PHOTOGRAPH: B.M. KEDARNATHESHWARSWAMY

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Colombo - Rs.20.00 and
Port Blair - Rs.15.00

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MAY 27, 2016 .

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COVER STORY

JUSTICE
AND THE
TWO IDEAS
OF INDIA
MONICA TIWARI

IN TH E C O R R I D O R S O F T H E S U P REM E C O U RT
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of India, a le photograph.
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India is caught between two conicting visions of the nationa


progressive constitutional one and a conservative oneeach with
its own view of the role of the judiciary. The fundamental struggle
between these has profound implications for the countrys judicial
system. B Y G . M O H A N G O P A L

NO ONE CAN DISAGREE WITH THE CHIEF


Justice of India that India has too few judges. China
today has over two lakh judges for a population only
slightly more than that of India. Even after an explosive
growth in judge strength in India in the last decade
(judge strength nearly doubled from about 11,000 to
about 20,000), India still has only some 10 per cent of the
number of judges that China has and only some 66 per
cent of the judge strength of the United States, which has
some 30,000 judges.
The Chief Justice is again absolutely right when he
says that many judges are hugely overworked (this is, of
course, no different from the situation in which many
other public servants providing equally important
services in our country, such as police personnel,
teachers, doctors, nurses, etc., nd themselves).
However, the question of judge strength and judicial
reform cannot be discussed without addressing more
fundamental questions: Why do we need more judges?
What is the role of the judiciary? What do we expect of
our judges?
FEUDAL IDEA OF INDIA

SHAHBAZ KHAN/PTI

The role of any judiciary is derived from the vision of the


nation of which it is a part. India is caught between two
conicting visions of the nationa progressive
constitutional vision and a conservative social
visioneach with its own view of the role of the judiciary
and the number and types of judges needed. The
conservative social vision of India is of a strong nation
that derives its strength from the ruling classes. India is
envisioned as a nation united by a common set of beliefs
and values emanating from and authorised by the ruling
classes and imposed on the masses. In this view, a strong
India equals a strong ruling class (the iron frame or
authoritarian vision). This vision is, in essence, an
attempt to update and revive the feudal idea of India.
The opposing view, the progressive constitutional
vision, is of a strong nation that derives its strength from
the masses. This vision envisages breaking down the
concentration of power and devolving and scattering
power amongst the poorest and the weakest. In this
vision, the unity of the people and the strength of the
nation rest on a shared belief in equality, individual
freedom and democracy.In this democratic vision of
India, a strong India equals a strong citizenry (the
individual swaraj or democratic vision).

CHI E F J US TI CE OF I N D I A T. S . THA KUR

addressing the Joint Conference of Chief Ministers and


Chief Justices of High Courts in New Delhi on April 24.

In the iron frame vision of India, the role of the


justice system would be in line with a classical denition
of the judicial responsibilities of a raja: to punish evil
people (i.e., people who question the ruling classes);
honour good people (i.e., people who support the ruling
classes); grow the revenue; and defend the
nationdushta danda; sajana pooja; kosha vridhi; and
rajya raksha. The judicial system would secure and
uphold the power, property and privileges of the state
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and of the ruling classes. There is little scope in the iron


frame vision of India for a rights-based adversarial
justice system that is meant to empower the average
citizen by giving her the tools to interrogate the powerful.
The iron frame vision would see the judicial system as
primarily an instrument for the state and the ruling
classes to use against errant citizens and institutions that
question or challenge the orthodoxy on which the nation
is built. It is not meant to be used by citizens to question
the ruling classes or the state. The iron frame vision
would therefore look at the 20-fold increase in the
number of cases in the judicial system over the last half
century (from about 25 lakh in the 1970s to about ve
crore currently) with consternation. It would see docket
explosion as a great threat and set up strategies to divert
cases from the judiciary to alternative dispute resolution
forums and tribunals.

As declared by the Supreme Court of India in 1981


(S.P. Gupta vs Union of India), the Constitution is a
charter for social revolution and is clearly on the side of
the democratic vision of India. Much of the legislation
enacted by the legislature is also in support of the
democratic vision of India. The philosophy of the
Constitutionderived from the national movement for
freedomtherefore, clearly embraces the democratic
vision.
DOCKET EXCLUSION

The individual swaraj vision would see the justice system


as a tool for the masses to hold the ruling classes and the
state accountable. It would see the problem not as
docket explosion but as docket exclusion. It would
point out that the U.S., for example, has an annual ling
of some 330 new cases per thousand population, whereas
Bihar has an annual ling of about four new cases per
thousand population. The annual ling for India as a
whole is 17 cases per thousand population. Within India,
Kerala has about 40 new cases per thousand population
and Delhi has about 52 new cases per thousand
population. Is this difference because the rights of the
people of Bihar, for example, are less violated in India
than the rights of the people of Kerala or the U.S.? Or is it
because there is greater social approval and support for
common people taking recourse to courts to protect their
rights? Or is it because in a more democratic society, the
personnel of the courts, and therefore the institution
itself, are more receptive to the grievances of the poor?
The effective implementation of constitutional
provisions and laws by the judicial system would be a
social revolution in and of itself, and the battle over
competing visions of India would be decisively decided in
favour of the democratic vision. This is a strong reason
why the conservative elements of our society within state
institutionsand outside do not allow the judicial system
to work effectively.
The organisational framework and performance
metrics of the judicial system (and the number and types
of judges we need) would be different for the two visions
of the nation. For example, the quality of justice in the
orthodox vision would be measured by the extent to
which the social order is enforced against common
people, whereas the quality of justice in the second
democratic vision would be determined by the extent to
which rights are effectively secured.
The number of judges in the democratic vision would
be much higher than in the authoritative vision because
of the role of the judiciary in bringing about social
transformation. Regardless of the number of cases, every
two lakh citizens should have access to a court/judge
(compared with every 20 lakh citizens having an MP
today, a number that should also be signicantly
increased). This would increase the number of judges in
India threefold to 60,000. People should be assisted
through legal literacy and legal aid programmes to le
cases to secure their rights. Docket exclusion would be
the enemy, not docket explosion. Increase of bona de

The conservative elements


of our society within state
institutionsand outside do
not allow the judicial system
to work effectively.
The iron frame vision would see speedy disposal of
cases as a goal in itself, unmindful of the fact that
especially in criminal cases the vast majority of the
accused are poor people who have little access to legal
counsel or the means to protect themselves against a
widely corrupt system of policing. It is interesting to note
in this context that as a result of the recent initiatives in
judicial reform, some 30 per cent of the criminal cases in
the country are now completed within 12 months and
some 60 per cent (including this 30 per cent) within
three years. The speed of disposal is the highest in the
lowest courts, which is where most litigants are the poor.
It is also interesting that rates of conviction are the
highest in jurisdictions with lower social indicators and
more authoritarian social dispensations.
On the other hand, a rights-based adversarial justice
system that is meant to empower the average citizen is
central to the individual swaraj vision. Here the role of
the justice system is, to borrow a thought from Mahatma
Gandhi, to be a legitimate, peaceful, constitutional
channel of non-violent resistance against power. The
judicial system would secure the individual rights of
every citizen and their democratic power to rule this
nation. It would protect the powerless against the
powerful rather than protect the powerful against the
powerless. Such a role would challenge orthodoxy and
generate conict (as in the recent cases involving the
freedom of women to enter religious places).
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off the bench researching and writing judgments and


doing administrative work) working for 240 working
days in the year (including so-called vacation time), some
ve crore judicial hours are available. Given that the
system currently processes about ve crore cases
annually, this means that, for planning purposes, the
total time available to a judge to process each case in a
year is notionally about one hour and a lot of cases do not
get their turn.
In considering judicial reform and the role of the
judiciary, we also need to take into account the widely
varying and mutually conicting visions of justice and
demands for judicial reform from different economic and
social segments of the population. For example, the rich
dene the problem of justice in terms of the extent to
which the justice system effectively and promptly
protects their private property and privilegeand either
supports or frustrates state power to the extent it
challenges property or privilege. The middle class, on the
other hand, denes the problem of justice in terms of the
effectiveness of the justice system to protect it from the
excesses of both the ruling and the working classes and
address its principal concerns as employees, customers,
homeowners, borrowers, small business operators,
peasant farmers, small-scale property owners, victims of
crime, and so on. It wants the judicial system to challenge
the property and the privilege of the ruling classes and
the rights of the masses, where needed. It wants efficient,
fast, affordable justice that protects its interests.
REASONABLE ACCESS TO JUSTICE

RAJEEV BHATT

The crisis of justice that is the subject matter of


discussion in the media today is in fact the crisis of
justice for the middle class. The main difference
between India and the OECD (Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and Development) countries is
that whereas the middle class in these countries has
reasonable access to justice, in India it does not. A vocal
and powerful middle class has emerged in India since
1991. It is demanding reasonable access to justice. Much
of the judicial reform effort will help meet this demand.
This is a feasible objective, and the middle class in India
will have reasonable access to justice in the next 20 to 25
years.
The question of justice for the poor is, however, an
altogether different challenge. No country in the world
has been able to secure justice for the poor. Most of the
jails of the richest countries are lled with the poorest.
The masses are more often victims of the criminal
justice system than of crime. In India as well, jails are
almost exclusively lled with the poor. The civil justice
system is hardly accessible to them. They are often
victimised by lawyers, touts and court staff. They are
docket excluded, a new type of untouchability. The
language and the logicand the colonial and feudal
cultureof the judicial system are alien to them. It rarely
takes cognisance of their needs and interests. Their main
concern, therefore, is to escape the attention of the justice
system, criminal and civil. A landless Dalit person in the

AS TH E S UPR E M E C O U RT D EC LA RED in 1981, the


Constitution is a charter for social revolution.

litigation would be a cause of celebration, not of dismay.


The workload of judges would be set such that they could
take a proactive role to secure rights. Currently, the
judicial system as a whole involves 20,000 judges
processing some ve crore cases each year, that is an
average of 2,500 cases a judge a year. At about 10 hours of
work daily of some 20,000 judges (including time spent
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interior of Madhya Pradesh once gave me an insightful


denition of a court from the perspective of the masses:
A court is a place where you are forcibly taken by the
police to be punished; no one goes to a court. In contrast,
many lawyers and judges colloquially dene a court as a
temple of justice where rights are protected.
These sharply divergent visions mean that justice for
one section is often injustice for another. Protecting the
livelihood of traditional taxi and auto drivers from
predatory pricing by corporate app-based taxi providers
by imaginatively using the available tools of law to delay
their incursion would be seen by the rich and by sections
of the middle class as a failure of the judicial system, and
possibly as also resulting in a downgrading of the ease of
doing business measure. However, the masses would see
such a judicial intervention as strong evidence of a good
justice system. Although the conict over competing
visions of the nation and conicting demands from social
and economic segments have conned judicial reform of
judicial administration mainly to neutral areas such as
process reform, procedural law, technology, planning
and court and case management, judge strength, and the
workload of judges, there has been considerable
improvement in these areas, and the judicial system has
improved its performance.

administration and resolve them using the good offices of


the Supreme Court. The NCMS mechanism has been
replicated by now in all High Courts as State Court
Management Systems (SCMS) Committees. The NCMS
and the SCMS together have launched several initiatives.
In particular, the ve plus zero initiative has resulted in
nationwide monitoring of cases more than ve years old
in any court with a view to dispose of those cases and
achieve a ve plus zero status. Six States have become
statistically ve plus zero since this initiative was
launched. The central focus of the NCMS is on
advocating measurable performance standards covering
quality, responsiveness and timeliness (QRT) as well as
efficiency and a sound institutional framework of
standards, including on human resource development,
court and case management and planning, and
infrastructure. Baseline papers have been prepared in
each of these areas and posted on the Supreme Court
website.
It is unfortunate that there exists a very negative and
false impression of the judiciary that while three crore of
delayed cases are stuck in the courts of India, judges are
on a beach somewhere on vacation. The fact of the matter
is that courts are now by and large able to dispose of cases
equivalent to the number of new cases led each year
(about two crore ling and about two crore disposal); 40
per cent of the ve crore cases processed each year in
Indias judicial system (some two crore cases led
annually) are therefore less than one year old.
The problem is dealing with the roughly three crore
cases that are in backlog. From 1925, the suggestion has
been made that a separate, one-time effort is needed to
dispose of the backlog, segregated from the processing of
current lings. After nearly a century, this proposal may
now be implemented as one of the decisions of the recent
conference of Chief Justices and Chief Ministers. Of
these cases, 1.9 crore are between two and ve years old.
Some 23 per cent of the cases (1.1 crore) are over ve years
old. While for subordinate courts the ve plus (more
than ve years old) cases are 23 per cent of the overall
cases, these cases comprise 43 per cent of High Court
cases.
Proposals for judicial reform, including to increase
the number of judges, should not be seen in isolation. The
fundamental struggle over the competing visions of India
has profound implications for the countrys judicial
system. Expan ding the number of judges as the Chief
Justice of India demanded is essential for strengthening
the progressive, democratic vision of India. The vision for
judicial reform in India, and the performance metrics of
the judicial system, should consciously support the
progressive, democratic vision of India. Lawyers, law
teachers and judges should play a proactive role in
bringing about the democratic social transformation
envisaged in the Constitution.

No country in the world has


been able to secure justice
for the poor. Most of the jails
of the richest countries are
lled with the poorest.
No area has received as much attention of the Law
Commission of the Government of India as judicial
reform, which has constituted, directly and indirectly,
the single-largest area of its work over the past 60 years
(covering some 81 out of 262 of its reports and
accounting for over 31 per cent of its work).These
include, notably, the 14th report of the Law Commission
headed by M.C. Setalvad, on Reform of Judicial
Administration (1958), and the 77th Report, on Delay
and Arrears in Trial Courts (1978), by Justice H.R.
Khanna. In addition, there have been several committees
and commissions at the State/High Court level to look
into delay and arrears.
NATIONAL COURT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

Chief Justice S.H. Kapadia established the National


Court Management Systems (NCMS) Committee in
2012 (with which this writer is associated), creating for
the rst time a permanent institutional space within the
national judiciary to identify policy issues in judicial
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G. Mohan Gopal is a former Director of the National


Judicial Academy, Bhopal, and a former Director of the
National Law School of India University, Bengaluru.
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COVER STORY

Beyond rhetoric
The problem of pendency of cases in the judicial system must be examined
on the basis of data and not anecdotal evidence. B Y ALOK PRASANNA KUMAR
BUT FOR THE CHIEF JUSTICE OF INDIAS
outburst against the government, ostensibly due to the
delay in the process for appointment of judges, the biennial Chief Justices and Chief Ministers Conference, 2016,
would have gone unnoticed and mostly unremarked beyond a closed circle of the legal fraternity. What it has
instead done is to bring back the focus on the Indian
justice delivery systems perennial failingsdelays in the
disposal of cases and high pendency of cases.
The words delay and pendency have been used
rather loosely and lazily by policymakers and academics,
which has left the nature of the problem undened and
poorly diagnosed. An absolute number of cases pending
in the Indian judicial system3.5 crore cases, or some
similar numberis trotted out by way of complete explanation without trying to put it in proper context. Likewise, when it comes to delay, everyone has a story akin to
Dickens Jarndyce v Jarndyce from Bleak House but few
offer data or a statistical analysis of the problem.
When one digs through available data, one nds a
much more complex picture of the working of the judiciary that is beset by myriad problems that require different kinds of interventions by the various actors. In this
piece, I discuss the vital statistics of the Indian judiciary
in the context of pendency and delay with the hope that
the discussion on how to improve the functioning of the
Indian judicial system will be more informed and datadriven, rather than emotional and anecdotal.

of India, published quarterly. It contains details of all the


cases pending in the Supreme Court, the High Courts
and the district courts. In the latest issue of Court News
we nd there are 59,910 cases pending in the Supreme
Court, 40,05,704 in the High Courts and 2,71,56,020 in
the lower courts, a total of 3.1 crore casessmaller than
the 3.5 crore pending cases gure.
These gures must be placed in the context of the
overall number of cases that are disposed of in the countrys courts in a given year. The number of lings have
been steadily increasing over the years and as per the
latest gures available from Court News for a 12-month
period, the Supreme Court disposed of 87,846 cases, the
High Courts 16,87,743 cases and the district courts
1,86,05,800 cases. It has to be kept in mind that the
overall pendency data do not disaggregate the numbers
based on when the cases were led and do not therefore
present the true picture of the actual pendency of cases.
In fact, according to Court News data, all three levels of
the judiciary actually brought down the number of pending cases in the last year; substantially in the case of the
Supreme Court but marginally in the case of High Courts
and district courts.
This is not to say that there is no pendency problem.
Rather, it is to say that the problem must be understood
in its proper perspective. If we dene the problem as one
where the number of cases pending per judge is vast,
making it difficult for the judge to do justice to the case
(pun intended), then we have to examine how many cases
are pending per judge at different levels in India (see
Table 1). These numbers must also be seen in the context

PENDENCY

The gure often cited3.5 crore cases pending in the


systemreveals nothing about the actual pendency
problem in India. It may not even be an accurate number.
Remarkably, the gure 3.5 crore has been cited for
nearly two decades now as the total number of pending
cases. It has been cited by lawyers, academics, judges and
policymakers with absolutely no reference to the source
or veracity of this gure. The fact that this completely
incorrect statistic has been cited without even a little
preliminary research or statistical study shows why the
problem of pendency will always be misdiagnosed.
One source to ascertain the correct total number of
cases is the Court News publication of the Supreme Court
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proceedings were counted; in others, even applications


and interim proceedings within a case were counted as a
separate case. The absence of a single, unied denition
of what is a case must make us treat any national
number of pendency with circumspection and look to
address the problem at the level of each State.

of how many cases are disposed of per judge in a given


year.
While this would also not be the complete picture, it
gives us more clarity on the pendency problem, in comparison with the number of cases led. From these numbers, it is evident that, whether in terms of the absolute
number of cases pending per judge, or in relation to the
number of cases led per judge, the High Courts suffer
from the worst pendency problem among the three layers
of the Indian judiciary. Even among the High Courts,
there are signicant differences in the burden of pendency. If one looks only at the ratio of cases pending per
judge to the number of cases disposed of in a year per
judge, the highest numbers are found in the High Courts
(as given in Table 2).
Though there are other High Courts with a higher
absolute number of cases pending, the ve High Courts
that feature in Table 2 are those where the pending cases
are extremely high in relation to the disposal over a year.
In simpler terms, the ratio indicates the number of years
these High Courts will need to reduce their pending cases
to zero if no further cases are led in that time. While
these are just the High Courts with the worst problem,
the overall situation with High Courts when it comes to
the ratio of pending cases to the disposal rate, when
compared with the Supreme Court and the district
courts, is also troubling.
There is another reason not to give credence to an
absolute number of cases pendingthere is no universally accepted denition of what is a case across courts. This
problem was highlighted by the Law Commission of
India in its 245th Report titled Arrears and Backlog:
Creating Additional Judicial (wo)manpower when it
sought to try and assess what would be a realistic number
of judges needed at the district court level in India. What
the Law Commission found was that each State, and even
each district, seemed to have different norms for what
counts as a case. In some instances only the main

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DELAYS

As with the problem of pendency, the discussion on


delays has proceeded with little thought for the actual
numbers or an overall accurate picture of how long a case
takes to get disposed of in the system. Most coverage of
the judicial system in India pivots on an anecdote or two
about a long-standing rent, property or criminal matter,
which took the better part of a couple of decades to be
decided, or worse, is still pending. An egregious example
of such a delayed case can be seen in the Supreme Courts
judgment in DDA vs Anant Raj Agencies where the proceedings culminated after a scarcely believable 41-yearbattle in court, having gone through every level of the
judicial system between 1975 and 2016.

Yet, examples such as these, egregious as they are,


cannot form the complete basis to understand what actually ails the judicial system. To do this, one must examine the data on how long cases have actually been
pending in the judicial system. In the context of district
courts, the data for this are present on the National
Judicial Data Grid (NJDG), which gives a break-down of
how long cases have been pending in the system. The
NJDG was made public in September, 2015, as part of the
e-Courts project, connecting all district courts which
have been computerised on to one platform where cases
can be easily monitored. While not all district courts are
on the system at the moment, details of over two crore
pending cases are currently available, enough to give us a
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Even if all the posts are lled, there is also the further
requirement of ensuring adequate support staff and infrastructure for the judges to be able to function properly.
Even then, all of this will ultimately prove to be futile if
the procedural laws and rules are not updated, keeping in
mind modern trends in judicial process.
The problems of the Indian judiciary, therefore, require both the State and Central governments, along with
the High Courts and the Supreme Court, to work in
coordination and concert. Instead of broadly trying to
address delay or pendency in the abstract, what is
needed is focussed attention to the many aspects of the
Indian judiciary that require repair. At the district court
level, each State will require a solution tailored to its
specic needs depending on the exact nature of the problem being faced by it. This requires the High Court and
the State government to work in close coordination to
properly identify and remedy this problem. The Central
government and the Supreme Court may at best play a
supervisory and advisory role in this matter but in assessing whether more judges are needed, and ensuring that
existing vacancies are lled up, adequate infrastructure is
built and quality judges appointed, it is the duty of the
High Courts and the State governments to tackle the
problem.
At the level of the High Courts themselves, the immediate pressing problem is one of a severe shortage of
personnel. The latest gures from the Department of
Justice show that as of April 1, 2016, 462 posts or 43 per
cent of the posts of High Court judges are vacant. Even if
the Central government clears the 169 pending appointments, it still leaves nearly 30 per cent of the posts vacant.
As the numbers have shown, the pendency problem (and
quite likely, the delay problem) is much higher in the
High Courts than in the district courts and requires
immediate action. For better or worse, the collegium
system is here to stay, and it is incumbent on the Supreme
Court and the Central government to ensure that it functions at its efficient best.
The Indian judiciary, one of the largest in the world,
bestowed with wide-ranging powers of judicial review
and rigidly protected from executive interference in the
Constitution, cannot be seen to succumb under the
weight of its responsibility.

good idea of what the picture is likely to be over how long


cases have been pending in courts (see Table 3).
As of May 4, 2016, 27.81 per cent of all cases were
pending for more than ve years, with 10.28 per cent
pending for more than 10 years. If any effort has to be
made at addressing the problem of delays, it is these cases
that deserve immediate focus to ensure that no case is
pending in a given court for more than ve years. Once
that is ensured, efforts can be made to reduce the number
of cases pending for more than two years, and so on.
Given the scale of the problem it may be impossible to
ensure no case is pending for more than ve years, but if
the overall percentage is brought down to a minuscule or
negligible gure, signicant progress will be made.
As with pendency, the problem of delays is not
uniform. Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Bihar, account for more than 70 per cent of the cases
pending for more than 10 years, even though they account for only 50 per cent of all pending cases (see Table
4). While it is only to be expected that the States that have
the highest number of pending cases will also have the
highest number of cases pending for more than 10 years,
it is interesting to note that in these States (save for
Maharashtra) the percentage of delayed cases is greater
than the percentage of pending cases nationally.
West Bengal, Gujarat, Odisha, Bihar, Jammu and
Kashmir and Uttar Pradesh have the highest percentage
of cases pending for more than ve years. In these States,
more than one in three cases have been pending for more
than ve years. Tables 4 and 5 show the problem of delay
is most acute in West Bengal, Gujarat, Odisha, Bihar,
Jammu and Kashmir, Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh.
Any effort at tackling the problem of delays in the judicial
system must therefore lay emphasis on reducing the
number of delayed cases in these States (see Table 5).
CONCLUSIONS

There is still much by way of nuance that can be teased


out from the numbers as one goes deeper. The point,
however, remains that there is no simple diagnosis and
no silver bullet to solve the problem. An increase in the
overall strength of the judiciary, as often suggested and
sought by the CJI, is a meaningless and futile exercise if
the appointment mechanisms are not robust enough to
ensure that these new positions are lled in time with
competent men and women. The quality of legal education and the Bar has a large bearing on the quality of
judges who are ultimately selected to ll these posts.

Alok Prasanna Kumar is a Senior Resident Fellow at


the Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy. The views expressed
in this piece are entirely his own.
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COVER STORY

New look, old style


Chief Justice of India T.S. Thakurs tenure has so far drawn
mixed responses from the Bar. B Y V. VENKATESAN
One of the legacies that Justice Thakur inherited
from his predecessor, Justice H.L. Dattu, was the growing tussle between the executive and the judiciary over
the power to appoint and transfer judges. During Justice
Dattus tenure, the Narendra Modi government, fresh
after coming to power at the Centre with a landmark
electoral verdict in its favour, wanted to clip the powers of
the judiciary by setting up the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) through an amendment of
the Constitution. The NJAC sought to end the system of
judges appointing themselves through the collegium created by the Supreme Court in 1992. The Supreme Courts
ve-judge Constitution Bench, however, struck down the
NJAC Act and the 99th Constitution Amendment Act on
October 16, 2015, because it violated judicial independence, a basic feature of the Constitution, and revived the
collegium system. The Supreme Court collegium comprises the Chief Justice of India and four of his seniormost colleagues.
As the court took more than six months to decide the
constitutional validity of the NJAC, during which the
collegium was under a self-imposed restraint from meeting and recommending new appointments and transfers,
it resulted in vacancies not being lled up in the High
Courts and the Supreme Court. That led to an accumulation of cases.
Thus, as on May 1, 2016, there were six vacancies in
the Supreme Court and 433 vacancies in the 24 High
Courts. The Supreme Court has an approved strength of
31 judges, while the High Courts combined approved
strength is 1,065 judges. The CJIs lament stems from the
fact that if immediate steps are not taken to ll the
vacancies, they are likely to mount further as many of the
current judges are likely to retire in the course of the next
few months. In the Supreme Court itself, ve judges will
retire before the end of this year.
The revival of the collegium by the Supreme Court in
October last year by itself did not mean the end of the
imbroglio between the government and the judiciary.
The Constitution Bench, which heard the NJAC case, had
set for itself the task of reforming the collegium, and
delivered a consequential judgment in the case on December 16, 2015. It asked the government to supplement,

PTI

CHIEF JUSTICE OF INDIA T.S. THAKUR,


whose tenure began on December 3, 2015, will retire on
January 3, 2017. A performance appraisal of a CJI in the
middle of his tenure has its own risks and may not yield a
complete balance sheet of his achievements and setbacks.
Yet, a close look at his initiatives and responses so far
suggests a remarkable personality who nds himself at
the helm of affairs at a crucial juncture at the apex court
wanting to achieve whatever that is possible within the
limited time available to him.
Many in the Bar ask whether Justice Thakur, who
spoke impromptu at the recent conference of Chief Ministers and Chief Justices in New Delhi on April 24, did
really break down or merely intended to draw attention
to the serious crisis facing the judiciary. But there is no
doubt that his was an impassioned plea to the government to increase the strength of judges and clear all
pending les relating to judicial appointments.

CH IE F J US T I C E of India Justice T.S. Thakur.


FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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meetings and recommend new apin consultation with all the stakepointments until the new reformed
holders, the existing Memorancollegium is put in place.
dum of Procedure (MoP) a series
Thus newspapers reported on
of guidelines for making appointMay 5 that the collegium recomments and transfers to the higher
mended four new judges to the Sujudiciary, which was drafted way
preme Court. They are Chief
back in 1999in the light of its
Justice of the Madhya Pradesh
suggestions for reform.
High Court A.M. Khanwilkar,
As on May 6, 2016, the governChief Justice of the Allahabad High
ment has not yet completed this
Court D.Y. Chandrachud, Chief
exercise of revising the MoP as it
Justice of the Kerala High Court
sought to see in it an opportunity to
Ashok Bhushan, and former Addiindirectly clip the powers of the
tional Solicitor General and senior
judiciary, which it could not do diadvocate in the Supreme Court L.
rectly. Thus, one of the clauses in
Nageswara Rao.
the draft MoP said, according to
In the light of the Supreme
reports in the media, that the govCourts own standards of transparernment could reject a recommenency, the collegium could have andation of the collegium for
nounced these recommendations
J U S T I C E Rajiv Shakdher and Justice
appointment on the grounds of naofficially through its website. But it
Abhay Mahadeo Thipsay (below), known
tional interest or national security
chose to announce its recommenfor their legal acumen and impeccable
concerns.
dations through selective leaks to
integrity. Their recent transfers
Another clause in the draft
the media, which did little credit to
were disappointing.
MoP says that in case the governits credibility.
ment rejects a recommendation,
The reports also said that the
the collegium cannot send it again.
collegium recommended the transThis is not the case in the current
fer of Uttarakhand High Court
MoP, according to which if a recChief Justice K.M. Joseph as the
ommendation, after reconsideraChief Justice of the High Court of
tion, is reiterated by the collegium,
Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.
then it is binding on the governJustice Joseph was recently in the
ment.
news for quashing Presidents rule
Media reports suggested that
in Uttarakhand and passing severe
Justice Thakur, after consulting
strictures against the Central govthe collegium, did not give his conernment for misusing Article 356
sent to these clauses. Another
of the Constitution for the purpose.
clause in the draft MoP reportedly
Justice Josephs judgment was subfavours keeping the deliberations
sequently stayed by the Supreme
of the collegium out of the ambit of
Court, which is currently hearing
the Right to Information Act,
the Centres appeals against it. It is
which is likely to disappoint innot clear whether Justice Josephs
formation-seekers and proponents
transfer was a consequence of his
of transparency. In the revised guirecent judgment setting aside Presdelines suggested by the Supreme
idents rule or a result of his own
Courts Constitution Bench to reform the collegium, transparency is one of the key factors. request to the collegium on health grounds. As the colleThe other factors that were suggested include the giums proceedings continue to be condential, the truth
creation of a secretariat, a mechanism to handle com- of his transfer may not be known immediately.
But the collegiums two recent transfers of judges
plaints, the xing of eligibility criteria and interaction
between the collegium and the appointees. In the ab- evoked considerable disappointment in legal circles. The
sence of transparency over the draft MoP itself, it is not transfer of Justice Rajiv Shakdher from the Delhi High
clear whether the government, through the Group of Court to the Madras High Court and that of Justice
Ministers headed by External Affairs Minister Sushma Abhay Mahadeo Thipsay from the Bombay High Court to
the Allahabad High Court were both looked upon as
Swaraj, incorporated these suggestions in it.
The government has reportedly offered to reconsider unfair. Both Justices Shakdher and Thipsay are known
the draft MoP in the light of the CJIs concerns and it is for their legal acumen and impeccable integrity and they
likely that its nalisation may take a few more days. This have delivered judgments that went against the Central
inordinate delay appears to have forced the CJI to aban- government in some cases, involving the rights of citi
don his self-imposed restraint not to hold the collegium zens.
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COVER STORY

Case for appeal courts


The Supreme Courts decision to hear a PIL petition seeking the
establishment of a National Court of Appeal outside Delhi creates ripples
in legal circles as the court shows its willingness to entertain an idea to
which it was indifferent. BY V. VENKATESAN

FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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H.S. MANJUNATH

W H E N TH E S U PR EM E CO U R T B EN CH
comprising the Chief Justice of India (CJI) Justice T.S.
Thakur and Justices R. Banumathi and U.U. Lalit decided on February 26 to hear a public interest litigation
(PIL) petition seeking the courts directions to the Centre
to establish a National Court of Appeal (NCA) outside
Delhi, it took legal circles by surprise. The surprise was
mainly because the court had found an opportunity to
initiate a debate on the subject by entertaining a petition
led by a well-informed litigant from Chennai, V. Vasanthakumar, although it had remained lukewarm to the
idea when it was expressed from time to time by the
bench and the Bar.
But soon realisation dawned on the practical difficulties in realising the idea, even if the bench appeared
sympathetic to it initially.
Vasanthakumar led a similar petition in October
2014 requesting the court to direct the Central government to consider his representation on the setting up of
the NCA, which he had submitted in 2013. The court had
given the Centre six months to consider Vasanthakumars representation, as it found that his petition had
raised an issue that was of a positive nature.
But in its reply to Vasanthakumar, the Centre confused the plea to set up NCAs in the four regions of the
country with the opposition of the successive CJIs to the
proposal to set up a bench of the Supreme Court outside
Delhi. The Centre failed to understand the distinction
between an NCA and a Supreme Court bench.
Article 130 of the Constitution, which refers to the
seat of the Supreme Court, says that the Supreme Court
shall sit in Delhi or in such other place or places, as the
CJI may, with the approval of the President, from time to
time deem t. It is true that successive CJIs have opposed
the idea of setting up Supreme Court benches outside
Delhi on the grounds that it would affect the prestige and
integrity of the apex court. But the proposal to set up
NCAs has nothing to do with the setting up of benches of
the Supreme Court outside Delhi.
In his fresh petition, Vasanthakumar challenged the

A J UD G E listening to litigants at a mega Lok Adalat held


at the District Court Complex in Mangaluru in April 2014.

governments reply as erroneous and arbitrary. Vasanthakumar is not the rst petitioner to propose the setting
up of an NCA as a solution to the mounting docket crisis
facing the Supreme Court and to address the problem of
access to justice being aggravated by the geographical
distance of Delhi for litigants living in other regions, and
the time it takes to seek justice at the Supreme Court.
As K.K. Venugopal, amicus curiae appointed by the
Supreme Court in this case, points out in his submissions
to the Supreme Court, the former judge of the Supreme
Court, late Justice K.K. Mathew had, in an article published in 1982, contemplated Courts of Appeal to relieve
the huge backlog of cases in the Supreme Court.
Justice P.N. Bhagwati, in Bihar Legal Support Authority vs Chief Justice of India [(1986) 4 SCC 767], said:
The Supreme Court of India was never intended to
be a regular court of appeal against orders made by the
High Court or the sessions court of the magistrates. It
14

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

attempts to adjudicate all the pending cases, it will necessarily accumulate vast arrears over a period of time and
the court is bound to fail in hearing and disposing of cases
within a reasonable time frame. This is likely to erode the
condence of litigants in the effectiveness of the court in
delivering justice.
Venugopal, therefore, suggests the creation of four
regional or zonal Courts of Appeal, which would absorb
the 140 categories of cases relating to matrimony, rent
control, labour, service, and land acquisition, among
others, entertained by the Supreme Court. These cases
would belong to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Courts of
Appeal.
The Supreme Court would then be left with only
those cases that would fall within the jurisdiction vested
in it by the framers of the Constitution and covering
essentially the following matters:
I) All matters involving substantial questions of law
relating to the interpretation of the Constitution or of
national or public importance;
II) Validity of laws, Central and State;
III) The judicial review of constitutional
amendments;
IV) Resolving conicts between States and the Centre
as well as the original jurisdiction to dispose of suits in
this regard;
V) To settle differences of opinion on important issues of law between High Courts; and
VI) Presidential references under Article 143 of the
Constitution.
Thus, Venugopal has proposed that the Constitution
be amended by adding Article 136A, whereby the NCAs
would exercise the powers, which were hitherto being
exercised by the Supreme Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution. Article 136 (1) enables the Supreme Court
to use its discretion to grant special leave to appeal from
any judgment, decree, determination, sentence or order
in any cause or matter made by any court or tribunal in
the territory of India.
The Attorney General, Mukul Rohatgi, however, opposed the plea for setting up the NCAs, as in his view, it
would further delay the process of justice delivery by
adding one more layer of appeal between the High Courts
and the Supreme Court.
When pointed out that the decisions of the NCAs
would have nality over matters that are exclusively under their domain, the Attorney General modied his
concerns by asking what would happen to the constitutional guarantee to every citizen under Article 32 to move
the Supreme Court through appropriate proceedings for
the enforcement of the rights conferred by Part III of the
Constitution, dealing with Fundamental Rights. Rohatgi
has also opposed the reference of the case to the vejudge Constitution bench, as suggested by the CJI, claiming it would be a waste of the courts precious time.
Despite the Centres opposition to the idea, the Supreme Courts three-judge bench has reserved its decision on whether to refer the case to a larger bench to
debate the issue by hearing all the stakeholders.

was created for the purpose of laying down the law for the
entire country and the extraordinary jurisdiction of
granting special leave was conferred upon it under Article 136 of the Constitution so that it could interfere
whenever it found that the law was not correctly enunciated by the lower courts or tribunals and it was necessary to pronounce the correct law on the subject.
More to the point, the Constitution bench in that case
declared: We think that it would be desirable to set up an
NCA which should be in a position to entertain appeals
by special leave from the decisions of the High Courts and
tribunals in the country in civil, criminal, revenue and
labour cases and so far as the present apex court is
concerned, it should concern itself only with entertaining
cases involving questions of constitutional law and public
law.
The Law Commission of India, in its 229th Report
(2009), recommended the setting up of a Cour de Cassation in each of the four regions to have these Courts of
Appeal as nal courts with regard to the matters entrusted to them.
Venugopal also cites the research paper published by
Nick Robinson, a Yale Law School Research Fellow, that
10 per cent of the cases led in the Supreme Court
emanate from Delhi, 6.2 per cent from Punjab and Haryana, and 6.2 per cent from Uttarakhand, with only 1.1
per cent and 2.4 per cent from large States like Tamil
Nadu and Karnataka. According to Venugopal, this implies that the distance of the Supreme Court from the
southern States would, in fact, be an impediment to
access the apex court in Delhi.
According to information provided by the Supreme
Court on its website, as on September 30, 2015, the
number of pending cases stood at 59, 910. Of these, even
if one excludes connected matters as suggested by the
court itself, the result would be 36,414.
The number of Constitution bench matters, which
have been pending for many years, was 29. Although this
number is minuscule, the early disposal of these matters
would have resulted in lling the grey areas in law, which
could lead to early and expeditious disposal of several
pending cases as well. When the present CJI, T.S. Thakur, set up three Constitution benches of ve judges each
after taking over office in December last year, members
of the Bar felt relieved that the court had nally woken up
to the need to give priority to Constitution bench matters
and that as a result they could expect authoritative court
rulings on key issues.
According to Venugopal, merely augmenting the
number of judges in the Supreme Court will not solve the
problem of pendency of cases. Even if the apex court

As on September 30, 2015,


the number of pending
cases stood at 59,910.
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COVER STORY

NCA not in conict


Interview with K.K. Venugopal, Senior Advocate in the Supreme Court.
B Y V. VENKATESAN

Court. This means that the original litigant sometimes


may not even be alive to seek the fruits of the litigation by
the time the case is nally disposed of by the Supreme
Court. It is only his legal representatives who will be
carrying on the litigation. Therefore, I believe, that the
Supreme Court will entertain the case and refer it to a
larger bench of, say, ve judges, that is, Constitution
bench, to decide this issue which is of great consequence
to the justice delivery system.
It is a matter of policy. If a policy entrenches fundamental rights, the matter also shifts to the arena of the
superior courts jurisdiction. The court is not going to, by
itself, legislate. But it will play an important part in
reforming laws by expressing its views after an elaborate
debate where the Union of India also is a party and by
hearing all other stakeholders. Therefore, in the absence
of the executive or Parliament showing any concern
whatsoever for the sake of litigants because they, as a
class, do not form a vote bank, the only manner of activating the other two branches of government, that is the
executive and the legislature, is by the Supreme Court
debating on it, but leaving it to the government, in its
good sense, to implement it or not.

KOTTAYAM KATANKOT VENUGOPAL IS AN


eminent advocate practising in the Supreme Court of
India. His father, the late M.K. Nambiar, was the counsel
for A.K. Gopalan, who challenged the Preventive Detention Act, the rst constitutional law case of great significance in independent India. Enrolled as an advocate in
January 1954, Venugopal was designated Senior Advocate by the Supreme Court in March 1972. Recipient of
the Padma Bhushan (2002) and Padma Vibhushan
(2015) awards, 84-year-old Venugopal is respected for
his legal acumen and outstanding contribution to the
practice of law. Venugopal made signicant submissions
before the Supreme Court as amicus curiae in the justconcluded hearing on the public interest petition led by
V. Vasanthakumar, an advocate practising in Chennai,
seeking establishment of National Courts of Appeal
(NCAs) in four metros. In the face of stiff resistance from
the Centre through Attorney General, Mukul Rohatgi, a
three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India T.S.
Thakur reserved its decision whether to refer the petition
to a Constitution Bench for a detailed hearing of the
stakeholders and an authoritative ruling.
In this interview to Frontline, Venugopal outlines his
views on the issues facing the Indian judiciary and the
difference the proposed NCAs can make to improve its
functioning. Excerpts:

The NCA, it is clear, will require a constitutional


amendment to be brought into existence. Can the
Supreme Court issue a mandamus to bring about a
constitutional amendment using the PIL jurisdiction?
Just take the period of the Emergency. There were
wholesale amendments to provisions relating to the judiciary for the purpose of cutting down judicial intervention in regard to the validity of laws. To craft or structure
suitable amendments would be the easiest of exercises on
the part of the legislative branch of the government.
The only question which you have to ask is whether
this will conict with the theory of the basic structure of
the Constitution. In my opinion, it will not. Once you
understand the real structure of the Courts of Appeal, it
will be a fallacy to proceed under the basis that it will
duplicate the exercise of hearing cases by creating an
additional court as a second tier between the High Court
and the Supreme Court.
On the other hand, the Supreme Court, which is
today dealing with cases which no other Supreme Court

Can the Supreme Court entertain this petition because


the Centre has claimed that establishing NCAs is a
matter of policy and that according to the doctrine of
separation of powers the judiciary ought not to interfere
in matters of policy.
Access to justice has been held by the Supreme Court
of India to be a fundamental right under Article 21 of the
Constitution, which guarantees the right to liberty. If,
therefore, the Supreme Court is entertaining the petition,
it is for the purpose of enforcement of fundamental
rights. This is not in the nature of the usual PIL where you
are asking the Supreme Court to create law or lay down
guidelines and so on.
The necessity for intervention by the Supreme Court
is because a case, civil or criminal, takes an average of ve
to 10 years in the trial court, about seven to eight years in
the High Court, and about ve years in the Supreme
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with basic structure

R.V. MOORTHY

K.K. Venugopal.

result is that the old cases will go on getting delayed


further. According to me, this is a self-inicted injury by
the Supreme Court.

or apex court of any other common law country would


touch, is really doing a great disservice to its status as a
constitutional court. It is entertaining cases relating to
matrimonial disputes, custody of children, maintenance,
landlord and tenant, rent control, bail applications and
land acquisition. In other words, every case decided by
the trial court, which goes to the High Court and is then
brought to the Supreme Court is seriously dealt with to
nd out whether there is an error of fact, whether the
High Court judgment requires correction. This should
not be the area of consideration in the Supreme Court.
The U.S. Supreme Court restricts its consideration of
cases to a maximum of 120 a year. It does not hesitate to
reject the 121st case. But they also say that we will consider this question when it comes up again in some other
case.
Unfortunately, the Supreme Court of India appears
as if it has a very large heart, which really, according to
me, it should not have. It should be amply professional in
its approach and should not be a court which seeks to
wipe away every tear from every eye. What it does not
realise is that every single case which it takes on le will
result in a case which has been pending for years being
delayed further. And if it goes on taking all these sorts of
cases, which represent 80 per cent of the docket, the

If the NCA comes into existence, will litigants be


prevented from seeking another remedy in the
Supreme Court if they are dissatised with the NCAs
verdict?
The entire suggestion which has been made in setting
up the Courts of Appeal is that the workload of the
Supreme Court will now be restricted to matters of constitutional or national importance, differences of opinion
between High Courts, death sentence cases, and the
special powers conferred on the Supreme Court in regard
to suits between the Centre and the States, and so on.
This should represent 15 to 30 per cent of the total
workload today. That will be the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Supreme Court. The Courts of Appeal will not be able
to touch or deal with any one of these cases.
The rest of the classes of cases, including bail, land
acquisition, matrimonial, etc., will stand transferred
bodily to the Courts of Appeal. That will mean the exclusive jurisdiction of Courts of Appeal against which no
further appeal will lie.
And the reason is twofold. One, we cannot afford to
17

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let all decisions rest nally with the High Court because
they, off and on, or sometimes, deliver decisions which
are aberrations and perverse judgments, and therefore
this will require judges sitting in appeal who are selected
in the same manner as judges of the Supreme Court. This
would mean that the Courts of Appeal will be manned by
judges who are elevated from High Courts by the collegium, applying the same yardstick, the same guidelines,
which they use for elevating High Court judges to the
Supreme Court.
So, qualitatively, they will be the handpicked judges
known for their integrity, judicial acumen, experience
and wide knowledge. Four courts of appeal, manned by
15 judges each, in each one of the four regions, namely,
southern, northern, western and eastern, would take
justice closer to the litigants. Today, we nd people from
the south not approaching the Supreme Court with the
same number of cases with which persons from States
close to Delhi come to the Supreme Court. The distance,
not being able to access the lawyers quickly, not knowing
whether their cases are coming up, not being able to
travel long distances, cases are posted suddenly to the
next day, all these problems will also get solved.
More importantly, you will have 15 or 20 judges
manning the Supreme Court, who will be able to spend
sufficient time for each case by patiently listening to the
lawyers, not being overwhelmed by the 70 cases which
currently get listed for the day. You will nd a totally
different Supreme Court, where the judges will have
leisure to read the textbooks, the jurisprudence available
from different parts of the Commonwealth countries, so
that knowledge and quality of justice will increase. According to me, there will be only 2,500 cases led every
year instead of 60,000 cases which are led every year
now. The Supreme Court will be able to dispose of 2,500
cases in one year instead of seven to eight years.
Will the constitutional guarantee to every citizen to
approach the Supreme Court directly under Article 32
remain if the NCA comes into being?
If you are creating courts of the same quality of judges
as the Supreme Court, there is no reason why Article 32
power also should not stand transferred to the Courts of
Appeal. But that is a matter of policy. However, if a
substantial question of interpretation of law or the Constitution arises, it can be done only by the Supreme Court.
Article 136, with the new restraint which will be
applied by the Supreme Court, will continue. But Article
136 A will be there, where the wide discretionary powers
which are exercised by the Supreme Court today can be
exercised by the Courts of Appeal. If that be so, 80 per
cent of the cases now dealt by the Supreme Court will be
considered by the Courts of Appeal under Article 136 A.
These are easy amendments. The structure can easily be
changed. And I do not think that the basic structure will
be affected because you are enhancing the efficacy of the
judicial system. You are bringing into existence a Supreme Court which can spend more time listening to
constitutional issues and at the same time an equally
competent Court of Appeal to try other cases.
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The Attorney General has alleged that the Madras High


Court has dismissed a similar petition earlier and that
the petitioner before the Supreme Court (V.
Vasanthakumar) has concealed this fact in order to
agitate the issue afresh.
That was on the question of maintainability. Whether
it was mentioned by Vasanthakumar in his petition, I
dont think that is the real issue in this case. The real
issue, which the AG abruptly rejected, is something
which would enhance the quality of justice. If a case is
disposed of in one year, instead of eight years, if the
litigant is able to approach the alternative court of equal
competence by travelling less distance, I dont think anybody can say the basic structure is violated. Basic structure, if at all, will be enhanced.
The Constitution itself provides for the creation of
Supreme Court benches in other parts of the country.
Can this be an alternative to the NCA?
What difference it will make if 70,000 cases are
pending and if you divide the 31 judges of the Supreme
Court and send some of them to different benches. Of
course, the access to those in the regions where such
benches are set up will be easier, but the total disposal of
cases will be the same. It wont make any difference. And
you will be diluting the prestige and status of the Supreme Court if you set up benches in different parts of the
country. That will not subserve the real purpose of bringing down the huge pendency of cases.
Do you think the proposal for video conferencing can be
an answer to the problem of geographical distances
between the litigant and the Supreme Court?
If there are 60,000 cases in the Supreme Court, four
million cases in High Courts, 40 million cases in subordinate courts, how can this be an answer? We cant
compare ourselves with other countries. Canadas Supreme Court tried video conferencing with regard to
cases where the party is in Vancouver or far away; all that
can only be cosmetic as far as India is concerned.
How do you respond to the Chief Justices emotional
outburst at the recent conference of Chief Justices?
It only shows how serious the issue is. If you recommend 400 judges for elevation to High Courts, and 40
per cent of them are rejected or there is no response from
the government, what can the Supreme Court do? Because the litigant public, they do not represent a vote
bank. The government is indifferent to the suffering of
the litigant public because they cannot revolt or go on
strike. And, therefore, there is no pressure on them [the
government]. There are 80 vacancies in Allahabad, 94 in
Bombay, 60 in Delhi and 34 in Madras. How can anyone
close their eyes to this? You are playing with the lives of
citizens. Obviously, judges strength has to be increased.
If you get good judges, it will make a tremendous amount
of difference. Our legal education has to be strengthened.
There are 17 national law schools. They produce excellent
lawyers who can compete in the rest of the world. It is a
slow process. I think the government must be more
cooperative, not negative in its efforts.

18

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

Complex scene

M. GOVARTHAN

With multiple fronts in the fray and several issues, from prohibition
to power supply, at stake, the election scene in Tamil Nadu is making
the guessing game difficult. B Y T . S . S U B R A M A N I A N

AIADMK MP T H A MB I D U RA I receiving a copy of the party manifesto from Chief Minister Jayalalithaa at Perundurai in

Erode district on May 5.


ers, entertainers, and propaganda vehicles. Traffic had
come to a halt. AIADMK supporters waved the blackand-red party ag with the image of C.N. Annadurai,
founder-leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
(DMK) and former Chief Minister, in the middle and the
partys election symbol of two leaves. Supporters of the
ruling partys electoral allies, waving their own party
ags, converged on the election office, adding to the din.
A party functionary told this reporter that Amma
[Jayalalithaa] instructed all the candidates to le their
nomination papers between 12:50 p.m. and 1:20 p.m. on

FOR a few hours on the morning of April 28, a


carnival-like atmosphere prevailed on the main road in
Kovilpatti town in southern Tamil Nadu. As hundreds of
vehicles carrying supporters of the ruling All India Anna
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) thronged the
road, high-decibel music and party propaganda songs
lled the air. Outside the election office of Kadambur S.
Raju, the party candidate seeking re-election from Kovilpatti in the May 16 Assembly elections, a colourful arch
bearing a portrait of party general secretary and Chief
Minister Jayalalithaa towered over the sea of party work19

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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A. SHAIKMOHIDEEN

April 28. She believes this is an auspicious time as per her A I A D M K CA D R E S in front of the party office in Kovilpatti.
horoscope and that this will ensure victory for the
AIADMK. This is a record, for 233 candidates will be Makkal Katchi, the Puthiya Tamizhagam and others as
ling their nominations simultaneously at a particular its constituents; the Desiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam (DMDK)-led Peoples Welfare Front (PWF); the
time.
Jayalalithaa led her nomination papers on April 25 Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK); the Bharatiya Janata Parfrom the Dr Radhakrishnan Nagar constituency in Chen- ty(BJP)-led alliance; and the Naam Tamizhar Katchi, an
nai. The AIADMK is contesting 227 seats and its minor ultra-nationalist Tamil party led by lm director Seeallies are contesting the remaining seven seats on the man. The DMDK is led by its founder and lm actor
Vijayakanth. The PWF comprises the Marumalarchi
two leaves symbol.
Kadambur Raju visited the Shenbagavalli Amman Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) founded by Vaitemple in Kovilpatti before ling his nomination papers. ko, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the Communist Party of India (CPI), the Tamil
This correspondent waited on the main
Maanila Congress (TMC) and the Viduthroad expecting to see him accompanied by
alai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK), a Dalit
his entourage, but he materialised from a
party which has a strong presence in
side lane. When asked about his election
northern Tamil Nadu. The PWF has proplank, he instructed one of his cadres to
jected Vijayakanth as its chief ministerial
give us his propaganda pamphlet. It was
candidate and has promised voters that it
printed on thick paper, and carried the
would form a coalition government if it is
headline in Tamil: The historical projects
voted to power.
implemented in the last ve years during
the golden rule of honourable Amma in
the Kovilpatti Assembly constituency.
ISSUES AT STAKE
Tamil Nadu is witnessing a six-corOne issue that is being hotly debated
nered contest involving the ruling
across the State is prohibition. Be it Saroja,
AIADMK and its six allies; the DMK-led K A D A M B U R S . R A J U,
a vegetable seller at Chettymandapam
alliance with the Congress, the Indian the AIADMK candidate for
near Orathanad in Thanjavur district; a
Union Muslim League, the Manithaneya Kovilpatti.
group of Dalit women seated on the roadFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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20

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gradual prohibition? he sarcastically asked about Jayalalithaas assurance. We are for total prohibition, he
emphasised.
On April 9, at an AIADMK rally on Island Grounds in
Chennai, which marked the start of her campaign, Jayalalithaa said that although she was for total prohibition
it is not possible to bring about total prohibition with
one signature and that it can be reintroduced only in
stages. She promised voters that if the AIADMK was
given another term, it would rst reduce the working
hours of the liquor shops, then limit the number of shops,
close the bars attached to the liquor shops, and open
rehabilitation centres for addicts, all in stages.
MOOD IN THE WEST

A. SHAIKMOHIDEEN

People see a link between sales in the liquor shops and the
lack of money circulation. Shah Jehan said: When a
labourer who earns about Rs.350 a day spends much of it
on liquor, how much money can he give his wife to buy
groceries, vegetables or milk? The entire money goes to
TASMAC, where it gets locked up. Still the government
says it has a decit budget. E. Ayyamperumal, standing
at the intersection on the national highway from Coimbatore that led to Sankagiri constituency in Salem district, went ballistic when this reporter struck up a
conversation with him. There is no money circulation at
all. Real estate has crashed. If one acre of land costs Rs.1
crore, I am able to sell it only for Rs.25 lakh. I am not able
to sell any parcel of land. There are no buyers for ats
either. I am an AIADMK man but am upset that there
has been no money circulation for the past few years. He,
however, praised Jayalalithaa for setting up Amma canteens and Amma pharmacies and initiating the scheme
to sell Amma cement bags. Yet, he predicted that a
change will come about in the State.
Other issues that have come to the fore are lack of

S.S. KUMAR

side at Indira Nagar in Periyakulam (reserved) constituency; the elderly M. Gopal, seated at a tea stall at
Dasarayapalayam coming under the Avinashi constituency near Coimbatore; J. Shah Jehan, who sells sunglasses and helmets on the footpath near Quarry Office at
Madukkarai on the CoimbatorePalakkad highway; A.
Kumar at Manapparai; or R. Das, DMDK councillor of
Ulundurpet, the categorical demand is the closure of
liquor shops run by the Tamil Nadu State Marketing
Corporation (TASMAC). Women are more vociferous in
their demand. Mariammal of Indira Nagar in Periyakulam said: These brandy shops have ruined most of the
families. Sumathy said: If the TASMAC shops are shut
down, Tamil Nadu will be clean. The reason she felt so
strongly about the need for prohibition was that her
husband was killed when he was hit by a car near Indira
Nagar. The suspicion is that the car was driven by a drunk
driver. Another group of voters wondered if it was possible to bring back prohibition in one stroke or implement it in stages. Their stand depended on their political
affiliation. While DMK president and former Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi has promised to bring back total
prohibition, Jayalalithaa has promised to reintroduce
prohibition in stages.
Taking into account the ills of liquor consumption,
our rst signature after assuming office will be to implement total prohibition, Karunanidhi told an election
meeting at Mayiladuthurai on April 24. What is that

M D M K CHI E F Vaiko addressing the media in

Puducherry on April 29.


21

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BIJOY GHOSH

said: Real estate is down. There is less money circulation. Registration charges for buying properties is high.
Agriculture has taken a beating because the rains failed
last year [2015]. Agricultural land has become housing
sites. But there is no buyer for them because people do
not have paisa. In Sembanur, Thazhiyur, Madhampatti,
Narasipuram and Kuppepalayam, elephant-human conict is on the rise. So people do not want to buy land there
although these are scenic places.
However, there is praise for Velumani for providing
drinking water facilities and good roads. The assessment
is that he may not have to ght hard to retain his constituency because Syed Mohammed of the MMK, who is
contesting against him, is not considered a tough opponent. Yet, in the analysis of S. Thamaraiselvan, the DMK
representative for the Thondamuthur panchyat union, it
will not be a cakewalk for Velumani because there are
about 43,000 Muslim voters in the constituency. If most
of them vote for Mohammed, it will become a tough
contest.
There were other imponderables too, such as the
three parties that claim to represent the interests of
Gounders, who form a sizable chunk of the population in
the Kongu mandalam, consisting of Coimbatore,
Erode, Tiruppur, Salem, Namakkal and Karur, in the
western region of the State. The parties are the Kongunadu Makkal Desiya Katchi (KMDK) led by E.R. Eswaran,
the Kongu Nadu Jananayaga Katchi (KJK) headed by
G.K. Nagaraj, and the Kongu Nadu Munnetra Kazhagam
(KNMK) led by Best Ramasamy. Velumani is a Goun-

DM K P R E S I D E N T M. Karunanidhi with State Congress


president E.V.K.S. Elangovan at a public meeting in
Tiruvarur constituency on April 25. Karunanidhi is
contesting the seat.

money circulation, the crash in real estate prices; the


failure of the government to desilt and deweed canals,
rivers, lakes and ponds; mechanisation of farming and
the consequent unemployment problem; erratic power
supply; failure of the AIADMK government to stem the
ight of industries from the industrial city of Coimbatore
to Karnataka; frequent arrests of Tamil Nadu shermen
by the Sri Lanka Navy, and so on. Often local issues
dominate election discourse. They include tanneries discharging effluents into the open ground making farmland and groundwater unt for use at Kuttiapatty and
other villages in Dindigul district, discharge of effluents
from dyeing units into the Noyyal river in Erode and
Tiruppur districts, and the revival of jallikattu (the
bull-taming sport) in Madurai and Sivaganga districts.
THONDAMUTHUR CONSTITUENCY

N. Palanisamy, a retired sub-inspector of police, and his


friend, R. Rajagopal, a former employee of a private rm,
of Thondamuthur on the outskirts of Coimbatore are
sure a change is in the offing. Attention is focussed on
the Thondamuthur constituency because S.P. Velumani,
Rural Industries and Law Minister, is seeking re-election
from there. Explaining why a change is round the corner,
Palanisamy, seated comfortably in the village square,
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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22

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completed in the State, from Tamil Nadus share of the


federal power stations and from agreements reached for
buying power on a medium- and long-term basis, she
said. She called this addition to power availability a
POWER SITUATION
In Coimbatore city, which is a premier industrial and historical achievement and claimed that there had been
textile centre, voters are in an irritable mood. This, de- no power cut at all from June 2015. The loot of granite
spite the claim of the AIADMK government that Tamil during the previous DMK regime was stopped during
Nadu had now become an electricity surplus State after AIADMK rule, she said.
Karunanidhi has been constantly criticising the
the debilitating power cuts during the DMK rule (2006
to 2011) and the rst four years of the AIADMK regime. AIADMK governments claims on the power situation.
The 10-hour daily load-shedding during AIADMK rule In a letter addressed to DMK cadres on April 9, he
had led to an exodus of industries to Karnataka and asserted that after the AIADMK came to power, no
plans were made for any new power genMaharashtra, which left the
eration project, no tenders oated and
State government looking rednot even a single MW has been generatfaced. At Sundampalayam in
ed.
Coimbatore West constituency,
If the State governments debt burworkers were furious that hunden was Rs.1,03,999 crore in 2011-12, it
dreds of small and micro-inshot up to Rs.2,11,482 crore in 2015-16,
dustrial units had closed down
he said. Statistics revealed that of the 21
in the district. One in a group of
major States, Tamil Nadu ranked 20th
men assembled at Sundampain overall development, 17th in infraslayam said: Coimbatores intructural facilities and 13th in the edudustry has been hit hard. Job
cational sector. Nearly 10,000 murders
orders for mixies, grinders and
and about one lakh robberies and thefts
motor pumps have come down.
had taken place during this time period.
There are no orders for units
The National Crime Records Bureau rethat make forgings and castvealed that 2,123 farmers had commitings. The industrial line is D M K T REA S U RER M.K. Stalin
ted suicide in the State.
completely choked. There have addressing a public meeting in
Elangovan ridiculed Jayalalithaas
been power-cuts several times a Ramanathapuram on May 6.
claims on her governments achieveday in the past two years and a
half. So unable to balance the power cut with loss of ments in the power sector. He pointed out that Jayalaproduction, many industries have relocated to other lithaa, in her partys manifesto in 2011, had promised
States. But Jayalalithaa claims that Tamil Nadu has sur- that [an extra] 5,000 MW will be generated by 2013
plus power now. At Kuttiapatty in Athur constituency, and that all villages and towns would receive three-phase
Abdul Salam, a rice merchant, said: If there is no power power supply by 2015. However, there has been an
cut in Tamil Nadu now, it is because industries have ed unannounced power cut at present by the AIADMK
to Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. Electricity consump- government and people were suffering because of sumtion has, therefore, come down. Abdul Salam argued mer, he said on May 1. If the States requirement was
that Karunanidhis assurance that he would re-introduce 15,400 MW, it was receiving only 13,000 MW. Farmers,
prohibition in one stroke had more credibility because it weavers and industrialists were suffering due to shortage
was the DMK president who rst promised to shut down of electricity.
Elangovan said: Since no investment was made in
liquor shops.
The power situation is a livewire issue in the cam- the last ve years in power generation, not even one MW
paign, with Karunanidhi and E.V.K.S. Elangovan, presi- was generated. Generation of power is made only from
dent of the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee, on the one the electricity projects inaugurated during the previous
side, and Jayalalithaa on the other exchanging a fusillade DMK regime and the Jayalalithaa government made no
of allegations. Addressing an election rally in Coimbatore effort to start new power projects. Although the Centre
on May 1, Jayalalithaa said that, as promised in her in 2012 had permitted the setting up of a 4,000 MW
partys election manifesto in 2011, the State was now power project at Cheyyur in Kancheepuram, work had
glowing with electricity and that there is no power cut not begun on it. There was no progress in the Udangudi
at all. She claimed: Quality power without any in- power project either, he said.
terruption is being provided to farmers, weavers, small
industries, big industries and trade centres. After the V A I K O S W I T H D R A W A L
AIADMK was voted to power in 2011, action was taken to Kovilpatti constituency was in the news on April 16 when
speedily complete several electricity generation projects Vaiko announced that he would contest from there. The
and buy power from other States, she said. In the past ve news generated interest because he is the star campaignyears, Tamil Nadus capacity had gone up by an addition er for the PWF.
of 7,485.5 megawatts. This was from the power projects
On April 4, Jayalalithaa named K. Ramanujam GaL. BALACHANDER

der, but a split of the Gounder votes can affect his chances, Thamaraiselvan said.

23

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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battle because he knew he would lose. An AIADMK


leader said: Vaiko developed cold feet after Jayalalithaa
elded Kadambur Raju against him. Vaiko was afraid
that he would be pushed to the third place.
Among the other prominent constituencies, Madurai
West, Athur, Ulundurpet, Tiruchi (West), Aravakurichi,
Pennagaram and Kolathur are expected to witness big
ghts.

nesh, a lightweight, as the AIADMK candidate for Kovilpatti. However, when the news was out that Vaiko was
planning to contest from Kovilpatti, she brought back
Kadambur Raju, who could pose a challenge to Vaiko. All
the three, Vaiko, Ramanujam Ganesh and Kadambur
Raju belong to the Naidu community.
Vaiko dropped a bombshell on April 25 when he
announced that he was opting out of the contest at
Kovilpatti, alleging that the DMK was planning intercaste tension in the constituency and blaming him for it.
Vaiko turned a bitter foe of the DMK after his expulsion
from the party and he went on to form the MDMK in
1994. He said he took the decision not to contest because
a group of people in Vadakku Thittangulam village in the
constituency prevented him from garlanding the statue
of Pasumpon Muthuramalinga Thevar. The group did
not want Vaiko to garland the statue because Vaiko
reportedly spoke ill of the Thevar community at Udumalpet in Tiruppur district after a Dalit youth, V. Sankar, was
murdered there on March 13, for marrying a caste-Hindu
girl.
However, Vaiko went on to garland the Thevar statue
at Vadakku Thittangulam. Vaikos decision to withdraw
from the contest drew jibes from the DMK, the AIADMK
and the BJP. They said he was running away from the

MADURAI WEST

It will be interesting to watch the outcome in Madurai


West where three important candidates are battling it
out. They are the AIADMKs Minister for Cooperation
Sellur K. Raju, G. Thalapathi of the DMK, and U. Vasuki
of the CPI(M). Sellur Raju, the incumbent MLA, is making every effort to retain the seat. Thalapathi was with the
M.K. Azhagiri faction in the DMK but switched loyalties
to the M.K. Stalin faction and has been rewarded with the
party ticket. (Azhagiri and Stalin are Karunadhis sons.
Azhagiri was dismissed from the DMK for anti-party
activities in March 2014.)
Unfazed by the resources at the command of Sellur
Raju and Thalapathi, Vasuki, the daughter of late CPI
(M) veterans R. Umanath and Pappa Umanath, is waging a spirited ght and knows the issues she has to tackle.
She told Frontline that the three important issues that
the CPI(M) would tackle were the livelihood issues of the
working-class people, a corruption-free government, and
a liquor-free State. This is the broad focus of the PWF in
the State.
More specically for Madurai West, Vasuki said she
would concentrate on three issues: implementation of
the Cauvery Comprehensive Water Scheme to provide
drinking water, deweeding and desilting of canals, lakes
and ponds in the constituency to increase their waterholding capacity, and supplying drinking water through
bowsers as a temporary solution. If we can do all the
three, we can combat the shortage of water, Vasuki said.
To ease traffic congestion, she would try to build the
yovers that Sellur Raju had promised for Madurai
West but did not implement, she said. The parks in TVS
Nagar and Pykara would be made usable and maintained
properly. She proposes to work towards setting up an All
India Institute of Medical Sciences in Madurai, a government arts college in Madurai West, a playground at
Sammattipuram, a cricket stadium, and a burial ground
for Muslims at Jeeva Nagar. She said she will help residents living for the past 40 years on the land belonging to
the Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board to receive pattas.
ATHUR

A. MURALITHARAN

It is all sound, fury and dust at Athur constituency in


Dindigul, where heavyweights are trading punches,
hooks and jabs. The major contenders are I. Periasamy of
the DMK and Natham R. Viswanathan of the AIADMK.
They are local satraps, wielding power in the areas under
their control. I. Periasamy is so popular in the constituency that he is I.P. to everybody. He is a die-hard
supporter of Karunanidhi and was a Minister in the

ANB UMA N I R A MA D O S S , PMK leader, at an election

meeting in Samayapuram in Tiruchi.


FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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R. ASHOK

U . VA S UK I , C PI (M) candidate for Madurai West, at Jaihindpuram in Madurai on May 1.

Soon a knot of people gathered. K.S.V. Ganesan, one


of them, said, The groundwater here has been reduced to
chemicals. We cannot even wash our face with it. V.
Vellaichamy, a farmer, chipped in: If you do, your eyes
will burn. The water in four big ponds and a lake in
Kuttiapatty has become unt for use, and paddy, cotton,
tomatoes and maize are no longer cultivated in the area.
But they refused to blame I.P. He works for the people
but he is unable to solve this problem of tannery effluents.
He has, however, provided piped drinking water to the
villages, one of them said. In village after village, people
praised I.P. for being accessible and for bringing several
developmental projects to Athur. His popularity was
visible in the big village of Athur, which boasts a twostoreyed taluk office and a newly built subtreasury office.

Karunanidhi government from 2006 to 2011. He enjoys


the condence of Karunanidhi so much that his son I.P.
Senthil Kumar has been made the DMK candidate in the
neighbouring Palani constituency.
Periasamy is immensely popular in Athur and every
villager this reporter met appreciated his performance.
But they are angry with tannery owners who release
effluents into the open ground. Stinging, bad odour hits
ones nostrils in several places in the constituency. The
effluents have ruined the soil, spoiled the groundwater
and wilted thousands of coconut trees in the groves of
Kuttiapatty and other villages.
As we entered Kuttiapatty, we ran into M. Nagaraj.
Even cattle refuse to drink the groundwater here because it has been spoilt by the tannery effluents. New
shovels become brittle in a few months. If you build a
house, the bricks become powdery because of the breeze
laden with toxic chemicals in the effluents and the houses
collapse after some years, Nagaraj said. His wife, Jeyarani, interrupted: Farmers used to grow paddy and tomatoes here but they can no longer do so because of the
tannery effluents. The yield from the coconut trees has
come down and the nuts are small in size.

TIRUVARUR

In Tiruvarur constituency, from where the 93-year-old


DMK patriarch is seeking re-election, the son of the soil
sentiment has seized the electorate. Karunanidhi belongs
to Tirukkuvalai village in Tiruvarur district. He did his
schooling in Tiruvarur town. His main opponents are
P.S. Masilamani of the CPI and A.N.R. Paneerselvam of
25

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the AIADMK. Hundreds of huts and houses across the


constituency are painted with the DMK election symbol
of the rising sun. The walls adorned with propaganda
slogans remind voters that the DMK has promised the
voters that students education loans would be repaid, the
loans of small and marginal farmers waived off, the price
of Aavin milk slashed by Rs.7 a litre, and consumers
could pay electricity bills every month, which would
mean lower bills.
P. Rathinam, an itinerant (on his cycle) vendor of
potato chips, fryums and groundnut cakes, and G. Selvaraj and G. Paneerselvam of Erukkattur, predict that Karunanidhi will win easily, but with a reduced margin.
Their views were similar: Since it is a six-cornered contest, the votes would get split. So, he will win with a
reduced margin this time. It will be less than the margin
of 50,000 votes by which he defeated the AIADMK
candidate in 2011. Rathinam regretted that Karunanidhi could not do much for his constituency in the past ve
years because the AIADMK was voted to power. If the
DMK returns to power, our constituency will see a lot of
development, he said.
At Ulundurpet, the DMKs G.R. Vasanthavel will
take on Vijayakanth. At Aravakurichi, the industrialist
K.C. Palanisamy of the DMK has a tough opponent in V.
Senthil Balaji , who was the Transport Minister in the
Jayalalithaa Cabinet. Although she dropped him from
the Cabinet in July 2015 and removed him as Karur
district AIADMK secretary, she has now reinstated him
at Aravakurichi. K. Chandrasekaran, an AIADMK cadre
from Karur, who was in Tiruchi on April 23 to listen to
Jayalalithaas election speech, said, Senthil Balaji has
been elded against Palanisamy because the latter has
money. Only Senthil Balaji can defeat Palanisamy.

OVE R G R OW TH OF korai grass at Koraiyaru in

Tiruvarur district. The governments failure to deweed


and desilt waterbodies is one of the issues that rankle
voters.
crore Thamirabarani-Karumeniaru-Pachaiaru project
announced by the previous DMK government to provide
drinking water to the Nanguneri, Radhapuram, Tuticorin and Theri areas would be completed, he said.
Vasanthakumar said efforts would be made to establish a
Government Arts College in Nanguneri. He said mobile
health camps would be set up for senior citizens.

NANGUNERI

Businessman H. Vasanthakumar of the Congress is contesting again at Nanguneri in Tirunelveli district. His
main opponent is the AIADMKs M. Vijayakumar. In
2006, Vasanthakumar was elected from the constituency
but he lost to A. Narayanan of the All India Samathuva
Makkal Katchi by 12,280 votes in 2011. The entire constituency knows that Vasanthakumar will not take any
bribes, asserted A.S.A. Karunakaran, his campaign
manager. A factor favouring Vasanthakumar is that Narayanan, who contested on the AIADMKs symbol of
two leaves, is not in the fray this time. (Vasanthakumar,
Narayanan and Vijayakumar belong to the Nadar community. There is a substantial population of Thevars in
the constituency.) Thevars have a predilection to vote for
the AIADMK. Since the All India Forward Bloc [which is
backed by Thevars] has elded a candidate this time,
fewer Thevars will vote for the AIADMK, and the chances of Vasanthakumar winning are good, said
Karunakaran.
Vasanthakumar said, if elected he would revive the
Rs.24-crore project announced by Stalin when the DMK
was in power from 2006 to 2011 for laying irrigation
channels from the Nambiaru in 46 places. The Rs.356FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

LALGUDI AND BHAVANI SAGAR

Interesting to watch will be the contests at Lalgudi in


Tiruchi district and Bhavani Sagar (reserved) in Erode
district. The CPI(M) has elded A. Jeyaseelan in the
former and the CPI has renominated P.L. Sundaram, the
incumbent MLA, in the latter. The 49-year-old Jeyaseelan lives in a house measuring 210 square feet with his
mother, wife and two daughters at Pallividai village. He
opened a bank account for the rst time in April this year.
His father was a farm worker and his 76-year-old mother
enrols for work under the Mahatma Gandhi Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. Jeyaseelans main opponents are the AIADMKs M. Vijayamurthy and the
DMKs A. Soundarapandian.
At Bhavani Sagar, Sundarams popularity is pretty
high. R. Ravi of Kanchanaickanur and his friends Prabhu
and Ganesan admire Sundaram for the good work he has
done in the constituency. Sundaram has done every26

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

canals in the past ve years. In Tiruchi, Thanjavur and


Tiruvarur districts, the tributaries of the Cauvery, irrigation canals, ponds and lakes were choked with weeds,
water hyacinths, juliora, eucalyptus trees and even palm
trees. Irrigation canals branching off from the Kallanai
dam are incredibly overgrown with naanal grass.
It is a complex election. There are 5.82 crore voters:
2,93,33,927 women and 2,88,62,973 men. About 1.05
lakh voters in the age group of 18-19 are rst-time voters
and there are 1.17 crore voters in the 20-29 age group.
What has captured the imagination of college students is
the DMKs promise to repay their education loans. A
group of students from Aravindar Polytechnic College in
Ambathurai near Madurai said that a DMK government
would generate more employment opportunities. Several
voters above 55 years were sure that a change would
occur through the ballot.
FREEBIES

B. VELANKANNI RAJ

What is favouring the AIADMK is its free distribution of


uniforms, slippers, textbooks, notebooks and geometry
boxes to school pupils, cycles to senior secondary students and laptops to college students. What has come in
for appreciation is the AIADMK governments free distribution of goats and cows, provision of four grams of
gold for thali for women who are getting married,
marriage assistance scheme, old-age pension of Rs.1,000
a month, green houses scheme, and free distribution of
fans, mixies and grinders. These were promised in the
partys 2011 manifesto.
This time, the party has outdone its previous manifesto. The AIADMK, which was the last to release its manifesto, has promised a free cell phone to everyhousehold
with ration cards,free supply of 100 units of electricity to
every house (this means that 78 lakh households, which
consume only up to 100 units, need not pay power tariff);
free Internet connections to senior secondary students
who receive free laptops; and 50 per cent subsidy to
women buying mopeds/scooters to enable them to drive
to their workplaces. During the Pongal festival, all ration
card holders would be given gift coupons to buy handloom products worth Rs.500 from Co-optex. Those having Arasu Cable TV (the government-owned cable
television network provider) connection would get a settop box free. It has also promised free wi- links at bus
termini, shopping malls and parks in the State.
The manifesto has also promised 8 gm of gold to
women who are getting married and have studied up to
Class X and an increase in nancial assistance from
Rs.12,000 to Rs.18,000 to pregnant women.
Other promises include writing off of loans and
grants orsubsidies to every section of society from farmers, weavers, shermen, salt-pan workers, potters and
traders, to minority sections. All loans, including crop
and medium- and long-term loans that small and marginal farmers had received from cooperative banks,
would be written off. The AIADMK will announce a new
policy on granite quarrying and sell beach sand minerals, if voted to power.

thing for the constituency, Ravi said. But they are unhappy that he has allied with neither the AIADMK nor
the DMK. People want to vote for Sundaram but he has
no backing from either the AIADMK or the DMK. Yet,
we cannot predict the outcome, Ravi said.
PENNAGARAM

Yet another constituency on which all attention will be


directed is Pennagaram, where the PMKs Anbumani
Ramadoss, former Union Minister and son of PMK founder Dr S. Ramadoss, is contesting. Anbumani Ramadoss
was elected to the Lok Sabha in 2014 when he defeated
P.S. Mohan of the AIADMK. In order to avenge this
defeat, the AIADMK is going all out to ensure the victory
of its candidate, M.K. Velumani. The DMK candidate,
P.N.P. Inbasekaran, is also expected to make it difficult
for Anbumani Ramadoss.
At Kolathur in Chennai, Stalin and the AIADMKs
J.C.D. Prabakaran have locked horns. While Stalin is
seeking re-election from Kolathur, Prabakaran has shifted from Villivakkam to Kolathur.
In the Cauvery delta region of Thanjavur, Tiruvarur,
Nagapattinam and Tiruchi districts, and in Cuddalore,
Villupuram and Kancheepuram districts, farmers are
angry that rivers, canals, lakes and ponds have not been
desilted or deweeded. In Thinniam village in Lalgudi
constituency, M. Puratchidasan, a farmer, complained
that irrigation canals had been deliberately lled up and
converted into agricultural land. In Sukumbaar village in
Thiruvaiyaru constituency, L. Kalyanasundaram is upset
that the AIADMK government has not desilted irrigation
27

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

Flood of troubles
The AIADMK may nd the going tough in the ood-affected
constituencies in Tiruvallur, Chennai, Cuddalore, Kancheepuram
and Villupuram districts. B Y R . K . R A D H A K R I S H N A N
and after the oods, and in the run-up to the Assembly
elections, said this was not so. People in the ood-affected districts were reduced to begging for food and water,
images that refuse to fade away from the memory of the
ood victims.
How can I forget the stench that remained for
months in my house? asks Mohan Babu, a resident of
Khuber Nagar in Madipakkam, a suburb of Chennai.
We cleaned the house every day for 10 days. But when we
came back the next day, the stench would still be there.
Our apartment was totally damaged, he said. It took him
a few months of cleaning and repair works to make the
house liveable. Thousands of families in Chennai and
other districts faced similar hardships.
The government did expedite the process of depos-

IT is not often that death stares a reasonably healthy


person in the face in Tamil Nadu. This southern State has
a higher life expectancy at birth than most other States; it
is one of the better governed States and has a low crime
rate; and it offers multiple livelihood options. But the
oods of November/December 2015 changed all that.
The oods came in a ash with next to no warning.
Every river in the State swelled like never before. In
Chennai, the Adyar, the Cooum and the Kosasthalaiyar
overowed, 35 major lakes breached their banks in and
around the city, and vast areas remained inundated for
almost a week. Frontline has recorded in detail the reasons for the ooding and the All India Anna Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) governments apathy
during the period (December 25, 2015, and January 8,
2016). According to the government, 470 people were
killed, nearly one lakh livestock perished, and crops in
over 3.83 lakh hectares were damaged.
In a statement made in January, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa said that over 3.47 lakh hectares of agricultural
crops and 35,471 hectares of horticultural crops had
suffered damage. As many as 30.42 lakh families had
suffered partial or complete damage to their dwelling
units. The reinsurance broker Aon Beneld assessed the
economic losses at $3 billion.
Jayalalithaa refused to admit that there was any fault
on the part of the government. She said in the statement
that although her government was prepared for the monsoon, the unprecedented downpour had resulted in
large-scale damage, prompting the Centre to declare the
oods as a Calamity of Severe Nature. State and Central government agencies, apart from the armed forces,
were quickly pressed into service for relief and rehabilitation efforts and essentials and medical services were
promptly delivered, she said,
But many people this correspondent spoke to during
DWE L L I N G S O F more than 600 families were demolished

at Surya Nagar in Kotturpuram, Chennai, on February 18,


after the oods. Several families have moved into houses
allotted by the Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board at
Perumbakkam.
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

28

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

from their place of residence) to their respective schools,


but because of the responsibility involved, the move had
to be dropped: The NGO said it could organise transport
until the end of the academic year, but wanted someone
to take the responsibility for any eventuality during the
commute. The school, obviously, was not in a position to
offer any guarantee on this or any other aspect of reaching the students to the school.
The childrens parents, almost all of them daily wage
earners, have to pay for their transport to their workplace
in the upmarket area of Kotturpuram. The families of
some 80 schoolchildren of the Kottur Chennai High
School and primary schools run by the Chennai Corporation used to live in Surya Nagar, a slum at the end of
Ranjith Road abutting the Adyar. After the oods, most
of the residents of Surya Nagar and all the residents of
Chitra Nagar were summarily evicted and moved to Perumbakkam and its neighbourhood.
A few officials who were part of the rehabilitation
effort in Perumbakkam said there was a government
school in the vicinity. Enquiries revealed that the school
was barely functional, did not have enough teachers, and
functioned out of a building that was not t for a school.
We prefer coming here, one of the pupils of the
Kottur Chennai High School told this correspondent. For
a government-run school, the facilities at this modest
school is beyond imagination. It boasts a computer centre, offers classical dance and music classes, gives structured sports and games coaching, all in collaboration
with the local community, NGOs and dedicated individuals. The interest shown by the school administration to
enable these facilities needs mention. The school also has
a breakfast programme supported by the trust that runs
the M.O.P Vaishnav College for Women in the city. The
AIADMK manifesto has promised breakfast for pupils of
government-run schools.
But neither this Class IX pupil, nor the bunch of
children making the difficult commute every day from
Perumbakkam and the neighbouring settlements to Kottupuram are sure if they will continue in the school next
year. My parents say its too expensive to come here every
day, the child said.
The school principal, Kalpana Kannan, is condent
that at least 30 of them will come back next year. Since
they moved to the Perumbakkam settlement, there is a
high rate of absenteeism. Most of the children are not
able follow the 8:50 a.m. deadline for entry into the
school. In short, the oods have wiped out the Chennai
Corporations measures to maintain high attendance in
this school. Schools in other affected districts have similar stories of dropouts and absenteeism.
While residents of Chitra Nagar and parts of Surya
Nagar were forced to vacate, those residing in another
part of Surya Nagar managed to avoid eviction. With the
support of the NGO Pennurimai Iyakkam, representatives of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), and
entrepreneur and non-resident Indian R. Sriram, they
managed to get a stay order against their eviction. On
February 12, Justice R. Subbiah restrained the Tamil

S.R. RAGHUNATHAN

iting a cash compensation of Rs.5,000 into about 14 lakh


bank accounts, but more than double that number received no assistance.
Evidently, the AIADMK will nd the going tough in
the ood-affected areas: 10 constituencies in Tiruvallur
district, 16 in Chennai district, 11 in Kancheepuram district, nine in Cuddalore district and the constituencies
abutting the coast in Villupuram district.
The rehabilitation process was replete with largescale excesses on the part of officials, whose only aim was
to evict the people who inhabited the slums that dot the
courses of the rivers in Chennai.
The families of Anjali, Deepak, Jana, Sasikumar and
36 other schoolchildren were evicted from their dwelling
units in Kotturpuram, one of the worst-affected areas in
the December oods on the banks of the Adyar in the city,
to Perumbakkam, 20 kilometres away. Today the children set out early in the morning to commute by public
transport to the Chennai High School in Kotturpuram.
Some of them walk for two kilometres from Perumbakkam to Chennais information technology highway, Rajiv
Gandhi Salai, to board a local bus which takes them to
Tidel Park, from there they take the Mass Rapid Transport System (MRTS) train to reach the Greenways Road
station, from where they walk to their school. The journey costs Rs.40 both ways. Thankfully, the students need
not pay for the commute as a Government Order issued
after the oods said that the schoolchildren merely had to
be in their uniform to avail themselves of a free ride in the
State transport bus. But they have to pay for the train
ride. There was an attempt to involve a non-governmental organisation to transport students (dislocated

29

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

K.V. SRINIVASAN

system for Chennai, to mostly reNadu Slum Clearance Board, the


place the Metro Rail. But to date, it
Chennai Corporation, the Commisis yet to nd any competent consioner for Land Administration, the
tractor to implement its proposal.
Chennai Collector and the Public
The Maduravoyal elevated corWorks Department, their man,
ridor, which was conceived of in
agents, servants and persons acting
2008 to decongest the city of truck
under them from forcibly evicting
traffic proceeding to and from the
the petitioners residing at Surya NaChennai port, is still mired in litigar, Kottur, Chennai 600 085
gation: this time around, the litiga(WMP 3320/2016) pending disposnt is not a bunch of affected people
al of this writ petition (WP 3995/
but the State government. T.K.S.
2016) respectively.
Elangovan, a former Member of
The writ petition had prayed for
Parliament and the DMKs orgaregularisation of the slum. Sriram
nisation secretary, said: This is a
said: Surya Nagar association got a
typical example of how the
court order for regularisation of
AIADMK government has functheir stay in their place. This is an
tioned over the past ve years. Any
unprecedented achievement. The
scheme planned and taken up for
government authorities are dragimplementation by Kalaignar
ging the case by getting the hearings
C H I LD REN casting their votes to elect
[DMK supremo and former Chief
postponed. As of now, the residents
the school pupil leader and the
Minister M. Karunanidhi] has
are not being disturbed. There are
assistant leader at the Chennai High
been shelved by her. There has
about 250 families, who remained to
School in Kotturpuram in August 2014.
been no infrastructure developstay and ght.
Sriram credited the local youth, who were not de- ment in Tamil Nadu in these past ve years. Leaders of
terred by the odds of approaching an English-speaking opposition parties point to a long list of projects that were
judiciary. The youths problem was simple: If they move, promised but not taken up for implementation by the
their livelihood will not move with them. They still will AIADMK.
Neither Jayalalithaa nor the AIADMKs campaign
have to come back to Kotturpuram for work. Spending
money to commute 20 km every day was not a good managers are deterred by criticism that she did precious
little by way of infrastructure development in the past ve
option.
Jayalalithaa is contesting the elections from one such years. They believe that the AIADMKs manifesto will be
ood-affected constituency, R.K. Nagar. After the rst a game changer. The schemes that we have announced
deluge in November 2015, she went around the constitu- in the manifesto, no party can even dream of, claimed
ency, from where she was elected last year with an un- Thoothukkudi Selvam, a party spokesperson. Asked why
precedented margin, and addressed the distressed the projects in and around Chennai could not be implepeople as my dear voters. But after the second oods in mented, he said some projects had litigation issues, while
December, when she did not visit the constituency, sto- in the case of a few others, the cooperation of the Central
government was not forthcoming.
ries about her being ill started making the rounds.
Jayalalithaa herself did not seem to be bothered
But Jayalalithaa may not have to put up a big ght.
She has two decent opponents in Shimla Muthuchozhan, about the criticism: Ungal anbulla amma pesugiren
who draws support from her party (Dravida Munnetra (Your dear mother is speaking], begins an FM radio
Kazhagam) and the fact that she is a local person, and the advertisement, which then lists, in her voice, the issues in
Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK) candidate V. Va- Tamil Nadu when she took over and what she did to bring
santhi Devi, a former Vice-Chancellor and an academic about development in all sectors in the State. At election
of high standing. Jayalalithaas opponents are expected rallies in Dharmapuri, Vriddhachalam and a few other
to split the anti-Jayalalithaa votes, resulting in an places, she sought to emphasise that she is the mother
AIADMK victory. AIADMK candidates in other ood- and that the people of Tamil Nadu are her children:
Only a mother can understand the needs of her chilaffected constituencies may not be as lucky.
dren, she said. What she said subsequently is not that
important. Jayalalithaa is seeking to change the disNO INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
Across Chennai and the ood-affected districts, there has course in the elections by occupying the pedestal of a
been no major infrastructure development in the past mother, as the one that has all the voters as her children.
ve years. The Metro Rail work, which was initially Do you want another mother? asked Kanimozhi, the
stalled soon after the AIADMK came to power in 2011, is DMKs parliamentary party leader, and one of the three
wobbling along; only a 10-km stretch is open since main campaigners of the party, at an election rally. On
mid-2015. The Planning Commission approved the pro- hearing a resounding no from the crowd, she said:
ject in April 2008 and tenders were oated in January Then tell her [Jayalalithaa] these are not polls to elect a

2009. The Jayalalithaa government promised a monorail mother.


FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

30

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

The M factor
The use of money to buy votes is expected to signicantly inuence the
result of the Assembly elections in Tamil Nadu, despite the Election
Commissions best efforts to thwart the practice. B Y I L A N G O V A N R A J A S E K A R A N
was a fake ambulance with a fake registration number.
The team seized 12 currency-counting machines,
empty corrugated boxes and rubber bands (possibly to
bundle the cash), envelopes and also copies of electoral
rolls in the godown. Apart from the fake ambulance, the
godown had four high-end cars, a tractor and an SUV
with the word G indicating government. The seized
articles, according to a police officer, were handed over to
the Velayuthampalayam police station.
The ECI alerted the Investigation Directorate of the
Income Tax Department, which in turn dispatched a
team of senior officers to carry out raids on the house of
the businessman in question, identied by now as C.P.
Anbunathan, 46, a nancier-cum-businessman who is
also claimed to wield considerable clout with politicians
of all parties, especially the ruling All India Anna Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK).
The I-T team reportedly unearthed Rs.4.7 crore and
several documents from Anbunathans house. We seized

ON April 22, Vandita Pandey, the Superintendent of


Police (S.P.) of Karur, a town in Tamil Nadu known for its
heavy vehicle body building industry, received condential information from the Office of the Chief Electoral
Officer that huge sums of money were hoarded on the
premises of a highly inuential businessman.
The operation that followed was so secretive that
even top officials of Karur districts revenue administration were kept in the dark. A police team and a multidisciplinary ying squad of the Election Commission of
India (ECI) rushed to Ayyampalayam, a Karur suburb,
where the businessmans house and a godown are located. Their initial raid yielded cash to the tune of Rs.10.33
lakh stashed inside a vehicle parked in the godown.
But what the raiders saw on the premises other than
the cash bundles shocked them. An ambulance parked
inside the godown had the insignia of the Union government and stickers of National Rural Health Mission
(NRHM) pasted on all sides. Inquiries revealed that it

TH E PA R K I N G S H E D at Ayyampalayam in Karur district from where election officials seized Rs.10.33 lakh on April 22.
31

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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State, is carrying out searches


frequently even at the district
level with IRS [Indian Revenue Service] officers in charge
of operations. The focus is to
unearth money waiting to be
distributed to voters.

A dependable
strategy
BY ILANGOVAN RAJASEKARAN

THE Chief Electoral Officer of Tamil Nadu, Rajesh


Lakhoni, was busy when Frontline met him in his office
at Fort St. George in Chennai. Despite the stream of
visitors and the constant ringing of his phones, the
suave officer, who is in charge of conducting the massive exercise of the 2016 Assembly elections in which
over ve crore people will vote, elded even some of the
embarrassing questions with ease. He accepted that
money had emerged as a menace in the elections and
explained in detail how the Election Commission was
dealing with it. Excerpts:
The Election Commission, it seems, is struggling hard
to arrest the money ow in the Assembly elections in
Tamil Nadu. Do you think that the menace can be
eradicated?
Money is a serious issue not only in Tamil Nadu. We
have evolved a dependable strategy to curb its ow this
time. Initially, the ECI had to depend totally on State
resources even at micro perspective levels. We were not
able to stem its ow totally. We were helpless. But after
the seizure of hawala money in the Bihar elections, the
ECI decided to involve the Enforcement Directorate of
the Income Tax Department for the purpose in all
States that are going to the polls this time. It has been
effective so far.
Are you condent?
Yes. I am. For this poll, we have formed teams
comprising both State and Central government employees so that there is no room for any sort of manoeuvrability and unethical practices. Besides, the Income
Tax is activating its own intelligence network across the

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

Political parties invariably accuse the Chief Electoral


Officer of showing a partisan attitude. You are also
facing such problems.
Let it be. They have to understand that we in the ECI
have put in place a system that will eliminate all such
misgivings. I am just a facilitator sitting in a room and
monitoring the operation. The IT Department and other teams of enforcement are in the eld. The details of
IT raids, seizures, etc., if any, and other related materials will be directly intimated to the ECI with only a copy
marked to the Chief Electoral Officer. If the seizures are
of small denominations, the officials of the squads can
verify suo motu and after receiving supporting documents can release the same within 24 hours. This move
has been initiated to protect genuine people from harassment. Where is the room for accusing me of bias
here?

advance bail. On May 4, he received conditional bail. In


the petition, he denied the charges and blamed his business rivals for implicating him on false charges. He said
he had nothing to do with the fake ambulance and the
cash seized. He said he was a trustee of a school and a
regular income tax assesee. The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) has sought an inquiry into the case by the
Central Bureau of Investion (CBI).
On April 24, two days after the Karur raid, a search by
I-T sleuths and ECI teams in a posh apartment at a
high-rise in Egmore in Chennai yielded cash to the tune

the money and asked him [Anbunathan] to appear before us with supportive documents linking to the seizures. He is yet to appear, said a senior I-T officer in
Chennai on April 30. Anbunathan approached the Karur
court on April 28 seeking bail, but his plea was rejected.
In the meantime, the Velayuthampalayam police registered cases against Anbunathan under Sections 420
and 484 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) read with Section
5 of The Emblems and Names (Prevention and Improper
Use) Act, 1950. On May 3, Anbunathan led a petition
before the Madras High Court Bench at Madurai seeking
FRONTLINE .

It is a massive endeavour
involving a massive
workforce. The disbursement
of the money to smaller nodal
points by the parties, it is
R A J E S H LAKHON I ,
Chief Electoral Officer. claimed, is almost
accomplished. Everyone
speaks about cash for vote.
We have set in motion a strong mechanism with
which even rural pockets are brought under our scanner. We have formed village youth vigilance committees
in 16,000 villages in Tamil Nadu. If a consignment of
unsolicited money is sighted anywhere, the same will be
intimated to us, which in turn will be conveyed to the
flying squads and multi-disciplinary committees
through short messaging services. The exercise is transparent since every member in the squad would receive
the SMS about the location to be raided, thus eliminating even a strand of suspicion in the whole operation.
M. VEDHAN

Interview with Rajesh Lakhoni,


Chief Electoral Officer of Tamil Nadu.

32

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

2011 Assembly elections. It is just the tip of the iceberg,


said N. Gopalaswami, former CEC. Rajesh Lakhoni, Tamil Nadu Chief Electoral Officer, said: We still have a
crucial phase, two days before the actual polling date
[May 16], when widespread distribution of cash among
voters is expected.
Cash alone is not what is on offer. Packets of biriyani,
tokens for household articles, bundles of sarees, dhotis
and cotton caps, silver anklets, mobile top-ups, and so on
are on the list of things that are being used to entice
voters. The election atmosphere is rife with allegations
that police and government vehicles are being used to
transport money.
Indeed, journalists in the eld are well aware of the
widespread prevalence of the M (money) factor in the
elections. The use of the expression Thirumangalam
formula became popular during the Assembly byelection in Thirumangalam, Madurai district, in January
2009, referring to the use of cash to woo voters. But the
practice of bribing voters started with the byelection in
Sathankulam in Tuticorin district in February 2003.
Sarees and utensils, apart from cash, were distributed,
mainly among rural people. The AIADMK, which won
the constituency defeating its nearest Congress rival, was
in power.
The DMK was in power when the practice was apparently perfected in the Thirumangalam byelection, which
recorded an unprecedented 90 per cent polling. The
DMK candidate breezed through amid allegations that
votes had been bought. Cash was slipped through doors
and distributed with morning newspapers. Gopalaswami
called it a shame on democracy. Though clinching evidence could not be obtained, poll-watchers claimed that
the DMK and the AIADMK would have spent at least
Rs.150 crore between them to buy votes in that byelection. The lions share allegedly came from the DMK.
With that election, the M factor has become entrenched in the State. One analyst said: The urge to
remain in power that is ingrained in the political culture
of the two major Dravidian parties, the DMK and the
AIADMK, is the underlying reason for the desperate and
unethical manoeuvres they make in every election. And
money comes into play to provide the crucial edge in close
battles. Thus, it has become a vicious circle with money
fetching power and power bringing money in a State
where identity politics is closely intertwined with Dravidian politics. The M factor has percolated down to the
last voter in remote rural habitations.
Today the ECI is constrained to deploy considerable
manpower and expertise to thwart election bribing. A
60-year-old farm worker near Gingee in Villupuram district told Frontline that the entire hamlet, with 1,500
votes, had chosen to vote for the AIADMK in the last
general elections since they gave Rs.200 per vote. This
time, too, the village residents, the majority being Vanniyars, a Most Backward Class community, are waiting for
election payouts. If the same rates apply, then a family of
ve will get Rs.1,000, apparently equal to two days wages
requiring hard labour under the scorching sun. The farm

How will you check last-minute disbursal?


The money distribution will be made extremely
difficult this time. We will be going after those who
are stashing money for election purposes. In the
two days prior to the polling date we will launch a
series of multi-disciplinary actions to curb distribution. It is not going to be easy for those who
harbour hopes of buying votes.
You are reaching out to the people in a big way
this time. The objective of 100 per cent voting
looks encouraging and evolving. But will it be
possible to achieve this magic gure?
Yes. It can be. Besides 100 per cent voting, we
also will ensure ethical voting. Innovative awareness campaigns such as My vote is not for sale are
already catching on. Our video coverage on this
subject has become an instant hit among voters,
especially among those who are in the age group of
18 to 29, who form a staggering 23 per cent of the
electorate in Tamil Nadu. You cannot buy me is
one of the few other catchy slogans that have
caught attention. The whole process has been automated. A voter can use his mobile phone to know
about the location of the booth, serial number of
his vote, the status of the queue at the polling
booth, and so on. We have created an application
for IPhone, Android and Windows.
Can you ensure free and fair polls?
This time no humans, only humanoids operate
the entire exercise. The two IT majors, Income Tax
and Information Technology, will usher in a new
era in elections in this part of the country. The
noose has been tightened to ensure a fair poll as we
give paramount importance to the neutrality of
elections. We are extremely condent of ensuring
an election free of all evil inuences.
Do you have plans to enforce Section 144 of the
Cr. PC during the elections?
No. [The ECI enforced Section 144 during the
last parliamentary elections, which created a controversy.] Sensitive booths have been identied for
which additional security will be provided.

of Rs.4.72 crore. The at was occupied by a few young


men said to be relatives of a politician from Thanjavur.
On April 25, the teams conscated Rs.3.40 crore in cash
and 245 gold coins from a private school in Krishnagiri,
and Rs.50 lakh from a bus coming from Madurai to
Chennai.
Cash seizures until May 6 amounted to a staggering
Rs.82 crore, the biggest haul among all the States participating in the current round of Assembly elections and
way beyond the Rs.25 crore seized from the State in the
last parliamentary elections and Rs.35.53 crore in the
33

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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That the ECI is taking a serious view of the problem is


evident in its recent decision to bring in cash seizures
during elections under the purview of the enforcement
agencies such as the Income Tax Department and the
Enforcement Directorate. The seizure of large amounts
of cash during the Bihar Assembly elections and in the
previous Assembly elections in Tamil Nadu spurred it
into taking a pro-active role to thwart the practice.
Accepting money to vote for a candidate is an offence
under Sections 171 B and E and 123 (1) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, and is punishable with
imprisonment of either description for a term that may
extend to one year, or a ne, or both. In many cases, with
no clinching evidence, both those who give and those who
take money get away with it. It is tough to prove that the
cash seized is meant for buying votes, though if a candidate is found purchasing votes, he or she could be disqualied and imprisoned for up to one year, a senior
officer said. Seizures being brought under the IT Act
could discourage widespread distribution, since to reclaim the money the party in question has to reveal its
sources. Thus huge sums that remain unclaimed have
been deposited with the Government Treasury, he
noted.
The problem came to the fore with renewed force
after Rs.19 crore, suspected to be money from hawala
operations, was seized during the 2015 Bihar Assembly
elections. The ECI deliberated with the Central Board of
Direct Taxes, a statutory authority that is responsible for
the administration of direct tax laws through the Income
Tax Department, to formulate a standard operating procedure to involve the investigation wing of the IT Department in election-related operations.
This yielded some results. The IT Act is inexible and
those who are on the wrong side of the law with dubious
transactions of money during elections are wary.
Through a circular to all Chief Electoral Officers dated
April 4, the ECI has re-issued the SOP for follow-up
action by the ying squads on receipt of complaints
relating to the storage of cash or other valuables on any
premises.
On receiving such complaints, the Complaint Monitoring Cell must inform the expenditure observer, who
in turn will alert the Income Tax Department. Neither
the expenditure observer nor the members of ying
squads should enter the premises before the arrival of the
IT team though surveillance can be maintained until its
arrival. Rajesh Lakhoni said: It has instilled a sort of fear
in the minds of those who bribe.
Many South Asian countries face this problem of
bribing during elections. The ECI, in association with the
International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), an intergovernmental body, unveiled
the New Delhi Declaration2015, on Political Finance
Regulation in South Asia. The declaration contained
guiding principles to be adopted to strengthen the mechanism of the regulation of political nance. In the current
elections, however, the ow of freebies and cash is expected to be a major factor in deciding the result.

worker said: After the elections, the winning political


party will offer koozhu [rice gruel] to the village temple, which will also be distributed to us.
Many feigned ignorance of the fact that accepting
cash to vote is illegal. The practice clearly inuences the
battle of the ballot, putting candidates and organisations
that cannot or do not pay at a serious disadvantage. It is
also claimed that oor panchayats (forums of village
elders) in many villages and hamlets, especially in the
southern districts, issue diktats to village residents to
cast their votes in favour of a particular political party
after taking over the responsibility of distributing cash
among voters. Liberal donations by candidates to village
temples are also part of the game.
NO LEVEL PLAYING FIELD

D. Ravikumar, a senior politician of the Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi who is contesting from the Vanur segment in the Villupuram district, said: How can you
expect us to ght the might of money? The VCK is part of
the Peoples Welfare Front, a rainbow coalition that includes the Desiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam, the
Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, the Tamil
Maanila Congress, the Communist Party of India and the
Communist Party of India (Marxist). Its aim is to provide
a credible alternative to the Dravidian giants that have
been alternately ruling since 1967.
While the bigger and richer parties buy votes with
money, the smaller players struggle to meet election
expenses. The VCKs candidate in the Kunnam segment,
Aloor Sha Navas, is crowdsourcing funds while Ravikumar has posted desperate appeals for funds on social
media. At least a minimum of Rs.50,000, which is a
conservative estimate, is needed to meet a days basic
expenses, such as providing water and food to volunteers,
printing and distributing pamphlets, buying fuel for vehicles, etc. We will not be able to spend half of even the
ECI-permitted amount of Rs.28 lakh per constituency
for the elections, Ravikumar said. Only those who are
rich can contest. Where is the level playing eld here?
Gopalaswami told Frontline that the chances of having a level playing eld in elections were remote in the
near future unless an effective crackdown could stop
vote-buying. The sinister nexus between political funding and black money has to be ruthlessly eradicated. Can
you expect the ECI to exercise its limited powers to
control this serious menace whenever elections are
held? he asked.
The ECI, though, is doing its best to ensure a level
playing eld. It has been implementing a slew of stringent measures to neutralise the money factor. Rajesh
Lakhoni said, As the bad money seeps into the deep rural
pockets, we have taken the initiative of roping in about
22,000 rural youth to alert us on suspicious transactions.
We are getting positive results. Also, for the rst time, we
have deployed Income Tax officials in all districts to
monitor cash movement and strengthened ying and
static squads, which include officials from Central agencies (see interview).
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

34

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Battle for Puducherry

S.S. KUMAR

At an election rally in Puducherry on April 25,


ALTHOUGH Tamil Nadu and the Union Territory of
Puducherry are geographically and linguistically close AIADMK general secretary and Tamil Nadu Chief
to each other, they are poles apart in politics. With the Minister Jayalalithaa said the AINRC is worse than
Assembly elections round the corner (the elections are the Congress. The party which came out of the Connormally held on the same day in Tamil Nadu and gress will only be like that, she said. (Rangasamy
Puducherry), the distinction has become even more broke away from the Congress in 2011 to form the
glaring. If the political parties in Tamil Nadu have made AINRC.) For Jayalalithaa, if the Congress is an eneprohibition a central issue, those in Puducherry avoid my, the AINRC is a traitor. She said: Not only did
making it an issue. Caste-based politics is also not Rangasamy bury coalition dharma but he has pushed
practised in the Union Territory. However hard the Puducherry into the quicksands. Puducherry saw no
Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK), which claims to repre- development during his rule. The law and order sitsent the interests of Vanniyars in Tamil Nadu, may try uation became laughable.
Rangasamy, who began his campaign on May 4,
to get a foothold in Puducherry, voters there have coldshouldered it despite Vanniyars forming the majority of retorted that the Tamil Nadu government had not
responded to Puducherrys request for
the population.
land to expand its airport. Puducherry
The Union Territory will witness a
can prosper only if it gets the required
multi-cornered contest for the 30 Asland. But the intention of Jayalalithaa is
sembly seats on May 16. The constituotherwise. People can make their own
encies include Yanam on the Andhra
conclusions as to who is a traitor, he
Pradesh coast, Mahe on the Kerala coast,
said.
and ve constituencies in Karaikal,
There appears to be general dissatiswhich is surrounded by Tamil Nadu. The
faction with the performance of the
ruling All India N. Rangasamy Congress
Rangasamy government. Traders and
(AINRC) and the All India Anna Dravibusinessmen said they were unhappy
da Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) are
with the governments decisions to incontesting independently this time. The
crease the excise duty on liquor and the
PMK is contesting in 28 seats. The elecvalue-added tax. Industries left the
toral alliance formed by the Congress C H I EF M I N I S TE R
Union Territory because tax holidays
and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam N. Rangasamy.
had come to an end, leading to loss of
(DMK) for Tamil Nadu has been extended to Puducherry. While the Congress is contesting in jobs. No development has taken place here. Rang21 constituencies, the DMK has elded its candidates in asamy says he will encourage only pollution-free and
nine. Some of the constituents of the Desiya Murpokku non-water-consuming industries. He has not created
Dravida Kazhagam (DMDK)-led Peoples Welfare employment opportunities, complained a young
Front (PWF) alliance of Tamil Nadu are also in the businessman. The Union Territory has not even set
fraythe Communist Party of India (CPI) in eight con- up information technology parks. Informed sources
stituencies, the Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK) said the nancial position of the government is poor.
in seven, and the Communist Party of India (Marxist) The previous United Progressive Alliance governand the Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam ment at the Centre was not generous with its budget(MDMK) in four each. The DMDK will test its fortunes ary allocations because Rangasamy walked out of the
in six constituencies. One seat has been allotted to the Congress to form the AINRC, a businessman said.
Revolutionary Socialist Party of India. The Bharatiya The Chief Minister also did not lobby with the Centre
for increased allocation. The Centre also cut grants to
Janata Party is trying its luck as well.
The AIADMK is keen to come to power in order to Puducherry, and as a result, the government has
teach Chief Minister N. Rangasamy a lesson as he kept accumulated a debt of Rs.6,000 crore.
The AIADMK has favoured three defectors, P.
it out of power in 2011. The AINRC and the AIADMK
had contested as allies in that election and agreed to Kannan of the Congress, Vaiyapuri Manikandan of
share power if the alliance won at the hustings. The the AINRC, and V.M.C. Sivakumar, with the party
AINRC won 15 of the 17 seats it contested and the ticket. A. Namasivayam, president of the Pradesh
AIADMK won ve of 10. Their allies, the CPI(M), the Congress Committee, is likely to be in the race for
CPI and the DMDK, drew a blank. Rangasamy took the chief ministership if the Congress-DMK alliance is
help of an independent legislator, V.M.C. Sivakumar, voted to power.
T.S. Subramanian
and went on to form the government.

35

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

Nervous phase

ASHOKE CHAKRABARTY

Unkept promises and the terror unleashed by the Trinamool Congress


come back to haunt Mamata Banerjee in the last phases of the
Assembly elections in West Bengal. B Y S U H R I D S A N K A R C H A T T O P A D H Y A Y

ON April 24, Susoma Bhoumick, 76, along with her


son Somnath, daughters Priti and Swati, and granddaughter Sohini, returned to their home at Garanberia
village in Nandigram, escorted by the police following the
orders of the Election Commission of India. She looked
bewildered as she gazed at what remained of the house
where she and her family had once lived. It used to be a
relatively prosperous establishment, but today it has
been reduced to a pile of rubble. Susoma Bhoumick held
a picture of her late husband, Nishikanta, in her frail
hands. Nishikanta died in misery last year, in exile from
his own village. The family had ed for safety six years ago
following a brutal attack by alleged supporters of the
Trinamool Congress.
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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CHI E F M I N I S TE R Mamata Banerjee during the last lap of

the Trinamool Congress campaign before the fth phase


of Assembly elections in the State on April 30.
Nandigram in West Bengals Purbo Medinipur district turned into a battleground for more than two years
in the wake of the death of 14 villagers in police ring on
March 14, 2007. The village residents were staging a
protest against reported plans to acquire land in the
region to set up an industrial chemical hub. The movement snowballed into a political battle, which saw the
then ruling Communist Party of India (Marxist)-led Left
Front lose control of the region and the revival of Mamata
Banerjee and her Trinamool Congress from political ob36

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Oblivious to the tragedy that had befallen the family,


seven-year-old Sohini was plucking owers in front of the
ruined house. The girl said: Is it possible to stay in this
place? My grandfather always said he wanted to come
back here. Although she is too young to remember what
happened on that afternoon, she bears the scars. Her
legs hurt even now because of the force with which they
threw her on the ground, Priti said. The family knows
that it is not safe to live in the village.
Somnath, who works in a private bank, said: We will
wait and see what happens in the elections, and then
decide whether to stay or leave.
Today peace may have returned to Nandigram, and
development may have changed the face of the once
sleepy, green shing villages, but fear continues to stalk
the region. Nobody in Garanberia was even willing to
point out where Susoma Bhoumicks house stood. In the
time of elections, there was no sign of the existence of an
opposition in the region. Trinamool Congress ags uttered in the villages and Trinamool graffiti adorned the
walls of the houses.
There are people who support the opposition here,
but they do not come out in the open to canvass for their
parties, Sheik Supian, an inuential Trinamool Congress leader of Nandigram, told Frontline. According to
him, it is not fear that kept them from openly supporting
the opposition. Let them show us one complaint lodged
by the CPI(M) or the Bharatiya Janata Party [BJP]
against us, he said, denying the accusation that most
people are too afraid to even go to the police station.
They are lying. The fact is that people do not support the
CPI(M), nor does the CPI(M) have any workers or leaders here. Is the Trinamool Congress expected to provide
them with workers for electioneering? he said.
Since the 2008 panchayat elections, the Trinamool
Congress has been the single most powerful political
force in Purbo Medinipur. In the 2011 Assembly elections, the party, in alliance with the Congress, won all the
16 seats, and in 2014, it won both the Lok Sabha seats in
the district. Moreover, in the 2014 elections, it had an
insurmountable lead in all the Assembly segments, even
after adding up the votes polled by the CPI(M) and the
Congress individually. The electoral tie-up between the
Left parties and the Congress in this election may not
have an impact here, as the Congress vote share is negligible in most of the constituencies.
In the sixth and nal phase of Assembly elections on
May 5, when Purbo Medinipur went to the polls, the
Trinamool Congress main concern was not the opposition parties, but itself. A senior leader of the party admitted that faction ghts were rife in practically all the
constituencies of the district. Matters were resolved
when the Adhikari family (the unchallenged political
powerhouse of the region) intervened days before the
elections began in the State. Sisir Adhikari and Suvendu
Adhikari represent Kanthi and Tamluk Lok Sabha constituencies respectively. Suvendu Adhikari, who is contesting from the Nandigram Assembly constituency, is
one of the top Trinamool Congress leaders who were

SUHRID SHANKAR CHATTOPADYAY

scurity. The Trinamool Congress-backed Bhumi Uchhed


Pratirodh (Land Eviction Resistance) Committee
(BUPC), an informal alliance forged between naxalites,
the Socialist Unity Centre of India (SUCI) and the Jamiat
Ulema-e-Hind, practically established a muktanchal
(liberated zone in which the State administration and the
police were not allowed to function) and drove out supporters of the CPI(M).
Susoma Bhoumicks family recalled the horror of that
afternoon when suspected Trinamool Congress activists
from the village attacked their house for refusing to be
part of the partys movement.
Priti said: They tied up my aged parents and beat
them. They dashed my head against the ground until I fell
unconscious; they did not even spare my one-year old
daughter whom they hurled on to a pile of stone chips.
The family ed with the clothes on their backs and just
Rs.30. The miscreants looted or destroyed everything
they had.
Susoma Bhoumick said: The home that I lovingly
built since entering the house as a 14-year-old bride is
completely gone.

SU SO M A B H O UMI C K , who returned to what remains of

her house at Garanberia village in Nandigram, with a


picture of her late husband.
37

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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margin increased to 34,000, and in the 2014 Lok Sabha


elections, even with the BJP registering an unprecedented surge in its votes, Singur still gave the Trinamool
Congress a lead of over 30,000. Mamata Banerjee has
not campaigned in Singur for this election. Her reluctance to visit the electorate that has remained most loyal
to her is clearly a sign of her unease at the prospect of
facing them, particularly after not being able to full her
end of the bargain.
However, Rabindranath Bhattacharya is one of the
few Trinamool Congress leaders who is not dependent on
the Mamata factor for winning the election. The respect
he commands in the region cuts across party lines. We
want industry in Singur, and at the same time we will
protect the interest of the farmers, he told Frontline. His
opponent, the CPI(M) heavyweight candidate Rabin
Deb, believes that the people of Singur are today overwhelmingly in favour of industry. All the voters I met
while campaigning urged us to ensure industrialisation
in the region if we won, he told Frontline.
In 2011, the Trinamool-Congress alliance won 16 of
the 18 Assembly seats in Hooghly, and in the 2014 Lok
Sabha elections, it had a lead in 16 Assembly segments.
Serampore and Champdani were the only seats in which
combined Left and Congress votes surpassed the Trinamool Congress vote. In Pandua and Goghat, the seats the
Left had won in 2011, the Trinamool Congress led.
The last three phases of the elections were in Mamata
Banerjees main strongholds: North 24 Paraganas (April
25, fourth phase), South 24 Paraganas and Hooghly
(April 30, fth phase), and Purbo Medinipur and Cooch
Behar (May 5, sixth phase).

caught accepting cash on camera in the sting operations


carried out by the news portal Narada News.
SINGUR

In West Bengal politics, Nandigram in Purbo Medinipur


and Singur in Hooghly district are more than just names
of Assembly constituencies. They are symbols of resistance to the previous Left Front government, which ruled
the State continuously for 34 years, and are inextricably
linked with Mamata Banerjees ascent to power. It was in
Singur that Mamata Banerjee led a prolonged and violent agitation on behalf of a small group of unwilling land
losers, whose land was acquired for the setting up of the
prestigious Tata Motors small car project. The agitation
forced Tata Motors to shift the project to Gujarat in
2008, and investment-starved West Bengals hope for
industrial revival was once again shattered. Five years
down the line, the hopes of the farmers to get back their
land, as promised by Mamata Banerjee, too have been
dashed.
Although the rst piece of legislation passed by Mamata Banerjee after assuming power in 2011 was the
Singur Land Rehabilitation and Development Act, which
provided for the return of land to the farmers who had
refused to accept the compensation package, her promise
has remained unfullled owing to legal hurdles. The
matter is pending in the Supreme Court
For 10 years, the farmers waited with their faith in
Mamata Banerjee intact. But with every passing year, a
bit of that faith is getting chipped away. Sullen stares and
acerbic replies are the usual responses of the local people
to queries from the media. Today, many of them regret
not having accepted the compensation package, for they
are left with neither land nor an alternative scope for
employment, which the establishment of the factory and
its ancillaries would have ensured.
The agitation in Singur may have been a catalyst for
paribartan (change) in West Bengal politics, but it also
gave Mamata Banerjee a reputation for being anti-industry, an image she is nding increasingly hard to
shrug off. Though Singur was instrumental for her political success, it has also become a symbol of one of her
biggest failures. One of the main thrusts of the CPI(M)Congress combines campaign has been reviving industry
in the State and Singur has been held up as one of the
most glaring examples of the Trinamool Congress governments perceived anti-industry image. If the Tata
Motors factory was allowed to come up, the scenario in
Singur would have been totally different. We tried to do
that and will do it again, former Chief Minister and
CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee
said at a pre-election rally in Singur.
Singur was a stronghold of Mamata Banerjee even
when her political career was at its nadir. In 2006, when
the Trinamool Congress had just 30 MLAs in the 294seat Assembly and she was the partys lone MP, Rabindranath Bhattacharya, or Mastermoshai (schoolmaster) as he was affectionately called, won in Singur
with a margin of 1,700 votes. In 2011, the partys victory
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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NORTH AND SOUTH 24 PARAGANAS

In the 2011 Assembly elections, in the 33 seats in


North 24 Paraganas and 31 seats in South 24 Paraganas,
the Trinamool Congress-led alliance won 28 and 27 seats
respectively. However, in this election, the ruling party
may nd the going tough in these strongholds, particularly in the light of the Left-Congress tie-up and the
bitter inghting within the party. Moreover, as in
Hooghly, the BJPs performance will also be a key factor
in certain constituencies.
At least in 10 seats in South 24 Paraganas, including
Basanti, Kultali and Bhangore, which the Left Front had
won in 2011, the ght may be a close one. Although the
Trinamool Congress registered a huge lead over its rivals
in the Bhangore Assembly segment in 2014, Mamata
Banerjees decision to eld former CPI(M) Minister Abdur Rezzak Mollah, who joined the Trinamool Congress
just before the election dates were announced, caused
consternation among party workers. The long-standing
feud between Rezzak Mollah and the controversial Trinamool strongman of the region, Arabul Islam, could not
be kept in check even on polling day. Men allegedly
belonging to the Arabul Islam camp reportedly attacked
Mollahs supporters. This is expected to hamper the prospects of the Trinamool Congress in Bhangore. It is
important to note that the district was among the rst to
38

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

SUHRID SHANKAR CHATTOPADYAY

come under Trinamool Congress rule after the 2008 ments made by senior Trinamool Congress leaders which
panchayat elections, and there is a possibility of an anti- served to damage the image and credibility of the party.
incumbency factor working against the ruling party here. These factors compelled Mamata Banerjee to increasingNorth 24 Paraganas has thrown up an interesting ly project herself, rather than the partys candidates, a
parallel in the Basirhat Uttar and Basirhat Dakshin seats. move that is interpreted as a desperate effort to cling to
The Trinamool Congress wrested the Basirhat Uttar seat, her voters.
The Chief Ministers actions and words started to
near the Bangladesh border, from the CPI(M) in a byelection in 2011 following the death of the incumbent betray her insecurity, which in turn had an effect on the
MLA. Although the ruling party maintained its lead in voters. In a last-ditch effort to salvage the situation, she
even started acknowledging the
this Assembly segment in the 2014
crimes committed by her party
election, the margin was greatly releaders. If I have done anything
duced. To add to the Trinamool
wrong, give me two slaps. If you tell
Congress woes, Raqul Islam Monme to, I will go and wash your utendal, one of the most inuential leadsils. But if you call me a thief, if you
ers of the party in the region, joined
spread lies, if you insult Bengal, it
the CPI(M) and was propped up
hurts, she said at a public rally
against the ruling party MLA,
before the fth phase of elections.
A.T.M. Abdullah. Mondals deparOn another occasion, she even
ture left the Trinamool Congress
railed against the State police apconsiderably weaker. He told Fronparently for doing their work proptline: The moment people realised
erly in ensuring free and fair
that I am the candidate of the jote
elections. The nervousness in the
[Left-Congress tie-up], their reacrank and le of the party is also
tion has been one of spontaneous
apparent as the whisper that began
delight and enthusiasm. The ideolbefore the electionsthat the inogy with which the Trinamool was
vincible Trinamool Congress may
set up is no longer present in the
losegot louder with every phase
party. It has now become a destrucof the elections.
tive party that hires goons to supThe dole politics of Mamata
press democracy and establish
RA F I Q U L I S LAM M ON D AL, former
Banerjee, guaranteed to bring elecdictatorship.
Trinamool Congress leader who is the
toral success, and the development
The CPI(M) won the Basirhat
CPI(M)s candidate in Basirhat Uttar.
work that has undoubtedly taken
Dakshin seat in 2011, but in the byplace in large parts of rural Bengal
election that took place following
the death of the sitting MLA, the BJP won it, its lone seat have been offset by the rule of terror perpetrated by
in the State, by a narrow margin. Riding on the crest of members of the ruling party. Even basic democratic
the pro-Narendra Modi wave, the BJP registered a strong rights, such as voting without the fear of violent repercuslead in the Assembly segment in the 2014 election. The sion, have been denied to citizens in many areas. Even
main contest here this time is between the BJP MLA, children have not been spared to keep dissent at bay, as
Shamik Bhattacharya, and former footballer Dipendu was evident in the post-election violence in different
Biswas of the Trinamool Congress. The jote has not parts of the State.
Nandigram is a prime example of the latent violence
really matured here, and my ght is to increase my
margin. The jote and the Trinamool Congress are ghting prevailing in the State, kept hidden under an illusion of
for the second place, Shamik Bhattacharya told peace and stability. Mamata Banerjee not only failed to
keep her promise of returning the land to the people of
Frontline.
Singur, but also failed to establish peace and ensure
security in the State. Polling has largely been free and fair
THE FEAR OF DEFEAT
With the ruling party not expected to do well in north under the surveillance of a huge contingent of Central
Bengal, and uncertainty looming over its prospects in forces. If the issue of suppression of democracy outBirbhum and Bardhaman, the partys performance in weighs the governments claims of development, then it
North and South 24 Paraganas is crucial for Mamata will be almost impossible for the Trinamool Congress to
Banerjee to return to power. Apart from facing a com- return to power. But if Mamata Banerjee emerges victobined opposition, the Trinamool Congress came under rious, she will have to make a serious attempt to solve the
further pressure following a series of incidents on the eve issues within her party and government which conjured
of the electionsthe Narada sting, the collapse of a yov- up the spectre of defeat even before the elections were
er in Kolkata in which 27 people lost their lives (which over. An unsmiling, ashen-faced Mamata Banerjee briefalso brought to the fore the nexus between local Trina- ly ashing the customary victory sign after casting her
mool Congress leaders and the subcontractors engaged vote and striding off, spoke more than all the rhetoric of

in the construction), and indiscreet comments and state- the opposition combine.
39

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

Uncertain state
In Kerala, the ruling UDF and the opposition LDF realise that this
round of election is like no other as the BJP seeks to break fresh
ground with new allies. B Y R . K R I S H N A K U M A R
against all UDF Ministers, the Leader of the Opposition
V.S. Achuthanandan has shown me mercy in this issue
as well. He has made me the chief minister in this
respect too. But the truth is that there is not a single case
against me. That is what I am going to declare before the
Election Commission when I le my nomination papers
tomorrow. If my declaration is wrong, my nomination
will be rejected. They are raising baseless allegations
because they have nothing else to say against the government. But our faith is in the thinking people of Kerala,
who hear and know everything, and see through such
games as the voters here at Aruvikkara did last year.
The Chief Ministers appeal was not the only one that
set the tone of the stretched-out election campaign in
Kerala. Right at the beginning, Achuthanandan of the
Communist Party of India (Marxist) asked voters in the
north Kerala constituency of Dharmadam in Kannur
district to present a proud victory for the partys former
State secretary, Pinarayi Vijayan. The rivalry in the party
between factions owing allegiance to the two leaders
dominated Kerala politics in the past two decades and
decided the fate of the Left Democratic Front (LDF) in all
elections held in the State during that period.
Two days before the Chief Ministers speech at Aruvikkara, Kerala waited eagerly to see what Pinarayi Vijayan would say as he campaigned at Malampuzha in
Palakkad district, where Achuthanadan is seeking another term. Pinarayi Vijayan said: Malampuzha is a
constituency that has stood strongly with the LDF forever. Many would like to try and do some kind of a miracle
here. There is such a talk in some inner circles. But people
take decisions on the basis of their experiences. There is
no need to introduce V.S. Achuthanandan to the people
of Malampuzha. They have accepted him like a member
of their family. His activities have gained much acceptance among society. There was also a note of caution at
the end of the speech: An election is a political battle. It
has its own ethics and principles. In this battle there
should be no laziness, negligence or overcondence. It
will all weaken our struggle. We should work without
mistakes and present a bright victory for V.S. by voting
for the hammer and sickle symbol.

PERHAPS one of the best campaign speeches in this


round of Assembly elections in Kerala was made by Chief
Minister Oommen Chandy at a nondescript junction in
Aruvikkara, a rural constituency bordering Thiruvananthapuram, the night before he led his nomination papers at Puthuppally, a constituency in central Kerala that
has been electing him to the State Assembly continuously
since 1970.
The Chief Minister had pointedly taken the detour to
Aruvikkara to thank the people there for giving the
ruling UDF [United Democratic Front] its last moraleboosting byelection victory in 2015 and seek support
once again for the young man whom they had elected
thenK. Sabarinath, son of former Speaker G. Karthikeyan, a popular local MLA who died in office.
How can I ever forget the voters of Aruvikkara? How
can the UDF ever forget you? No amount of praise would
be high enough for your political wisdom that ensured
our victory in that byelection when an entire army of
forces had hatched a conspiracy to bring the UDF to heel.
Was it just a political battle? All the forces that were
aggrieved at the government for closing down 730 liquor
bars were here in that election. Do you know how powerful they are? They were people who faced a loss of income
of over Rs.100 crore a day after the closure of the bars.
Then there were the raising of those controversies, solar
scandals, bar bribery allegations and what not. Forces
determined not to let the UDF move forward an inch
were at play in Aruvikkara in that byelection. But the
voters of Aruvikkara ignored and defeated all of them.
They made the two-line UDF campaign sloganGrow it
must, this State; Continue it must, this Governmentso
deep-rooted in Keralas psyche, he said.
The Chief Ministers brief speech was littered with
references to the development achievements of the UDF
government, and he said that right from the beginning
the opposition targeted him and demanded his resignation. Now, at the end of our ve-year term, when I seek
your blessings once again, when they nd that there is no
public ill-will towards this government, they are once
again resorting to false allegations. Now they say there
are 31 cases against me. Although there are allegations
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

40

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

S. GOPAKUMAR

It was a sign that the constituents of both the LDF,


widely tipped as favourites to form the next government,
and the UDF, the besieged ruling coalition, had recognised the lethal cost of inner-party fueds.

CHI E F M I N I S TE R OOM M E N CHAN D Y arrives in

RIVALRIES PUT ON HOLD

campaign, BJP president Amit Shah told an election rally


near Kochi that Kerala was not electing the UDF or the
LDF in the past 50 years, but was only voting out one to
make way for the other. In reply to Congress leader A.K.
Antonys statement asking the people to beware of the
BJPs hidden agenda as evident in the massive campaign involving even the Prime Minister, Amit Shah said
the BJP had only an open agenda and that is to throw
the UDF and the LDF into the Indian Ocean

Aruvikkara near Thiruvananthapuram to campaign for his


party candidate. The next day he led his nomination papers
at Puthuppally, which has elected only him since 1970.

Within the Congress, the group rivalries that came to the


fore during the selection of candidates have been effectively put to a halt by the party high command. In the
LDF, the pre-election harmony, especially between the
two top leaders of the CPI(M), has become its trump
card, which is a dramatic change from the situation that
had weakened the partys, and the Fronts, prospects in
earlier elections.
Both fronts know that this election is like no other in
the past, when the two regularly got the chance to replace
each other in government every ve years. The Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) has put an unusual focus on achieving
a breakthrough this time in the State Assembly, where it
has so far drawn a blank. At the behest of its central
leadership and the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh
(RSS), which is driving its campaign, the BJP has formed
a motley coalition of forces that are subtly aiming to
change its image as a party of just the upper caste segments in Kerala society.
On May 6, hours before Prime Minister Narendra
Modi arrived to launch an unprecedented three-day

BJP OFFENSIVE

The NDA-BJP alliance, as it likes to describe itself in


posters and hoardings, has elded candidates of four
partners, the newly formed Bharat Dharma Jana Sena
(BDJS, claiming its support from among the largest
backward caste group in the State, the Ezhavas, which
forms nearly a quarter of the States population), tribal
leader C.K. Janus Janathipathya Rashtriya Sena (JRS),
the Kerala Congress (P.C. Thomas group) and a splinter
group of the Janathipathya Samrakshana Samiti (JSS).
By embracing this fresh card of inclusive caste politics, which the two established fronts have so far cleverly
41

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

S.K. MOHAN

kept at a safe distance by accommodating caste interests


within their own peculiar coalition set-ups, the BJPs
central leadership hopes to create an exclusive opportunity for the party in Kerala. This time there is a third
alternative. So far, both fronts played vote-bank politics
and gave step-motherly treatment to the vast majority of
people, Amit Shah said.
The alliance has elded candidates in all 140 seats,
with the BJP itself contesting 97 seats, the BDJS 37, the
Kerala Congress (Thomas) four and the JSS (Rajan Babu) and the JRS one each. The new president of the State
BJP, Kummanam Rajasekharan, nominated directly by
the partys central leadership, declared that his partys
intention this time was to win sufficient number of seats
to rule Kerala. Even his party members do not give
credence to such a claim, though the BJP demonstrated
its best all-round performance in Kerala in the local body
elections held a few months ago (Frontline, November
27, 2015).
In this election, if history is any guide, the party can
only hope to increase its share of votes and perhaps win a
seat (or two) at best, if all its plans go well. But to win
anywhere in Kerala, even in constituencies such as Nemom or Manjeswaram, for example, where the party has
come second in elections held in the past, the BJP would
need the two established coalitions to play straight and
not join hands to defeat it with an intent, as they are often
accused of doing. The only other possibility, in the absence of sufficient breakthrough votes of its own, is for a
BJP candidate to get support from an opposing camp in
return for similar gestures in another constituency as
part of what is often alleged as an unholy alliance.
There is, however, a reason why the BJP and its allies
have caused the two established fronts some nervousness
this time. The UDF and the LDF have obtained more or
less an equal share of the votes in past elections, and the
question of who will rule the State is often decided on the
basis of a difference of one or two per cent, and by a small
section of voters who remain uncommitted until the very
end.
In the last Assembly elections, which saw the UDF
coming to power by a thin majority, the margin of victory
in eight constituencies was less than 1,000 votes; the
LDF won in three of them and the UDF in the others. In
18 constituencies the margin was between 1,000 and
5,000 votes; and in 40 constituencies it was between
5,000 and 10,000 votes. Therefore, the question uppermost in the minds of poll pundits and commoners
alike during the campaign this time is not about the
possibility of BJP opening its account, but which of the
two fronts will be affected the most by the increase in
spoiler votes gained by the BJP and its new alliance.
In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP, contesting
on its own, came rst in the votes polled in four Assembly
segments of the Thiruvananthapuram Lok Sabha constituency, including Nemom, Vattiyoorkavu, Kazhakkoottam and Thiruvananthapuram. (All four have more
than 70 per cent Hindu population, with Nemom, where
its veteran leader O. Rajagopal is contesting, having the

K.K. MUSTAFAH

CP I ( M )
VE TE R AN V.S.

Achuthanandan
(above)
campaigns in
Dharmadam in
Kannur district
for party
colleague
Pinarayi Vijayan,
and (left)
Pinarayi Vijayan
campaigns for
the former in
Malampuzha
constituency
in Palakkad
district.

highest share of 80 per cent Hindus.) It came second in


three other Assembly segmentsParassala (in Thiruvananthapuram), and Manjeswaram and Kasargod (both
in Kasargod district). In all these constituencies, and in
other places such as Kattakkada, Chengannur, Aranmula, Manalur, Palakkad, Tripunithura and Mavelikkara,
the BJP has made the ght extremely tricky for the ruling
and opposition fronts, narrowing further that thin line
between victory and defeat.
Similarly, in constituencies where the BDJS has eld42

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

the economic and social development of Ezhavas. But


since then the movement has been mired in corruption
scandals and its electoral power has remained a matter of
speculation.
An interesting aspect of the campaign, as it entered
its nal days, is the allegation by all three fronts of secret
deals by the other two in many constituencies to keep the
BJP out or, in some constituencies, to help the BJP win in
a few seats in return for keeping either the LDF or the
UDF out, as the case may be. However, the campaign by
LDF leaders in most constituencies seemed focussed
equally against the BJP and the UDF. In contrast, at least
in the initial stages, the State leaders of the Congress and
other UDF partners seemed more absorbed in attacking
the CPI(M) than the BJP. But with the BJP making
allegations against Congress leaders in Parliament about
the AgustaWestland helicopter deal, the focus of the
UDF campaign too turned against the BJP, with A.K.
Antony declaring emphatically that the UDFs aim is an
Assembly without the BJP.
Despite statements to the contrary by the BJPs national leaders, the partys campaign seemed targeted
more against the LDF than the UDF. Clearly, many see
the wisdom behind the BJPs hopes to keep the LDF out
of power for one more term, and its likely preference for a
UDF seemingly weakened by serious allegations of corruption and scandals that threaten the fortunes of many
of its prominent Ministers and MLAs in this election (See
Frontline issues dated April 15 and April 29).
There are a lot of undercurrents this time that assume
a strength of their own when seen from this perspective.
They include, for example, the eager crowds that
gather to hear V.S. Achuthanandan and Oommen Chandy, perhaps more than other State leaders; reports about
unprecedented ow of money into Kerala in the weeks
preceding the election; the stand of a number of small
parties, including rivals to the Muslim League, claiming
the allegiance of the Muslim mind; the varied positions of
the churches that often claim to speak for the 18 per cent
Christians in the State; the proclaimed equidistance of
the Nair Service Society (NSS), the social organisation of
the other major Hindu caste group, the Nairs; the political travails of parties such as the Kerala Congress (Mani)
and the RSP, which saw some of their prominent leaders
joining the LDF on the eve of the campaign and being
elded against their own candidates in their strongholds;
parties and persons left high and dry in the seat-sharing
exercise; the presence of a lot many (mainly UDF) rebel
candidates; the presence of an unusual number of actors,
media personalities, independents, or individuals from
other elds contesting as party candidates; and the
strange cases of weak, unlikely UDF/LDF/BJP candidates contesting in constituencies supposedly witnessing
prestigious three-cornered ghts.
As this report went to press, the campaign had just
entered its last 10 days, and several national leaders,
including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, were about to
campaign in the State, setting the nal agenda for what is
surely an election that dees easy prediction.

ed candidates, such as Kovalam, Kuttanad, Vaikom, Ettumanoor, Ranni, Udumbanchola, Kodungalloor and
Kaipamangalam, the BJP-led alliance claims it can make
or mar the prospects of prominent front candidates.
Traditional wisdom is that minority votes, in general,
go in favour of the UDF (especially because of the presence of the Muslim League and the major Kerala Congress factions in it) and a large chunk (over 70 per cent) of
Hindu votes are often polled in favour of the LDF. But
with the BJP alliance seriously getting into the fray, this
election could see the strengthening of the trend that was
evident in the local body elections, where the minority
vote seemed in general to favour the candidate who has
the best chance of defeating the BJP in any given constituency. In many local body seats, this favoured the LDF,
which also, unlike the UDF, succeeded in its efforts to
check the BJP from eroding its traditional vote bank.
The LDFs consistent and rm stand against the Hindutva agenda vis-a-vis the UDF has over the years gained
a lot of admirers, especially among the minority communities in the State. The BJP/RSS untested claim, however, is that their alliance has the potential to win at least 18
seats in Kerala and offer a strong triangular ght in 69.
The result of such well-publicised theories could be a
possible secular/minority mood against it, and a section
of the minority voters, traditional UDF supporters, may
decide to vote in favour of Left candidates, except in
places where there are Muslim League or Kerala Congress candidates. But with the recent spilt in the Kerala
Congress (Mani), one section, named the Democratic
Kerala Congress, has now joined the LDF and its candidates are ghting their former colleagues in many Christian stronghold constituencies.
Clearly, within the UDF, only candidates of the Muslim League are perhaps in a comparatively secure position, with the partys continuing domination of the
Muslim vote bank.
THE BDJS FACTOR

Hindus form about 56 per cent of the total population in


Kerala, and Ezhavas, among them, are estimated to be
about 27 per cent. The BJPs alliance with the BDJS is
aimed at drawing a a chunk of the traditional Left supporters from the Ezhava community to its side.
But surely, neither Vellappally Natesan, the guiding
force behind the BDJS and general secretary of the Sree
Narayana Dharma Paripalana (SNDP) Yogam, the social
organisation of the Ezhava community established by the
reformer-saint Sree Narayana Guru, nor his son Tushar
Vellappally, the leader of the edgling party, can claim
the support of all the Ezhavas in the State, or of even all
the members of the SNDP Yogam. Left leaders like Pinarayi Vijayan have insisted at every other campaign venue that the gurus teachings about a casteless society are
in sharp contrast to the very rationale behind the BJPRSS-BDJS alliance.
But the BDJS possible strength is reportedly the
network of nearly 1.5 lakh self-help groups that the SNDP
Yogam launched at the initiative of Natesan in 2003 for
43

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

CONTROVERSY

Manufactured anger
EVEN before the dust on the nationalism debate settled down, a new
controversy has erupted over the
portrayal of Bhagat Singh in a history
book. The determined effort of the
Bharatiya Janata Party-led National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) government to correct historical wrongs
in the education system took a new
turn during the Budget session of
Parliament. On April 27, Anurag
Thakur, a BJP Member of Parliament, while commenting on the role
of history in nation building, referred
to events that happened in February
on the Jawaharlal Nehru University
(JNU) campus and launched a fullblown attack on a book authored by
the late historian Bipan Chandra and
four others. Pointing to a reference to
Bhagat Singh as a revolutionary terrorist in the book, he claimed that
the same professors had depicted the
Congress vice president (Rahul
Gandhi) as a charismatic leader. The
book in question is Indias Struggle
for Independence, covering the period from 1857 to 1947, and published
in 1988. It had already sold over one
lakh copies. While the usage of the
term terrorist could be a matter of
debate, given the context in which it
was written, the accusation that the
historian had described certain contemporary political leaders as charismatic was preposterous as the book
covered the period ending 1947.
Reliable sources point out that
the book, which was translated into
Hindi by the Delhi University (D.U.)
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

THE HINDU ARCHIVES

A BJP leaders attack on an authoritative book on Indias freedom


struggle for referring to Bhagat Singh as a revolutionary terrorist is of a
piece with the Sangh Parivars attempt to malign critics of its version of
nationalism. BY T . K . R A J A L A K S H M I

B H A GA T S I N G H.

Hindi Implementation Board in


1990, was immensely popular. The
uproar over the terms that were considered offensive spilled over into
television channel debates, where
historians who sought to explain the
context in which the term was used
were pilloried endlessly. It was as if
the nationalism vs anti-national debate had taken a new form. The colonial and imperial context seemed
inconsequential as far as the critics of
the book were concerned. The politicisation of Bhagat Singh had begun
afresh. When the issue was raised in
the Rajya Sabha, Deputy Chairman
P.J. Kurien expressed concern over
the usage of the term revolutionary
terrorist and ordered the government to remove the term from the
book. (Kurien later claried that he
had not asked for a ban on the book.)
Within no time, the university or-

dered an embargo on the sale and


further publication of the book,
which in any case was not a part of
the syllabus but was only recommended as additional reading material for students of Indian history.
The Minister for Human Resource
Development, Smriti Irani, said on a
TV channel that the use of the word
terrorist to describe Bhagat Singh
was an academic murder.
While one section of the family of
Bhagat Singh, represented by the
Shaheed Bhagat Singh Brigade, demanded that the description be
dropped, another section of the family condemned the attack on historians. Jagmohan Singh, one of Bhagat
Singhs nephews, said in a written
message that the present debate occurred at a time of great challenge to
free spirit of enquiry, learning and
questioning. He pointed out that it
was Bipan Chandra who initiated the
Bhagat Singh Research Committee
in 1978. It was Bipan Chandras introduction to Bhagat Singhs Why I
am an Atheist and An Introduction
to Dreamland that threw new light
on the personality and thoughts of
martyrs. He said it also initiated a
whole new understanding of the period of the Indian struggle for independence. It is because of Professor
Bipan Chandra that I could collect all
possible documents on the history of
the Indian Independence movement
from the family, co-patriots and other living freedom ghters and thus
have the benet of appreciating this

44

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

had turned to Marxism and had


come to believe that popular broadbased mass movements alone could
lead to a successful revolution; in
other words revolution could only be
achieved by the masses for the masses. That is why Bhagat Singh helped
establish the Punjab Naujawan Bharat Sabha in 1926 as the open wing of
the revolutionaries.
Clearly, if Bipan Chandra wanted
to denigrate the revolutionary, he
would not have used laudatory terms
to describe Surya Sen and Bhagat
Singh.

SHIV KUMAR PUSHPAKAR

great heritage. I stand in solidarity


with the cause and defence of history
and the great contribution of Professor Bipan Chandra. On the controversy over the usage of the term
terrorism, he said a more thorough
understanding was required and
that the discussion was deliberately
focussed on single words quoted out
of context. And this is what suits
pseudo anti-nationalists.
Historians of all hues echoed the
views of Jagmohan Singh. They felt
Bipan Chandra, who had popularised Bhagat Singhs writings and
ideas, was being vilied. The criticism by sections of the government
was, therefore, ironical. What was
equally baffling was the BJP MPs
demand to withdraw the term and
ban the book. One MP even said that
Bipan Chandra had been a member
of the Communist party. Trinamool
Congress members pointed out that
Surya Sen, who led the Chittagong
armoury raid, was also described as a
revolutionary terrorist. The reference was to the chapter in the book
titled Bhagat Singh, Surya Sen and
other revolutionary terrorists. It
was another matter that the same
chapter described Surya Sen as a
brilliant and inspiring organiser, an
unpretentious soft-spoken and
transparently sincere person. Possessed of immense personal courage,
he was deeply humane in his approach. He was fond of saying: Humanism is a special virtue of a
revolutionary. He was also very fond
of poetry, being a great admirer of
Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam.
The same chapter (page 254) describes Bhagat Singh thus: Bhagat
Singh, born in 1907, and a nephew of
the famous revolutionary Ajit Singh,
was a giant of an intellectual. A voracious reader, he was one of the most
well read political leaders of the time.
He had devoured books in the Dwarakadas Library at Lahore on socialism, the Soviet Union and
revolutionary movements, especially
those of Russia, Ireland and Italy.
The chapter also points out that Bhagat Singh, before his arrest in 1929,
had abandoned his belief in terrorism and individual heroic action. He

B I P A N C H A N D R A.

In a letter to D.U. Vice Chancellor Yogesh Tyagi, some of the coauthors said Bipan Chandra had
stopped using the description in his
later writings and that he had even
publicly stated that he would not like
to use the word terrorist any more.
Aditya Mukherjee, Professor of History, JNU, and one of the co-authors
of the book, sent to the Vice Chancellor a statement issued by Bipan
Chandra in 2007 (the centenary year
of Bhagat Singh), which was published in a mainstream newspaper. Bipan Chandra was quoted in the
newspaper article as saying: It was a
phrase of praise and was used to distinguish Bhagat Singh from the other streams of freedom struggle. But
the word terrorism has assumed a
different meaning now. I would not
like it to be used any longer. He also
said that all the co-authors had de45

Contact : @Razkr

cided and announced publicly that in


accordance with the wishes of Bipan
Chandra they will make the necessary changes in the book. On behalf
of the co-authors, Mridula Mukherjee, K.N. Panikkar, Sucheta Mahajan
and myself, I want to convey to you
our intention to make the necessary
changes in the book, which was published in Hindi in 1990, ... with immediate effect.
In a letter addressed to Asha
Gupta, Director of the Hindi Implementation Board, Aditya Mukherjee
referred to his letter to the Vice
Chancellor and Bipan Chandras
2007 statement and assured her that
he would help work out the modalities to make the necessary changes
in the book. Despite all these assurances, the controversy refused to die
down as it became clear that the issue
at hand was not the denigration of
Bhagat Singh or the other revolutionaries and patriots of his time but
branding the surviving co-authors as
anti-national in the context of the
debate on nationalism. It was a
strange coincidence that the lead author and the co-authors were and are
associated with JNU, a university
that is facing a litmus test for 21st
century Indias patriotism.
Professor D.N. Jha, as head of the
History Department in D.U., recommended the translation of the book
into Hindi. Jha told Frontline: The
Hindi Implementation Board was
set up to supply reading material in
Hindi not only for Hindi texts but
also for social science textbooks. Not
only textbooks, but other books, too,
were recommended for translation.
When I saw Indias Struggle for Independence, I immediately recommended it even though it was not a
part of prescribed readings as I felt it
would be of some use. Those who are
raising an issue now are illiterate.
This is a manufactured controversy.
There are more important academic
issues. Bhagat Singh used the term
political terrorist to describe himself.
I dont see why history should be
written according to the descendants
of Bhagat Singh. Historians should
not be guided by what Bhagat Singhs
descendants think. The Vice Chancellor should have acted with a bit
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

What Bhagat Singh


said about terrorism
LET us be clear about this difficult question. The path of the
bomb has been continuing since
1905 and it is a tragic comment
on revolutionary India. Until
now, we have not realised the use
and abuse of this term. Terrorism is an expression of the absence of the lack of inuence of
revolutionary thought in our society; or repentance. In this way,
it is an acceptance of our failure.
In the very beginning, it was of
some use. It changed the politics
in a fundamental manner. It polished the thinking of young intellectuals; it gave self-sacrice a
vibrant form; and it gave an opportunity to show the reality and
power of the movement to the
world and our enemies. But it is
not sufficient in itself. It [terrorism] has the history of failure
across the worldin France,
Russia, Germany, Balkan countries and in Spaineverywhere
the story is the same I would
like to warn that the Irish model
is not applicable here in India.
Irish revolt was a popular revolt
on the national level rather than
sporadic incidents of terrorist
activities in which gunmen were
deeply associated with the people
There is no need to appreciate the demon of terrorism.
Terrorists have done a lot of
work, and taught the world a lot.
If we do not make mistakes relating to our aims and methods, it
can be of use even today. Specially, in times of despair, terrorist
methods can be useful in our
propaganda drive but it is nothing more than reworks and it
should be restricted for special
occasions and for a select few. A
revolutionary should not be
thrown in vicious cycles of futile
terrorist activities and individual
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

self-sacrice. For all, the inspiring ideal should not be to die for
the objective but to live for it and
that too to live a purposeful and
worthwhile life.
It goes without saying that
we are not completely disassociating ourselves from terrorist activities. We seek complete
appraisal of it from the viewpoint of the workers revolution.
Those young men who are not t
in mature and silent organisational work can be used in a different manner. They should be
freed from monotonous work to
live their desired life. But the
parent organisation should beforehand assess the impact of the
party and its work, its impact on
the masses and the strength of
the enemy. Such kind of works
can divert the attention of the
masses from combative mass
struggle to sharp and amboyant
work and thus can become an
excuse to attack the very roots of
the party. Hence, this ideal
should not be carried forward in
any circumstance. But the secret
military department is not a
curse. In reality, this is the frontline. The ring line of the revolutionary party has to be linked
to the base, which is the dynamic
and progressive peoples party.
There should be no hesitation to
collect funds and arms for the
organisation.
Bhagat Singh
Pages 281-283, Bhagat Singh
Ke Sampoorna Dastavez, foreword Kultar Singh; preface,
compiled, and edited by Chaman
Lal, Aadhar Prakashan, Panchkula, Haryana, 2004.
The translation has been done by
Aditya Mukherjee and Mridula
Mukherjee, Professors of History in JNU and co-authors of Indias Struggle for Independence.

more sense. If D.U. has stopped the


sale and reprint of the book, it is
foolish.
In a separate rejoinder to the
controversy and the attacks on them,
the co-authors said that a deliberate
misrepresentation of Bipan Chandras views on Shaheed Bhagat Singh
is being done by saying he used the
term revolutionary terrorism to
denigrate the martyr. They pointed
out that using the term for the rst
time on page 142, Bipan Chandra
had claried that it was a term we
use without any pejorative meaning
for want of a different term. They
said Bipan Chandra, who wrote the
introduction to Why I Am an Atheist,
which was published in 2006, did
not use the word terrorism. Quoting
Bipan Chandra, they said: Bhagat
Singh was not only one of Indias
greatest freedom ghters and revolutionary socialists, but also one of its
early Marxist thinkers and ideologues this last aspect is relatively
unknown with the result that all
sorts of reactionaries, obscurantists
and communalists have been wrongly and dishonestly trying to utilise for
their own politics and ideologies the
name and fame of Bhagat Singh and
his comrades such as Chandrashekhar Azad (The Writings of Bipan
Chandra: The Making of Modern India, From Marx to Gandhi, Orient
Blackswan, 2012, page 465).
SAHMAT STATEMENT

Defending Bipan Chandras historical assessment of Bhagat Singh, the


Safdar Hashmi Memorial Trust
(Sahmat), in a detailed statement,
said it was instructive to repeat what
Bhagat Singh had said about terrorism, which showed that it was not a
term of abuse at that time. In the
manifesto of the Hindustan Socialist
Republican Association (HSRA), to
which Bhagat Singh and his comrades belonged, it was written: We
have been taken to task for our terrorist policy. No doubt the revolutionaries think and rightly that it is
only by resorting to terrorism that
they can nd a most effective means
of retaliation. The HSRA, stated
that it was because of British repression that terrorism has been born in

46

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Delhi University campus on April 29


against the books reference to
Bhagat Singh.

this country. It is a phase, a necessary


and inevitable phase of the revolution. Terrorism is not the complete
revolution and the revolution is not
complete without terrorism. It was
eminently clear that the new-found
admirers of Bhagat Singh had not
read all his writings, including the
basic manifesto of the HSRA. In a
note written from prison to his associates in 1931, Bhagat Singh said:
Terrorists have done a lot of work
and taught the world a lot. in times
of despair, terrorist methods can be
useful in our propaganda drive we
are not completely dissociating from
terrorist activities. We seek complete
appraisal of it from the viewpoint of
the workers revolution such kind
of work (terrorism) can divert the
attention of the masses from combative mass struggle to
sharp and ashy work
.hence this ideal should
not be carried forward in
any circumstance. Academics cutting across
disciplines supported the
Sahmat statement. It
was evident that Bhagat
Singh was debating these
ideas in his writings. And
as it happened, Bipan
Chandra, too, was debating and thinking about
all these aspects, as he
F O RM ER J N U
was deeply impressed
professor Chaman
with Bhagat Singh and
Lal.

SANDEEP SAXENA

SUSHIL KUMAR VERMA

M E MBE R S O F T H E B I R K H A LS A
DAL during a protest outside the

his ideas. The co-authors pointed out


that due to his failing health and
poor eyesight, Bipan Chandra could
not revise the book as planned, but
they intended to drop the term in the
revised version. To attack a great
scholar, especially one who did so
much to bring Bhagat Singh to centre stage appears to be part of a larger
design to silence critics, they said.
Bipan Chandra found and published
Why I Am an Atheist as a pamphlet
at his own expense in 1970, they
pointed out. His last public lecture,
Aditya Mukherjee said, was the one
he delivered at the inauguration of
the Bhagat Singh Chair at JNU in
April 2011 where he said that had
Bhagat Singh lived, he would have
been the Lenin of India. Bipan Chandras last unnished book was a biography of Bhagat Singh.
The 600-page Indias Struggle
for Independence was part-nanced
by the Indian Council of Social Science Research in an effort to document the Indian national movement
in all its dimensions, including the
revolutionary component exemplied by the ideas and approaches of
some of the freedom ghters. Apart
from using traditional sources of information, the authors had interviewed nearly 1,500 surviving
freedom ghters. Chaman Lal, former Professor of History, who compiled and edited Bhagat Singh Ke
Sampoorna Dastavez in 2004, said
Bipan Chandra had in the rst Bhagat Singh Chair memorial lecture in
2011, said the term revolutionary
terrorism was not a denigration of
the revolutionaries at all
and that Bhagat Singh
himself had used this
term. Yet Bipan Chandra
felt that revolutionary
nationalism could have
been a more appropriate
term.
PENGUIN BOOKS
STATEMENT

In a statement, Penguin
Books India said: Since
rst being published in
1988, Indias Struggle
for
Independencehas
been a recognised au47

Contact : @Razkr

thority and positive appraisal of Bhagat Singh and his associates huge
contribution to Indias freedom
movement. At the time of writing,
the author made it clear that the
phrase revolutionary terrorist was
used without any pejorative meaning and for want of a different term.
Language has evolved since the book
was rst published and we are already working with the co-authors to
update and revise the phraseology to
reect both modern usage and the
hugely important role Bhagat Singh
played in the creation of modern India. The publisher said it was open
to changes but at the same time acknowledged the merit of the text concerned, the context and especially
the appraisal of Bhagat Singh and his
associates.
The reason for the present controversy may not be difficult to discern. The views and concerns of one
section of the family seem to be in
concert with the views of sections
within the government. Chaman Lal
said the issue was raised during the
tenure of the previous United Progressive Alliance (UPA), too, and Bipan Chandras Modern India was
attacked for showing Jats in a poor
light. I think they are targeting universities and, in particular, those that
do not conform to their denition of
nationalism. The Hindi version is very popular among young graduate
students and therein lies the problem, Chaman Lal told Frontline.
Bipan Chandra, who passed
away in 2014, was the author of several books on colonialism, nationalism and communalism. He was also
the chairperson of the National Book
Trust. His colleagues and students
are shocked not so much about the
specic nature of the charge but
about the BJP leaders ignorance of
Bipan Chandras commitment to
Bhagat Singh and his views.
If D.U. decides to pulp Indias
Struggle for Independence or take
some drastic measure, it will be dealing a blow to intellectual and academic freedom and research and
doing a disservice to the book, which
remains one of the best ones to have
documented the national movement
in detail.

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ERALDO PERES/AP

WORLD AFFAIRS

THE COUP BEGINS


THE VOTE IN THE LOWER HOUSE OF THE
Brazilian parliament, the Chamber of Deputies, on April
17 to forward the case for the impeachment of President
Dilma Rousseff to the upper house, the Senate, was the
rst big step taken by the coup plotters as they seek to
oust the popularly elected President of the republic. Dilma Rousseff, Brazils rst woman President, was reelected only 18 months ago for a second four-year term.
The Senate is dominated by the political opponents of the
ruling Workers Party and is widely expected to recommend that the President stand trial for alleged constitutional improprieties, when it considers the issue in the
middle of May. As is well known, almost all the key

With the lower house of


Brazils parliament voting
for the impeachment of
President Dilma Rousseff,
she faces the biggest
political challenge of her
life. B Y J OHN C H E RIAN
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

48

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

of the current coup mongers in civilian garb look nostalgically to that dark era, which only ended in 1985. Dilma
Rousseff spent three years in military prisons where she
was routinely tortured.
OPERATION LAVA JATO

IGO ESTRELA/GETTY IMAGES

None of the legislators voting to impeach her mentioned


the formal charge of crime of responsibility for economic mismanagement against her. Instead, many of them
falsely accused her of being involved in the ongoing
corruption investigations into politicians from all political parties, known as Operation Lava Jato (Car Wash).
Dilma Rousseff has remained unscathed by the corruption scandal that has tarred many in her own party.
Attorney General Jose Eduardo Cardoso has been insisting that the corruption charges against Dilma Rousseff
are totally unfounded.
The political mastermind behind the move to remove
an elected President is Eduardo Cunha, the President of
the Chamber of Deputies. He is constitutionally third in
line to succeed the President. He was angry with the
Workers Party for a variety of reasons, the main one
being its refusal to protect him from serious charges of
corruption. He is said to have millions of dollars parked
in Swiss bank accounts and is currently under investigation by the Swiss authorities. The Ethics Committee of
the lower house is investigating him for having received
$40 million as illegal gratication in the Petrobras (the
state-owned oil company) scandal. His name has also
gured in the Panama Papers.
Some 299 of the 513 members of the lower house are
currently under investigation for acts of corruption and
nepotism. A Brazilian magazine has published a 41-page
summary of the corruption charges against them. Brazilian legislators have immunity from criminal prosecution
unless the Ethics Committee expels them or if the countrys Supreme Court orders it. Only 10 per cent of the
legislators in both houses of parliament are directly elected. Therefore, most of the corrupt legislators do not have
to face the electorate; they make it to the parliament on
the basis of party lists. This is only one of the many aws
of Brazilian democracy. The media in the country are
almost totally under the control of the elite, which has no
love for the Workers Party. The entire corporate media
seem unied in the attempt to destabilise the elected
government.
The immediate political beneciary of the impeachment move against Dilma Rousseff will be Vice President
Michel Temer. He too has been named a beneciary of a
gargantuan corruption scandal, with a high court judge
ruling that the parliament should consider an impeachment motion against him. If the Senate decides to put
Dilma Rousseff on trial, she will have to take leave of
absence from the presidency for six months. If she is
found guilty, she will have to quit. Temer has said that he
is ready to step into her shoes at short notice. A recent
opinion poll showed that only 2 per cent of the Brazilian
public would vote for him. Dilma Rousseff has called the
Vice President a traitor and alleged that he is playing a

P R E S I D E N T D I L M A R O U S S EF F at a press
conference on April 18 in Brasilia, Brazil, a day after the
Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the parliament,
voted for the motion to impeach her. (Facing page) A day
before the impeachment vote, Eduardo Cunha, President
of the Chamber of Deputies (seated top), presiding over a
debate in the house on whether or not to impeach her.
Opposition lawmakers are holding signs in Portuguese
that read Goodbye dear and Impeachment now.

players who want Dilma Rousseffs head are themselves


mired in corruption. The Brazilian President has not
been charged with corruption herself nor has any evidence surfaced to implicate her. Her alleged crime is that
she illegally covered up budgetary shortfalls by borrowing from public sector banks as the country went to the
polls in late 2014. All ruling party candidates like to paint
a rosy picture of the economy before they face the electorate. But the opposition is charging Dilma Rousseff with
a crime of responsibility for misrepresenting the actual
state of the Brazilian economy at the time.
In the political circus that led to the impeachment,
the legislators voting against Dilma Rousseff gave various reasons for their move, ranging from peace in Jerusalem to saving the country from communism. One
prominent right-wing legislator, Jair Bolsonaro, even
said that his vote was to honour Col Brilhante Ustra, the
military officer who tortured Dilma Rousseff in 1973
when she was a left-wing guerrilla ghting against the
military dictatorship in the country. Bolsonaros son, also
a member of the lower house, voted in honour of the
military men of 1964. The 1964 United States-backed
military coup in Brazil led to the overthrow of a centreleft government. The military dictatorship constitutes
one of the dark chapters of recent Brazilian history. Many
49

Contact : @Razkr

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

UESLEI MARCELINO/REUTERS

prominent role in the unfolding coup. Temer is the leader elites. Six of her Cabinet Ministers had to resign last year
of the Party of the Brazilian Democratic Movement, for their roles in the Petrobras scandal.
Dilma Rousseff, facing the biggest political challenge
which until recently was helping the Workers Party run
in her life, has decided to ght on regardless of the
the government.
The Workers Party has never had a majority in the shadow of a looming impeachment. During a recent visit
countrys parliament since it was rst voted into power to the United Nations headquarters in New York, she
more than 14 years ago. In fact, since 1995, no ruling said that she would never let the coup against her sucparty has got more than 20 per cent of the seats. The ceed. She told the media in New York that there were no
Brazilian Constitution, while envisaging a strong presi- legal grounds for her impeachment. In the past, coups
dency, made provisions to ensure a multiparty legisla- were carried out with machine guns, tanks and weapons.
ture. In the vote in the lower house to refer the Today all you need are hands willing to tear up the
impeachment motion to the upper house, the majority of Constitution, she said. She said that if the Senate apthe members of all the right-wing and centre-right par- proved the impeachment motion, then she would appeal
ties, which form the overwhelming majority in the to the international community and that she might go to
Chamber, voted against Dilma Rousseff. Only the Work- the Mercosur, Latin Americas major regional grouping,
to get its support to thwart the uners Party, the Communist Party of
folding coup. She said that she would
Brazil, the Democratic Labour Party
ask the grouping to implement the
and the Socialism and Freedom Party,
democracy clause in its constitution
along with seven members of the Vice
if there is a rupture in the democratic
Presidents party, voted against the
process in Brazil.
motion.
The impeachment process, she
According to observers of the Brasaid, had all the characteristics of a
zilian political scene, it will be difficult
coup as it had no legal basis. The
for Temer to form a government given
left-wing parties in the region have all
his abysmal approval ratings and corcome out in support of their belearupt image; 58 per cent of the electoguered comrade. The Permanent
rate wants Temer also to be
Conference of Political Parties of Laimpeached. This will leave the door
tin America and the Caribbean, comopen for Eduardo Cunha, who is at the
prising 60 Left parties, issued a
moment instrumental in protecting
statement condemning the instituthe Vice President from impeachtional coup in Brazil. The statement
ment. His approval ratings among the
rejected any destabilising intent to
Brazilian public are also dismal. A
undermine democracy in Brazil. It
group of Senators is calling for a new
V I C E P RES I DE N T Michel Temer.
drew comparisons to the 2009 coup in
presidential election to be held in NoHonduras and the 2012 impeachment
vember this year along with the municipal elections. This is the only way, they say, to keep of Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo.
The Brazilian President said that she had received
venal politicians out of the presidency after the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, which they consider a foregone messages of solidarity from many world leaders. Brazil,
conclusion. The lead public prosecutor of Operation Car along with Russia, India, China and South Africa, is a
Wash, Deltan Dellagnol, has expressed his fears about member of the important BRICS grouping, which was
the regime that will displace the Workers Party-led gov- formed to challenge the economic dominance of the
ernment. He has said that with corrupt legislators form- West. If a right-wing regime took over in Brazil, the
ing a new government, there will be concerted attempts countrys interest in the grouping could wane. Top oppoto derail the ongoing investigations which have implicat- sition leaders from Brazil have been ying to Washington
to brief senior officials in the Barack Obama adminised leading gures from the opposition.
During the vote in the lower house, Dilma Rousseff tration on the neoliberal economic policies they would
forcefully pointed out that she was never mentioned in implement once Dilma Rousseff is ousted from power.
any documents or witness accounts relating to Operation But the U.S. seems to be having second thoughts about
Lava Jato and that the impeachment process should not the impeachment process. The U.S.-backed Organisahave been allowed in the rst place as at the most she was tion of American States (OAS) has been critical of the
guilty of administrative errors. Brazils Supreme Court whole exercise. After meeting with the Brazilian Presihas so far refused to step in and give a legal ruling on the dent in mid-April, OAS secretary general Luis Almagro
constitutionality of the impeachment proceedings. The issued a statement that said: Her constitutional mancourt, like all the major institutions in the country, seems date must be ensured, in accordance with the Constituto be split along ideological lines. Dilma Rousseff empha- tion and the laws, by all the powers of the state and all the
sised that the reforms her government had instituted had institutions of the country, and any undermining of her
empowered the judiciary to thoroughly investigate the authority should be avoided, wherever it may come

nexus between the countrys political and economic from.


FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

50

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

WORLD AFFAIRS
MEXICO

Despair and unrest


There is anger in Mexico over the violence that snuffs out lives but does not
get investigated. However, there is little hope that the state will act.

GINNETTE RIQUELME/REUTERS

B Y VIJ A Y PR A S H A D

A M A R C H against violence towards women, in Mexico City on April 24.

ON APRIL 24, THOUSANDS OF DEMONSTRATORS


marched to the Angel of Independence monument in
Mexico City from the municipality of Ecatepec. People
from all kinds of backgrounds marched with signs that
had the requisite dose of humour and anger. Revolucion
en la Plaza, en la Casa y en la Cama (Revolution in the
streets, at home and in bed), announced one woman,
while another wrote on her pregnant belly: Quiero nacer
sin violencia (I want to be born without violence). A

resonant chant went Ni sumisa, ni obediente. Soy libre,


loca y valiente (Neither submissive nor compliant. Im
free, crazy and brave).
The statistics explain the anger. Seven women are
killed every day in Mexico. Over the past three decades,
over 45,000 women have been killed. The passive voice is
appropriate here. Over 95 per cent of these cases have not
been properly investigated by the police and judged by
the courts. The impunity rate is stunning. Two-thirds of
51

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Mexican women above the age of 15 report in surveys that


they have experienced some form of physical or emotional abuse or discrimination at work.
The slogans for the marchVivas nos queremos
(We want to stay alive) and Ni una menos (Not one
female less)echoed other familiar slogans from earlier
marches. During the disappearance of dissidents in the
dirty wars of the 1980s in South and Central America,
their supporters would mutter, Vivos los queremos (We
want them alive) and Ni uno mas (Not one man less).
This slogan has returned to Mexico, says Aurelia Gomez
Unamuno, whose forthcoming book, Memoria y violencia, studies the memories and testimonies of Mexican
guerrillas of an earlier era. In the most recent instance, 43
students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers College in
the State of Guerrero vanished in September 2014. Their
families and friends continue to ght to nd out what
happened to these young men who were training to be
rural schoolteachers. We want them alive is the slogan
for the disappeared. We want to stay alive is the slogan
of the women.
FORTY-THREE STUDENTS' DISAPPEARANCE

In 1968, as part of the Dirty War, the Mexican state


massacred hundreds of students in Mexico Citys Tlatelolco section. Each year, there is a large demonstration at
the Plaza de las Tres Culturas (the Plaza of Three Cultures), the site of the massacre. In 2014, the students at
Ayotzinapa went off to commandeer buses so that they
could go to that demonstration on October 2. These
students were mainly indigenous Amerindians, one of
the three cultures of Mexico (pre-Colombian, colonial
Spanish and Mestizo). Masked men and the police ambushed the buses on their way back to the campus. Six
students died at the scene. One bus, with 43 students,
vanished. The government said that the local drug gang,
Guerreros Unidos, had killed the students and incinerated their bodies. This, said Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam, was the historical truth. They wanted the
case, as with other cases, to vanish.
The families and friends of these missing students
would not back down. Their perseverance caught the
imagination of others in Mexico and across Latin America. Pressure on Mexicos President Enrique Pena Nieto
pushed him to allow the Inter-American Commission of
Human Rights to send a team of ve experts to investigate the disappearance. Mexico has been protective
of its sovereignty. This was a historic capitulation to the
demands of its people and recognition of the failure of its
own investigative mechanisms.
Pena Nieto assumed that the panels work would be
perfunctory, the writer Francisco Goldman told this writer. Goldmans book The Interior Circuit: A Mexico City
Chronicle (2014) eerily foretold the collapse of the golden
story of Pena Nieto.
With his typically careful eye, Goldman has been
following the investigation into the 43. Goldman
watched as the commission, known as GIEI, worked
seriously, with an obsession. The Colombian prosecuFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

tor Angela Buitrago went over 185,000 pages of the old


case le, while Guatemalas former Attorney General
Claudia Paz y Paz analysed the documentation with her
well-known rigour. GIEI invalidated the governments
case. Attacks in the establishment media came alongside
a cold shoulder from the government. The conditions to
conduct our work dont exist, said Claudia Paz.
What did the experts at GIEI nd? That Guerreros
Unidos had used buses to smuggle heroin and cocaine to
the United States. It was likely, they suggested, that one
of the buses commandeered by the students carried large
amounts of drugs. Gunmen of the gang alongside soldiers
and policemen blocked the highway most likely to recover that bus.
Complicity between the Mexican establishment and
the world of drugs is well documented, most notably by
the investigative journalist, Anabel Hernandez, in Narcoland.
Christy Thornton, a historian of Mexico, told this
writer: The federal government is seeking desperately to
protect itself. That its Attorney General would muddy
the waters is a sign of just how high up the corruption
52

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

for U.N. Women, spoke in El Salvador at the release of a


report on femicide. Femicide and other forms of violence against women in the region continue to grow, she
said, and the application of justice continues to be limited with a rate of 98 per cent impunity for the offenders.
Governments seem uninterested in these crimes. A
United Nations report from 2003 laments the relative
incapacity of the state to adequately solve these cases. A
fog grows over them. People begin to think of them as
mysterious, when in fact there are very clear reasons why
these women are being killed.
The ongoing death toll is not mysterious, said RosaLinda Fregoso, author of Feminicidio en America Latina. It is a consequence of the historic structure of impunity in place in Mexico, the failure on the part of the
Mexican state to adequately prevent and investigate violence against women at all levels. Aurelia Gomez told
this writer that the violence takes place out of a combination of machista rage, drug cartels protected by authorities, and permissiveness from the authorities in general.
In 2007, Senator Marcela Lagarde Rios, who coined the
term Feminicidio, pushed through the General Law to
Provide Women with Access to a Life Free of Violence.
Despite the presence of this important law, Fregoso said,
Mexicos judiciary, legislative and criminal justice sectors are staunchly patriarchal. The disregard for crimes
against women is normal.
EDGARD GARRIDO/REUTERS

THE STATE DID IT

The Mexican state, says Aurelia Gomez, efficiently dismantles social movementsworkers and peasant
unions, teachers and students organisations. But the
drug cartels remain intact. Plan Merida of 2008 links
Mexico to the U.S. Global War on Terror, with the new
term of art being narco-terrorism. Funds from the U.S.
government ood Mexican law enforcement agencies,
which use this new money and equipment to break one
drug ring in order to prot another.
Blood, death, threats, exploitation, weapons, unlimited prots; this is the big business created by the illegality of drugs, writes Rodriguez in The Femicide Machine.
There is little hope in the states institutions for the
families and friends of the 43 and for those who marched
on April 24. Drug cartels are in the blood stream of
Mexican institutions. To expect the Mexican state to
tackle this would be like presuming a heart surgeon could
do an open-heart operation on herself. At protests for the
43, a common slogan is Fue el estado (the state did it).
At the last public meeting of GIEI, the families and
friends of the 43 shouted: No se abandona (do not
abandon us).
There was a feeling, says Francisco Goldman, that
with the departure of the international commission,
nothing will happen. It is a feeling shared by the families
of those who have disappeared. Justice eludes them.
They indict the state. Who will give them justice from the
state? These people live in an abyss, Goldman told this
writer. They are forced by the state to live in the shadows, as a ghost with your ghosts.

R E L AT I V E S of the 43 missing students from a


teachers training college in Ayotzinapa during a march
to protest against the governments handling of the
investigation, on April 26, the 19-month anniversary of
their disappearance, in Mexico City.

goes. The drug trade has overwhelmed the Mexican


economy. The journalist Carlos Loret de Mola says that
the drug cartels are three times more protable than the
ve hundred largest Mexican rms. It is little wonder
then that drugs might have played a role in this tragedy,
or that the Mexican establishment would go to such
lengths to hide the story.
OF LITTLE VALUE

In his book The Femicide Machine, Sergio Gonzalez Rodriguez writes of the people who are considered of little
value. These are the 43 students, surely, but also the tens
of thousands of women whose murders have not been
investigated.
Ten days before the April 24 protest, Luisa Carvalho,
the regional director of the Americas and the Caribbean
53

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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WORLD AFFAIRS
SAUDI ARABIA

In a bind
The diplomatic and economic clout of
Saudi Arabia suffers as its moves to
back terror groups backre.
B Y JO H N C H E R I A N

THE KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA SEEMS TO


be caught in existential throes. The last couple of years
have seen considerable diminishing of its diplomatic and
economic clout. The rot started with the Saudi establishments decision to stoke sectarian res in the region
through foolhardy gambits. Its bankrolling of Sunni militant groups that later transformed into terror outts has
backred. The ghting in Iraq and Syria, fuelled to a
great extent by Saudi money and sectarian propaganda,
has led to unintended consequences. The secular government in Damascus not only has survived ve years of
horrendous civil war but is now on the offensive against
the proxies of Saudi Arabia and the West. The Saudi army
has been involved in an open war in Yemen for the last
one year. It has led to the loss of thousands of civilian lives
in the Arab worlds poorest country, and the Saudi army
is far from achieving its goal of installing a friendly
regime there. The countrys infrastructure may have been
reduced to rubble, but the Saudis and their local allies are
not anywhere near scoring a decisive military victory. The
United States is unhappy with the never-ending war in
Yemen. It is concerned more about the apparent indifference of the Saudis to the spread of Al Qaeda there than
about rising civilian casualties.
The Saudi establishment had pushed the panic button after it became clear that the Barack Obama administration would sign the nuclear deal with Iran. The Saudi
leadership, along with Israel, tried all the tricks in the
book to scupper the deal. The U.S. was not happy with the
machinations of the two countries. President Obama in a
series of interviews with The Atlantic magazine has been
critical of the role played by U.S. allies such as Saudi
Arabia in the region, describing them as free riders
eager to snare the U.S. into a sectarian war. He singled
out Saudi Arabia for its failure to nd an effective way to
share the neighbourhood and institute some sort of cold
peace with Iran.
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

A I R FOR CE ON E taxiing to a halt at King Khalid


International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on April
20. President Barack Obama and King Salman met
amid deepening tensions between their two
governments over Iran, the ght against terrorism and
the potential release of long-delayed documents said to
implicate Saudi officials in the 9/11 attacks.

After the peace deal with Iran was signed, the Saudi
government, in an apparent act of pique, executed a
leading Shia cleric, Ayatollah Nimr al Nimr, along with
46 others. That move led to widespread protests in Iran.
International public opinion in Europe and elsewhere
turned even more against the Saudis after the hanging of
the popular cleric, who was a leader of the Shia Saudi
minority. European countries were anyway upset with
the Saudi support for Wahhabi and Salast preachers
who have been instrumental in the rise of groups like the
Islamic State (I.S.) and Al Qaeda. Many of their own
citizens were inuenced by the Salasts and embraced
extremist groups like Al Qaeda and the I.S. The terror
attacks in Paris and Brussels were launched by European
citizens inuenced by the puritanical strain of Islamic
theology.
After King Salmans accession to the throne, his son,
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, seems to
be pulling the levers of power. Unlike previous royal
scions, the young prince seems to be a man in a hurry. He
has been pushing for Saudi Arabia to lead from the front
on military, political and economic issues. Going to war
in Yemen is said to be his idea. He reportedly played a key
role in scuttling the recent move by leading oil producers
54

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

STEPHEN CROWLEY/NYT

On April 25, the Deputy Crown Prince announced


that Saudi Arabia was transitioning to an economy that
would no longer be dependent on oil. He vowed to liberate the country from its addiction to oil by 2020. The
government announced its Vision 2030 in the last week
of April. The Deputy Crown Prince, who is the Defence
Minister and controls economic and foreign policy,
wants the kingdom to develop its own services. The
government has said that the private sectors share of the
economy will rise from 40 to 70 per cent by 2030 and that
the kingdom will produce 50 per cent of the armaments it
needs. Saudi Arabia is the worlds third largest defence
spender. It currently produces only 2 per cent of the
armaments domestically.
Many analysts predict that the Deputy Crown Princes ambitious goals will be difficult to achieve, given the
kingdoms overwhelming dependence on oil revenue. In
the rst week of April, he announced the decision to sell
part of Saudi ARAMCO, the kingdoms agship oil producer and the worlds biggest oil company. He said that
the proceeds from the sale, which he estimated at $2
trillion, would be transferred to the kingdoms Public
Investment Fund. Such a move, he averred, would technically make investments the source of Saudi government revenue, not oil. The Crown Princes dabbling in
economics is said to be as popular among inuential
sections of the Saudi elite as his role in starting the war in
Yemen. For the rst time, Saudi Arabia has asked for a
loan of $10 billion from abroad to offset a budget shortfall. The wars in Syria and Yemen have not come cheap
for the Saudi royal family.
Obama, who was on a farewell visit to the region in

to curtail oil production in order to raise prices. At a


meeting in Doha in the third week of April, the oil
Ministers of the major oil-producing nations agreed to
freeze their oil production at current levels. A draft agreement was ready for signing, but the Saudis withdrew at
the eleventh hour after instructions from Riyadh. The
Deputy Crown Princes hand was suspected in the lastminute volte-face.
Analysts attribute the move to the Saudis desire to
retain the biggest share of the oil market and to punish
Iran and Russia for supporting the government in Syria.
The move is also against the shale gas industry in the U.S.
Oil prices have to be high to make the production of shale
gas and oil viable. After the start of the production of
shale gas and oil, the U.S. has once again become an
exporter of fossil fuel energy, impacting on Saudi Arabias global share. With low oil prices, shale oil production has been adversely impacted, but many American
companies are still in business.

The rot started with the


Saudi establishments
decision to stoke sectarian
res in the region through
foolhardy gambits.
55

Contact : @Razkr

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

REUTERS

DE P UT Y C R O W N PR IN C E M O H A M M ED B I N S A LM A N

after the Cabinet agreed to implement a broad economic


reform plan known as Vision 2030, in Riyadh on April 25.
late March, was given a cool reception when he visited
Riyadh. The Saudi monarch was conspicuous by his absence at the airport when the U.S. President arrived. The
arrival was not shown on state television. The Saudi
monarchy has many reasons to be unhappy with the
Obama administration. The Saudis feel that Obama is
not doing enough to stop the U.S. Congress from passing
a Bill that could hold the Saudi government indirectly
responsible for the 9/11 attacks. Obama has in fact supported the release of documents relating to September 11
that were redacted by the previous administration but
has cautioned against any conclusive evidence emerging
of official Saudi complicity. The 28 pages of intelligence
from a congressional report apparently name Saudi officials who had connections with those involved in the 9/11
attacks. Fifteen of the 19 hijackers involved were Saudi
nationals.
The redacted pages, according to leaked information
published in the U.S. media, contain names of Islamic
charities and individuals in Saudi Arabia and even members of the royal family who used their funds to either
indirectly or deliberately subsidise Al Qaeda activities
before 9/11. Some of the money, it is alleged, went to the
9/11 hijackers. According to former Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) agents involved in the 9/11 investigations, the Bush White House ordered that all investigations into the role of Saudi diplomats and officials in the
U.S. be closed. The top echelons of the Saudi leadership
have been given the benet of the doubt, but the redacted
pages reportedly pointed a nger of suspicion at a Saudi
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

diplomat and Saudi intelligence assets based in the U.S.


at the time.
The Saudi government has warned that if the Bill is
allowed, Riyadh will sell the $750 billion it has in U.S.
treasury assets. The Saudis fear that U.S. courts might
freeze their assets in the U.S. if the new Bill is passed. The
Saudi Foreign Minister, Muhammad al-Jubeir, personally delivered this message to Washington during a trip in
March. Such a move has the potential to damage the
American economy and deprecate the value of the dollar.
Obama administration officials said that any such move
would affect the Saudi government more but at the same
time assured the Saudis that the President would veto the
Bill if it was passed by Congress. The Obama administration has lobbied against the Bill, saying that its passage will put U.S. citizens abroad in danger.
The U.S. State Department has so far given the kingdom sovereign immunity from prosecution. This privilege has not been accorded to Iran or the Palestinian
Authority. Frozen Iranian assets worth $2 billion were
recently ordered seized following a U.S. Supreme Court
ruling that held Tehran responsible for terrorist acts in
Lebanon in the 1980s and a 1996 truck bombing in
Khobar, Saudi Arabia. The decision was based on claims
by survivors of the attacks. U.S. intelligence agencies had
blamed Iranian operatives for the attacks. Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif has described the ruling as a
travesty of justice. He said that Iran held the U.S. government responsible for this outrageous robbery, disguised
under a court order. But the order would have no doubt
sent shivers down the spines of the Saudi authorities.
Relatives of 9/11 survivors could bring in multibilliondollar suits against the Saudi authorities if the frayed
political relationship between Washington and Riyadh
reaches breaking point.
During his visit to Riyadh, Obama reassured the
Saudi leadership that Washington remained committed
to the security and well-being of the kingdom but made it
clear that under his watch the U.S. would not embark on
another military adventure in the region. At the same
time, there has been no let-up in the sale of American
arms to the kingdom. Saudi Arabia has been the recipient
of the most advanced U.S. weaponry, along with Israel,
for a long time. Since April 2015, the U.S. has sold
weaponry worth $33 billion to the Gulf states, the bulk of
it going to Saudi Arabia. In the rst six years of the
Obama administration, $50 billion worth of weaponry
was sold to the kingdom.
Much of this weaponry, which includes banned cluster bombs, has been indiscriminately used in the war in
Yemen, where schools and hospitals have been targeted
by the Saudi-led military coalition. Some of the sophisticated weapons have found their way to jehadi groups
supported by the Saudis and their allies in Syria and Iraq.
The Americans still prefer to look the other way as weapons ow into the hands of extremist groups in the region.
If the U.S. keeps on supplying its proxies in the region
with arms, there is little hope for a peaceful settlement of
the civil wars in Yemen and Syria.

56

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

WORLD AFFAIRS
INDIA-CHINA

Hasty diplomacy
The Indian government crosses the diplomatic red line by issuing and later
withdrawing visas to Chinese separatists, in line with its recent acts based on
think-tank diplomacy. B Y J O H N C H E R I A N
THE NARENDRA MODI GOVERNMENT, IT
seems, revels in scoring self-goals while conducting diplomacy with its immediate neighbours. First, it was the
red line it had drawn with Pakistan on the issue of its
diplomats holding consultations with representatives of
Kashmirs Hurriyat Conference. Then the government
decided that it was in the national interest that a de facto
economic blockade be slapped on Nepal over the Madhesi issue. India has been riling its biggest neighbour,
China, in many different ways. New Delhi has virtually
signed up with the anti-China military coalition being
forged by Washington in the Asia-Pacic region. The
latest indication is Indias decision to sign a Logistics
Support Agreement (LSA) with the United States. The
Chinese government, while taking note of the development, responded with discretion. But New Delhi apparently crossed a red line when it issued a visa for one
of the leading gures of the armed Uyghur separatist
movement, Dolkun Isa, to attend a conference in Dharamsala (Himachal Pradesh), the Dalai Lamas headquarters.
The conference was organised by the U.S. Commission of International Religious Freedom and the U.S.
Congress-funded U.S. Institute of Peace. Besides Uyghur
dissidents, representatives of the banned Falun Gong
movement and other anti-Beijing Chinese individuals
were invited for the conference. The presence of Isa on
Indian soil at the invitation of the Government of India
would have led to a major hiccup in Sino-Indian relations. Better sense seems to have prevailed at the eleventh
hour in the corridors of power in New Delhi. The e-visas
for Isa and a couple of other Chinese dissidents, including Omar Kanat of the Washington-based World
Uyghur Congress, were cancelled. The Indian government, however, let out the information that a few other
less controversial dissidents, including one Uyghur Chinese, were allowed to attend the closed-door conference.
Interestingly, in the rst week of May, the government also backtracked on the issue of Hurriyat leaders
meeting Pakistani diplomats. The new official line is that

D OLKUN I S A, Uyghur separatist movement leader.

the government has no issues with Hurriyat representatives meeting the Pakistani High Commissioner or any
other diplomat, as all Hurriyat members are Indian citizens. Foreign Secretary-level talks between the two countries have remained derailed for almost two years since
the Modi government called off the talks in 2014 over the
Hurriyat issue.
The invitation was extended to Isa although the Indian government was aware that China had designated him
as a wanted terrorist. There was also a pending Interpol
red corner notice against his name. The Union Ministry
of Home Affairs told the media that it was unaware of the
Interpol warrant against Isa when it issued a visa. Had
Isa arrived for the conference, the Indian government,
being a signatory to Interpol protocols, would have been
in a piquant situation. China would have demanded that
he be arrested and handed over to the Chinese authorities. The decision to issue a visa to Isa and later withdraw
it must have been taken at the highest levels of govern57

Contact : @Razkr

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

PTI

DE FEN C E M I N I S T E R Manohar Parrikar with his Chinese


counterpart General Chang Wanquan at the Peoples
Liberation Army headquarters in Beijing on April 18.

ment, leaving the mandarins of South Block red-faced.


Think-tank diplomacy has been in the forefront under
the new regime in New Delhi. The National Security
Adviser, Ajit Doval, headed a right-wing think tank, the
Vivekananda Foundation. His son, Shaurya Doval, heads
an inuential think tank, India First, which offers advice
to the government. American think tanks such as the
Brookings Institution and the Carnegie Foundation have
set up shop in India and many former Indian policymakers are on their payrolls. These policymakers were among
those who vociferously welcomed the initial decision to
grant visas to the Uyghur dissidents.
UYGHUR TERROR ATTACKS

The Chinese government has specically accused Isa of


aiding terrorist activity in Xinjiang, where most of the
Uyghurs, a Muslim minority of Turkish origin, live. The
area, which borders Pakistan and Afghanistan, has been
periodically wracked by terrorist attacks. Uyghur terrorists, owing allegiance to the East Turkestan Islamic
Movement (ETIM), have staged big terror attacks in
major Chinese cities, including Urumqi, Kunming and
Beijing. The last serious terror attack occurred last year
in Xinjiang. Fifty mine workers were hacked to death in
Baicheng in Jilin province. Last year, Thailand deported
to China more than a hundred Uyghurs suspected of
being part of a terror network. Soon after the deportation, Thailand suffered its worst terror incident. A prominent temple, frequented mainly by foreign tourists, was
bombed. Uyghur terror networks were suspected to be
behind the attack.
Uyghur ghters have been prominent in the ranks of
Al Qaeda and the Islamic State (I.S.) in Syria, Iraq and
Afghanistan. More than a thousand Uyghurs are estimated to be ghting alongside Al Qaeda and the I.S.
Beijing had previously lodged strong protests with Islamabad over the presence of Uyghur ghters in the tribal
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

areas of Pakistan. China blamed Pakistan for a 2011


terror attack in the oasis city of Kashgar. China said that
the plan for the attack was hatched in Uyghur training
camps in Pakistan and named one Nurmemet Memetmin as one of the masterminds behind the attack. He had
escaped from a Pakistani prison in 2006. The West has
been soft on the issue of Uyghur terrorism. The U.S. and
its allies consider Tibet and Xinjiang as issues on which
China can be made vulnerable. It is, therefore, not a
surprise that many Uyghur separatists nd safe havens in
Western capitals.
Isa, who is currently based in Germany, has been
demanding independence for Xinjiang. India decided to
issue a visa to the Chinese dissident in retaliation for
China putting on technical hold Indias bid to urgently
get the name of Jaish-e-Mohammed leader Maulana
Masood Azhar on the United Nations list of global terrorists. The Indian government decided to make a big
issue out of it. External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj
raised the Azhar issue with her Chinese counterpart,
Yang Yi, on the sidelines of the Russia-India-China (RIC)
Foreign Ministers meet in Moscow in April. Defence
Minister Manohar Parrikar brought up the issue during
his meeting with the Chinese leadership during the
course of an official visit to China in late April. The issue
also came up during the recently concluded 19th round of
India-China border talks in which Ajit Doval participated. Many diplomatic observers are of the opinion that
the Indian government unnecessarily hyped up a minor
issue.
The Chinese side has taken pains to explain that the
decision regarding Azhar was taken in accordance with
the facts and the rules of the U.N. 1267 committee on
counterterrorism. We encourage all parties related to
the listing of the matter of Masood Azhar to have direct
communication and work out a solution through serious
consultations, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman
said. He said as per the rules of the U.N. committee, the
relevant countries should hold direct talks. But the Indian side was not satised with the explanation. The External Affairs Minister criticised the double standards
being adopted by some countries on the global ght
against terrorism. Responding to the statement of Sushma Swaraj, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson
said China too rmly opposed the double standards on
the terrorism issue and that his country was also a
victim of terrorism.
After the ip-op over the visa issue, the Indian
government seems to have decided to tread more cautiously while dealing with China. President Pranab Mukherjee is due to visit China in June when important trade
and economic agreements could be initialled. The border
issue is on the back burner with not much progress being
made on the demarcation front. India has refused to take
a call on joining Chinas ambitious One Road, One Belt
(OBOR) economic blueprint for the Asia-Pacic region.
India and Japan are the only two major Asian countries
refusing to join the grouping, which has taken off successfully.

58

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

CONTROVERSY

Row over a report


IN March 2012, the Karnataka
State Minorities Commission came
up suo motu with a 7,000-page report on encroachments on and misuse and illegal disposal of wakf
properties in Karnataka. The report
is authored by Anwar Manippady,
who was appointed Chairman of the
commission by the previous Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in
the State. The scam, even going by
the government guideline values for
land (not the prevailing market
rates), is estimated at more than
Rs.2.40 lakh crore.
According to the Manippady report, out of the 54,000 acres (one
acre is 0.4 hectare) of wakf land in
the State, between 25,000 and
27,000 acres have been embezzled
by powerful politicians, inuential
persons, bureaucrats, State and district wakf board officials, and the
wakf land maa, acting with the
willing and systematic connivance of
pliable mutavallis (caretakers or
managers), officials of various wakf
and wakf advisory boards and the
Revenue Department, middlemen
and inuential leaders of the Muslim
community. The Siddaramaiah-led
Congress government has rejected
the report.
(According to the 2008 report of
the Joint Parliamentary Committee
on wakf, around 30,000 wakf institutions in Karnataka held around
19,000 acres. The report also cites
189 cases of encroachment on wakf

K. MURALI KUMAR

A report by the Karnataka State Minorities Commission detailing


misuse of wakf property over several decades has resulted in a
confrontation between the ruling Congress, which has rejected the
report, and the opposition in the State. B Y R A V I S H A R M A

B A N GA LO RE , M A R C H 26, 2012: Anwar Manippady (centre), Chairman of

the Karnataka State Minorities Commission, submitting his report on wakf


properties in the State to Chief Minister D.V. Sadananda Gowda.
properties. In around 40 of these,
government agencies themselves
were said to be responsible.)
The Manippady report states
that around 85 per cent of the cases
were in urban areas. The methodology adopted in compiling the report
was simple: source a wakf propertys
original revenue records, be it survey
maps of the Survey of India (some
going back to the 1930s and 1940s)
or gazette notications, especially
the Mysore gazette notication of
1974, and compare them with the
situation on the ground.
59

Contact : @Razkr

Manippady told Frontline that in


many cases the original survey
showed a piece of land having x
acres, but today only a fraction of
that land existed under that survey
number. The lost land is now part
of other newly created survey numbers with new owners. Said Manippady: The report indicates what the
extent of land was as per the original
survey and what it is today. He added: I have enclosed every relevant
land record as part of my report, and
in regions like Karnataka-Hyderabad the records drawn on cloth are
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

methodical and crystal clear. It is for


the government to investigate the
hows and the whys, and what went
on in wakf properties.
In 2012, the government itself referred the matter to the Karnataka
Lokayukta for a probe under Section
7(2A) of the Karnataka Lokayukta
Act. But nothing happened until Justice Narayanappa Ananda, who took
over in December 2015 as the Upalokayukta, began investigating the
cases listed in the Manippady report
and complaints made to the Lokayuktas office. He submitted his ndings in a 15-volume report on March
28, 2016.
But just days after Justice Narayanappa Ananda submitted his report, the Siddaramaiah government
withdrew the terms of reference for
the Lokayukta probe thereby effectively nullifying his report. Sources
in the Lokayukta told Frontline that
the Ananda report substantiated
most of what had already been said
in the Manippady report.
WAKF EXPLAINED

A wakf, under the Islamic context of


sadaqah (voluntarily giving charity
out of compassion, love, fraternity,
religious duty or generosity), is an
inalienable, permanent dedication of
movable or immovable property
made for any purpose recognised by
Muslim law as religious, pious or
charitable by a philanthropic person
professing Islam who has no intention of reclaiming the asset. The donated assets may be held by a
charitable trust. The grant is known
as mushrut-ul-khidmat, while the
person making the dedication is
known as wakif. Section 3(r) of the
Wakf Act, 1995, denes wakf as a
permanent dedication, which
clearly indicates that once a wakf is
validly created it continues to remain
the same and cannot be extinguished.
The Supreme Court bench of Justices A.S. Anand and V.N. Khare
brought more clarity to it when hearing a civil appeal dated January 28,
1998, by ruling that a wakf is a permanent dedication of property for
purposes recognised by Muslim law
as pious, religious or charitable and
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

the property having been found as


wakf would always retain its character as a wakf. In other words, once a
wakf always a wakf. The bench said:
After a wakf has been created it continues to be so for all time to come
and further continues to be governed
by the provisions of the Wakf Act.
A wakf is created to provide for
the nancial needs (maintenance,
staff salaries, and so on) of a mosque
or dargah and its congregation and is
usually located in close proximity to
the structure concerned. However,
in the coastal district of Dakshina
Kannada, the designated wakf is often a fair distance away. While the
mosque/dargah is in the heart of the
city, the designated wakf may be an
areca nut garden in a rural area. The
income from the areca garden was
and still is used for the upkeep of the
mosque. For example, the Nadumpalli Jumma Masjid is located in the
heart of Mangaluru. But its wakf is
an areca garden around 15 kilometres away on 15 acres and 15 cents
(one acre=100 cents) as per documents at the Wakf Board. It is another matter that of this area 15 acres
have been siphoned off. In actual
fact, it has been encroached to such
an extent that only 15 cents are now
in the possession of the masjid.
Manippadys report, a copy of
which was accessed by Frontline,
states that there has been a failure of
the Karnataka State Wakf Board in
protection of wakf properties; administration and protection of wakf
institutions, auditing of accounts of
wakf institutions that have huge
properties that generate substantial
income and get huge donations,
most of which is not accounted for by
the Wakf Board as wakf fund; updating records of wakf properties;
and handling of court cases and ling
of replies in courts against the interests of wakf lands, and on the contrary favouring encroachers and
culprits. The report states that the
illegal and fraudulent activities have
gone on for decades.
The list of encroachers/people
involved or responsible for the illegal
and fraudulent activities with regard
to wakf land, according to the Manippady report, is a veritable whos

who of Congress politicians in Karnataka and their kin, bureaucrats


and wakf board officials. Among
them are former Union Ministers, a
former Chief Minister, present and
past Ministers in the State, former
Members of Parliament, legislators,
educationists, former bureaucrats of
both the Central and State cadres,
businesspersons/builders/politicians, and present and past members
of the Wakf Board. (See box for details on encroachments/misuse of
wakf properties as listed in the
report.)
When Frontline contacted some
of those who are named in the report,
the response was that it is politically
motivated. They point out that Manippady was appointed by the BJP
government. But there are also a
number of voices that nd some
truth in it. Said a Congress politician from the Muslim community: It
is only because a BJP man [Manippady] is the author that it has got a
bad name. It would have been ideal if
a retired judge had penned the report. No political motivation could
then have been attributed.
A senior politician who has been
named in the report said it could not
be dismissed as nonsense. Let the
government have it inquired into.
Let those who are guilty of knocking
off wakf land donated for the welfare
of the poor of the community be
caught and hanged. Whoever or
however big the person is, this politician said.
METHODS USED

The report states that encroachers


used a variety of methods to usurp,
encroach on or misuse immovable
wakf properties. One of the most blatant methods, it says, is to give the
property on lease/rent at abnormally
low rates over long periods, even 99
years, and make a nancial killing on
the side. More ingenious methods
take time but are protable manifold. As is the norm, the wakf property is taken care of by a mutavalli.
Part of his duties is to pay the municipal taxes and take care of other revenue-related activities. Over a period
of time the mutavalli begins to pay
the municipal taxes in his name and

60

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Some of the encroachments


THE most prominent property
mentioned in the Anwar Manippady report on the encroachment/
misuse of wakf lands is the iconic
Windsor Manor Hotel in the heart
of Bengaluru (survey no. 25, Sankey Tank Road, 1,65,752 square
feet). In contravention of Wakf
rules, the propertys lease was extended twice, from 30 to 50 years
and then from 50 to 90 years for a
meagre amount. The following are
a few of the other encroachments
listed in the Manippady report.
Bidar district has the largest
number of encroachments, with
1,803 acres (one acre=0.4 hectare)
of the total 2,586 acres of wakf
lands being illegally occupied or
disposed of.

(25.21 acres), 50 (7 acres) and 51


(17.26 acres); all properties of Ali
Bareed Dargah containing the
tombs of Ali Bareed and Masjid
Sunni. This is a major wakf institution and also an archaeological
monument.
KALABURAGI DISTRICT

Survey no. 12: 8.34 acres of the


Hazrat Khaja Bandenawaz Dargah.
Survey no. 13: 2 acres of Dargah
Hazrath Aber Sayeed Junaidi in
Vakkalgera.
Survey nos. 33/1, 33/2, 33/3,
33/4, 33/5 of Brahampur village.
Hazrath Khaja Bande Nawaz, Gesudaraz.

BIDAR DISTRICT

BENGALURU URBAN
DISTRICT

Survey no. 73: 180 acres of Asias


second biggest graveyard for Muslims, belonging to the Khaja Abdul
Faiz Dargah in Haladkere village
in Bidar district.
Survey no. 73: 8.36 acres of land
belonging to the Fatehulla Qhadri
Dada Peer Dargah in Aliabad village.
Survey no. 59: 31.37 acres of land
belonging to the Shah Valiulla
Hussaini Dargah in Aliabad village.
Survey nos. 105 (2.11 acres), 104
(2.88 acres), 105 (5.35 acres), 107
(8.09 acres) of Chidri village; survey nos. 34 (1.34 acres) 35 (2.27
acres), 36 (22.23 acres), 37/1 (10
acres), 37/2 (13.07 acres), 49

Survey no. 18: 2.30 acres of land


belonging to the Hazrath Ataulla
Shah Dargah at Annepura Village
(near Lal Bagh, Bengaluru).
Property no. 10: Sardar Patrappa
Road, belonging to Hazrath Nawab Ibrahim Ali Shah Shattari
Zindavalli, Kumbarpet extension.
Property nos. 22-23 of Puliar Koil
Street, 15 and 17 of Makkan Road,
totalling approximately 7,329 sq ft
and belonging to the Kulsum Bi
trust.
Survey nos 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, and
13 of Vadepura village, totalling
239.38 acres, of which three portions of 3.01, 2.30 and 4.14 acres
have been sold as per the gazette
notication, belonging to Musar

not in the name of the dargah or


trust. He is, of course, aided and
abetted by Revenue Department ofcials and those in the State and/or
district wakf boards, who issue him,
if need be, a no objection certicate
(NOC). This is the rst step in the
process to transfer the property to his
own name, points out the report. In
the event of any queries posed by the
Revenue Department authorities, he
shows the NOC. Once the propertys

title is transferred to his name, it is


sold off. Many of those who helped
the mutavalli stand to benet the
most.
Another method, according to
the report, is for mutavallis to claim
ownership of a property by stating
that his forefathers had been gifted it
decades ago. The wakf board concerned, the report states, illegally
and wrongly denoties the property
and the mutavalli is given a certif61

Contact : @Razkr

Khana (Chatram) Sunni, Yelahanka.


Survey no. 28: 2.10 and 0.38 acres
belonging to Dargah Hazrath
Ataullah and Nabi Shah-Bada Makan respectively, in Mavalli.
Survey no. 55: Of the total extent
of 602.29 acres of land belonging
to the Hazrath Manik Shah Dargah in Bilehalli village, Cubbonpet
(Avenue Road), 122.20 acres have
been granted to 50 persons, with
the remaining land being disposed
of illegally.
Survey no 71/2, 3 acres, and survey no 71/2(A), 12 guntas, at Adugodi and belonging to Wakf
institutions.
Survey no. 1: 6.04 acres belonging
to the Hazrath Ataullah Shah Nabi
Shah Dargah, Bada Makan, in
Aneepura village.
Serial no. 189 and 259: 20,000 sq
ft of the Muslim graveyard and
Naubahar Shah Makan on Armstrong Road, Bengaluru.
Survey nos. 32/1, 34, 35, 37, 38,
39, 41, 42: An extent of 20.03 acres
at Yeshwantpur, belonging to the
Mohammed Sheriff Educational
Trust.
BENGALURU RURAL

Survey no. 22: 3.16 acres belonging to Mushtak Shah Makan in Nelamangala.
KOPPAL DISTRICT

Survey nos. 10/1, 10/2 and 10/3:


2.09 acres belonging to Berooni
Abadi Masjid in Gangavathi.

icate to show that the property has


been given to his family.
Yet another method, states the
report, is for the propertys revenue
documents, specically the survey
number, to be fragmented into a
number of subdivisions. These subdivided survey numbers are given
new names. The land bearing the
original survey number is now a fraction of what it was originally. The
new owners of the subdivided survey
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

numbers are free to sell or lease


their property, the report states.
Responding to questions whether the commission could bring out
such a report, Manippady explained
that the Karnataka State Minorities
Commission was well within its
rights to undertake a study and come
out with a report since the commission, besides examining the working
of various safeguards provided in the
Constitution and in the laws passed
by the State legislature for the protection of minorities, was dutybound under Section 10 (1)(h) of the
KSMC Act to study any other matter
which, in the opinion of the commission, is important from the point of
view of the welfare and development
of minorities to make appropriate
recommendations.
Manippady also pointed out that
under Section 10(2), the government shall cause the recommendations of the commission to be laid
before each house of the Legislature
along with the memorandum explaining the action taken or proposed to be taken on the
recommendations. Also, under Section 15, the government shall cause
the annual report, together with a
memorandum of action taken on the
recommendations contained therein, so far as they refer to the State
government, and the reasons for the
non-acceptance, if any, of such recommendations, to be laid, as soon as
may be, after the reports are received, before each house of the Legislature. Although the Manippady
report was submitted in March 2012
to the then Chief Minister D.V. Sadananada Gowda of the BJP, and despite
subsequent
decisions,
including a Cabinet decision in 2013
by the Jagadish Shettar dispensation
and an assurance by the Siddaramaiah government to table it in the
Legislature, it continues to lie in cold
storage. The Siddaramaiah government has cited technicalities for not
placing the report before the House.
RECOMMENDATIONS

The Manippady report has three key


recommendations: keep the Karnataka State Board of Wakfs under
suspension for 12 months in order to
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

enable a fair investigation; constitute a task force for wakf properties to


retrieve the wakf properties in accordance with the Supreme Courts
ruling; and set up a high-powered
committee to work out the modalities to run the Wakf Board in a
transparent manner.
The Siddaramaiah governments
explanation is that there are no provisions under the Central Wakf Act
to keep the Wakf Board under suspension. The fact is that the State
government has the power to supersede the board for a period not exceeding six months after issuing a
show cause notice to the board. The
government says that in 2013 a task
force on wakf boards was set up and
it was vested with powers on the lines
of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike and the Bengaluru Development Authority task forces.
In the Siddaramaiah governments view, the Manippady report
consists of two parts, the original report and the recommendations. Karnataka
Law
Minister
T.B.
Jayachandra said: I have already
put it in writing that the government
has acted as per Section 10(2) of the
Karnataka State Minorities Commission Act, 1994, and placed the
recommendations of the Manippady
report on the floor of the House.
These recommendations have been
rejected. The Act does not specify
that we have to table the entire original report. The Act is superior. I cannot go by the oppositions demands
even if they are making a big noise on
tabling the original report. The government has fullled what was expected of it. The matter is also in
court, let us see what the court says.
The Minister added that once the
report was tabled it could not be further discussed in the House and had
to be referred to the Committee on
Papers Laid on the Table, a joint
committee of both Houses of the legislature, where it will be decided
whether it is in the prescribed form
or not. The House cannot go on discussing the report again and again.
The Minister also said the Siddaramaiah government had rejected
the report. However, he was not prepared to specify why, except for say-

ing that there are so many


technicalities. I dont want to go
into them. Neither do I want to go
into the allegations made in the report on encroachment or other
wrongdoings. But many of his Cabinet colleagues, including those from
the Muslim community, are of the
view that the Siddaramaiah government is making a mistake by shying
away from tabling the report.
Today the report has become a
political hot potato between the ruling Congress and the opposition parties, the BJP and the Janata Dal
(Secular). With the Congress making
excuses to not table it, the opposition
has resorted to stalling proceedings
in the legislature, especially the Legislative Council, where dharnas and
adjournments were the order of the
day for nearly the entire recent session. The Leader of the House in the
Council, S.R. Patil, said the government had consulted the Attorney
General on the issue and added that
under the rules, it had to table only
the memorandum explaining the action taken on the recommendations
of the report. What irked the opposition was that in the legislature session in November Siddaramaiah
suggested to the opposition that the
Manippady report could be tabled in
both Houses during the next joint
legislature session (which was scheduled for January 2016). The Chief
Ministers suggestion was agreed upon by other members of the Business
Advisory Committee, including the
opposition leaders. However, the
government failed to act during the
joint session and in March it rejected
the report. What it tabled in the Legislative Council was only a memorandum explaining the action taken
on the reports recommendations
and not the complete report.
The opposition has taken the issue to Governor Vajubhai Vala. A
delegation led by the BJPs K.S. Eshwarappa submitted a memorandum
seeking his intervention and urging
him to take necessary action on the
failure of the government to table
the report despite a ruling by the
Chairman of the Council, D.H. Shankaramurthy, and the direction of the
Karnataka HighCourt.

62

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DROUGHT

Telanganas thirst
AT 3 a.m. on November 28, 2015,
residents of Bommareddigudem village in Telanganas Medak district
woke up to the familiar drone of a
borewell rig in operation. It is common practice in the village, like in
most other rural habitations of Telangana, to dig deeper and deeper to
nd water to irrigate the parched
lands. The clandestine drilling takes
place mostly at night as the residents
fear that the local authorities may
attempt to stop it as proper procedures are not followed to drill new
borewells.
Kumar Ramulu, 45, belonging to
the dominant Mudhiraju community, has been raising sugarcane in his
four-acre (1.6 hectare) eld for more
than two decades. For several years,
the yield had been poor. In 2014 and
2015, the crop failed. The wells Ramulu had previously sunk are dry.
The 150-foot-deep well he frenetically got dug in the wee hours of November 28 also did not yield water.
Ramulu had hired a contractor for
Rs.40,000, borrowing the money at
36 per cent interest. The contractor
was in a hurry to nish the digging
before dawn and be out of plain sight
but a desperate Ramulu urged him to
drill another well about 200 ft away.
It was 6:30 a.m. As the contractor
began drilling, Ramulu once again
went to the moneylender to borrow
another Rs.40,000 to pay the contractor. The second attempt also
failed.
At daybreak, the Dalit neighbourhood in the vicinity of Ramulus
land began to wake up. Rakesh and

PHOTOGRAPHS: KUNAL SHANKAR

Many villages in the State are reeling under acute water scarcity. The
government departments are trying to tap every available source to
supply water to them as the rural economy is collapsing. B Y K U N A L S H A N K A R

C H I RA N GI M ALLA R E D D Y, who owns 4.8 hectares of land. For the rst

time he had to dig a 1,000-foot borewell as the Manjeera, a tributary of the


Krishna river, has run completely dry.
63

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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his brother came out to see what the


noise was all about. Three-year-old
Rakeshs curiosity got the better of
him and he ventured closer to the
rst pit. He lost his balance at the
edge of the well and fell into the pit.
He was stuck at a depth of 30 ft, with
a heavy head injury. Rescue attempts
commenced immediately. As the
news spread, regional television crew
descended on the village and started
giving a blow-by-blow account of the
rescue operation to their viewers.
Men who were working on another
borewell in the neighbouring Nalgonda district rushed to Bommareddigudem and joined the rescue
attempts. After 25 hours, they were
able to lift the lifeless body of Rakesh
from the pit. Ramulu spent the next
45 days in jail, while his wife once
again went to the moneylender to
borrow Rs.25,000 to pay the police.
The borewell operator was arrested
and let off on bail after 15 days.
The accident involving Rakesh is
not a one-off incident. Telanganas
countryside is replete with stories of
children falling into open borewells.
According to the National Crime ReFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

B Y RI S A I LU A ND M OG UR A M M A , parents of the boy Rakesh who fell into a


borewell at Bommareddigudem in Medak district in November 2015.

cords Bureaus (NCRB) statistics for


2014, 50 people (42 men and eight
women) died when they fell into
open borewells. Almost half of them
were under 30. Activists said this was
a gross underestimation as several
deaths that occurred in the hinterland went unreported. Arribandi
Prasad Rao, a retired professor of
Hyderabads Acharya NG Ranga
Agricultural University, said there
were close to 100 such deaths a year
in Telangana alone and nationwide,
the gure could be in the thousands.
The right procedure to drill a borewell is to seek permission from the
mandal authorities, who will intimate the States Ground Water Department (GWD), which will send a
geologist to ascertain the right spot
to dig a well on the basis of the depth
of the available source and spacing
between two wells. It is mandated
that there should be a distance of 820
ft between two wells and the water
drawn should not be more than
1,000 gallons for a whole cropping

season. The GWD has based this estimation on the requirement of irrigated dry, or ID, crops such as
maize, millets, chillies, vegetables
and cotton. They are considered the
best crops for a semi-arid, waterstressed region. But as Telangana
reels under the worst drought in 60
years, the authorities have relaxed
the spacing between wells to 500 ft,
but only in canal-irrigated farmlands. Neither Ramulus rst failed
borewell nor the second one would
have met the criterion, as his fouracre land, split into two equal plots,
does not have a 500-ft radius.
Most of the digging happens
outside the purview of the government authorities after the Water
Land and Trees Act (WALTA), of
2002, came into force G. Sambaiah
of the GWD said. He was referring to
the Act implemented by undivided
Andhra Pradesh, which Telangana
has adopted. The Act not only mandates spacing but also disallows any
commercial borewell within 820 ft of

64

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

KU MA R R A M UL U, on whose land the borewell was dug, seen here with his
wife. The borewell did not yield any water.

a drinking water well. This was done


to check the rampant use of groundwater. Records with the GWD show
a 16-fold increase in the number of
borwells between 1986 and 2000.
The three decades for which data are
available indicate that the number of
borewells in Telangana increased
from 23,929 to 14.5 lakhs. Seventy
per cent of Telanganas farmlands
depend on groundwater for irrigation. But as the State witnessed a
second consecutive drought year in
2015, groundwater is used only for
drinking.
Government officials blame the
accidents such as the one in Bommareddigudem on greedy rig owners.
There are between 20 and 30 rig
owners in each of Telanganas nine
rural districts and two to three times
that number in Hyderabad city. The
GWD estimates that borewell drillers make not less than Rs.15 lakh a
month. The cost of digging one well
is anywhere between Rs.50,000 and
Rs.75,000. All the drilling compa-

nies are registered with the GWD


and yet they out the law. They capitalise on the farmers desperation
for water. It would have cost Ramulu
another Rs.5,000 to close the well he
had sunk, which would have meant
borrowing again.
A retired GWD official, not wishing to be named, blamed the inadequate staff strength for the inability
of the department to implement the
Act effectively. He said: Each district requires about 10 members to
carry out the departments work, but
we are functioning with about four or
ve. And our duties also include the
execution of the WALTA. An increase in the staff strength would
help us carry out more inspections,
he said. While all the loopholes cannot be plugged, along with some punitive measures, this could act as a
deterrent, he said. The GWD only
has the powers to recommend action. The revenue authorities have
the powers to penalise those violating the Act.
65

Contact : @Razkr

WALTA rules do not apply to


municipalities as water use in their
jurisdiction is assumed to be largely
for domestic and drinking water purposes. The estimation does not take
into account the exponential increase in apartment complexes and
the pressure this is putting on urban
groundwater resources, without any
means to replenish them.
Instances of children falling into
open borewells are only one aspect of
the drought conditions in the State.
Suicides by farmers, uorosis and
heat stroke are some of the other.
The State government has admitted
that as of April 30, 122 persons died
owing to the heat wave conditions
that prevailed between April 14 and
26.
Y.K. Reddy of the Hyderabad
Centre of the India Meteorological
Department said: Normally, heat
wave conditions happen in the second half of May, but occasionally
they occur in April as well. The last
time temperatures soared [to 45
Celsius] was in 2010. What is more
alarming is that the mean maximum
temperature, the value of the highs of
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

the past three decades [1981-2011],


has increased by about half a degree
Celsius compared with the previous
average [between 1971-2001] in several parts of the State. For instance,
Ramagundam, a town in north-central Telangana, recorded an unprecedented high of 46.1 Celsius in
April, Y.K. Reddy said.
WATER CRISIS

What is unfolding now is a calamity


that was not witnessed by at least
four generations in the Deccan plateau. Almost all of Telanganas reservoirs are dry. A combined
presentation by the Rural Water
Supply and Sanitation Department
(RWS) and the Irrigation Department to the Chief Minster recently
gives an appalling picture. The Central governments recommendation
of daily water supply for each rural
household is 40-55 litres, far less
than the 150 litres sanctioned for cities, but even that target is impossible to achieve.
Every summer, several of Telanganas villages go dry and the local
authorities make arrangements to
supply a minimum of 15 litres every
day for each household for its cooking and drinking water needs. For
the rst time this year, water was
transported to thousands of villages, Ravindranath, who is in charge of
the RWS calamity relief, said. As on
April 25, 2,081 habitations had no
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

water. This number rose to 2,151 in


four days. Last year, 482 habitations
needed water in the corresponding
period. The State has about 20,000
habitations, which means that about
one-tenth of the States 2.15 crore
people living in rural areas have no
access to water by April end. Medak,
Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhara
Raos home district, is the worst affected with more than 800 habitations without water.
In the adjoining Mahboobnagar
district, 400 habitations face water
scarcity. Even Adilabad, the district
with its southern boundary marked
by the Godavari river and the northern border by the Penaganga river,
faces a severe water crisis. Adilabad
generally does not experience severe
droughts but this time more than
200 habitations, several of them in
difficult-to-reach hilly tribal neighbourhoods, are without water.
Around this time of the year, the
government hires even private borewells to augment any water source
available to ensure a semblance of
supply. In all, 6,144 private borewells
have been hired to supply water to
3,643 habitations across the State,
the maximum number being in Warangal district, followed by Nalgonda
district. The water is then rationed to
the entire neighbourhood in the vicinity of these wells. Sridhar Rao
Deshpande of the Irrigation Department, speaking about his recent visit

to some villages in Mahboobnagar


district, said: There is always some
perennial water source that villagers
keep as a reserve during such situations. Villagers trek for a whole
day to get a pot of water.
Another official of the Rural Water Supply Department said: People
dont take a shower. They wear the
same clothes for weeks. Village residents take a small pot of water and go
into the elds for their morning ablutions. They dont require much water, and so the situation does not
appear alarming, but city folks are
used to an entirely different kind of
living. We ush the toilets every time
we use and take long showers. Our
water needs are more.
Near Bommareddigudem, Chirangi Malla Reddy is digging a 1,000
foot borewell in broad daylight. He
does not require permission to drill
because this is his rst well on a 12acre plot his family owns right near a
canal fed by the Manjeera river,
which has always irrigated his sugarcane crop.
In March, for the rst time, the
river ran completely dry. The Singur
dam on the Manjeera, a tributary of
the Krishna, is visible on the horizon.
It was conceived as an irrigation project, but it has become one of Hyderabads main lifelines in the past
two decades with the rapid growth of
the city. The water in the dam is now
below the dead storage level, as is
water in most of the regions reservoirs which also serve Maharashtra,
Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and
parts of Chhattisgarh and Madhya
Pradesh (see chart).
Rakeshs parents Byri Sailu and
Moruramma and Ramulus parents
have enrolled for the 100-day job
guarantee scheme, like other ablebodied members of the village. The
Telangana government had widely
discredited the Mahatma Gandhi
National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) around the
same time last year as a substandard, inefficient and ill-conceived
way of spending public money. But
in the past two months, works under
the MGNREGA have been scaled up
across the State in view of the collapse of the rural economy.

66

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HERITAGE

ANCIENT GIFT
for the modern world

D H Y A N A , Swami Sitaramananda,

Sivananda Yoga Farm, Grass Valley,


United States.

Contact : @Razkr

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

In the run-up to International Yoga Day, June 21, a look at


why yoga has captured the imagination of people.
Text & photographs by BENOY K. BEHL
YOGA was conceived 5,000 years ago, in the Indian
subcontinent. The Upanishads, composed in the 8th or
9th century BCE as a collection of beautiful verses, crystallised deep philosophical ideas that had a timeless quality and a vision of life in which yoga was a fundamental
factor.
The Katha Upanishad of 3,000 years ago says: He
whose senses are uncontrolled, who is not tranquil,
whose mind is not at rest, he can never attain the true self,
even through knowledge.
It also says: The Supreme, being formless, cannot be
discerned by the senses, hence all knowledge of the eter-

nal must be acquired by the more subtle faculties. These


are developed only through the purifying practice of
meditation.
Yoga is a deep study of the universal nature of humankind, not just a science of the mere physical world. It
is the study of consciousness itself, understanding ones
body, ones emotions, ones mind and, beyond that, ones
true self.
Yoga has a vision of oneness in all that there is around
us. It is a vision of great harmony and works towards
integrating us with the eternal reality. What comes in the
way of this unity is peoples egos and their limitless

DH Y A N A , Sivananda Yoga Farm,

Grass Valley, U.S.

Contact : @Razkr

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

desires which they spend their lives chasing. There is


never satisfaction in their lives, only pain and a constant
restlessness.
Conquering the fretful disturbances of the mind,
great thinkers researched deep into the self over several
centuries and in the process developed a great tradition
of logic and epistemology. They examined, among other
things, the following questions: What is the basis of our
knowledge? What is knowledge itself? It was a precise
and uncompromising study, an unerring search for the
truth to help us to know ourselves better and to help us
attain inner peace and joy.
The Katha Upanishad says: The one who is free from
desire and free from grief, with the mind and senses
tranquil, beholds the glory of the true self.
Yoga quite literally means to unite oneself with the
higher self, which is in us and is all-pervasive. It means to
join the subject with the object. To do this, we have to
strip away the many layers of momentary sensory perceptions that assail our senses and keep us bound to the

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I N D US VALLE Y S E AL of approximately 5,000 years

ago, showing a gure in yogic posture.

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

material world. In the words of the Katha Upanishad: When the ve sense organs of perception
become still, together with the mind: that is called
the highest state.
The Upanishad says: When all desires dwelling
in the heart cease, then the mortal becomes immortal and attains the true self.
The purpose of yoga is to free its practitioners
from the shackles of desires, awaken the true knowledge within them and help them be in harmony
with all that there is.
Yoga helps people to be in the moment in which
they live. Gradually, they become aware, rst of
their bodies and of their breath. Yoga brings them to
look at it, to control it. Once that has been achieved,
the transformation has begun.
From there, the next step is awareness of the
mind. Yoga and ancient Indian thought do not consider the mind to be consciousness itself. The mind
is, in many ways, like the body. People have to see it,
be aware of it. The ancient texts point out that the
mind is like a monkey, which jumps about. It its
from thought to thought, and people usually have
no control over it. In yoga, they become aware of it
and step aside, to become observers of the mind.
They are no longer carried away by the uctuations
of the mind.
The yoga sutras, written by the ancient sage
Patanjali, say that yoga is a state of Chitta Vritti
Nirodha, a state in which the waves or perceptions
of the mind have been stilled. In this state, a person
may be able to direct his or her consciousness to the
search for what is true and lasting.
Scientic research done on yoga in the past 40
years has conrmed that yoga contributes to the
health and happiness of people in all walks of life.
Meditation is not about nding anything new. It is
about letting go of what is not ones self. When a
person learns to observe himself or herself, the outside world no longer has control over him or her.
Good health and joy are the natural outcome. At the
end of the path of self-transformation is the reward
of true knowledge: when we are deeply aware of our
oneness with all that there is: the state of yoga.

P A D A N G US THA P AD M A UTKA TA S A N A,

Sasha Belousova, Zorba the Buddha, Delhi.

Benoy K. Behl is a lm-maker, art historian and


photographer who, in the past 37 years, has taken over
46,000 photographs of Asian monuments and art
heritage, made 133 documentaries on art and cultural
history, and held exhibitions in 54 countries around the
world. He has delivered lectures at most of the important
universities and museums around the world that have
departments of Asian art. His book, The Ajanta Caves, is
published by Thames & Hudson, London, and Harry N.
Abrams, New York, and is in its fth print run.
Behl is at present completing his third lm on yoga. The
rst lm was shown in 50 countries on the first
International Yoga Day, June 21, 2015. He carried out
the photography for this feature in India, Vietnam and
the United States over the last one year and was assisted
in this by Sujata Chatterji.
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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70

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71

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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S I R S A S A N A,

Sivananda Centre, Vietnam.

Contact : @Razkr

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KAP O T A S A N A
( VA R I A T I O N ).

Ambeeka and
Bhargavi at
Sivananda
Ashram, Neyyar
Dam, Kerala.

KAP O T A S A N A ,

Sivananda Yoga
Farm, Grass
Valley, U.S.
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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MA YUR A S A N A ,

Sivananda Yoga Farm,


Grass Valley, U.S.

M AYUR A S A N A,

Sasha Belousova,
Zorba the
Buddha, Delhi.

75

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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E KA P A D A UR D H V A D H A N U RA S A N A , Sasha Belousova, Lodhi Gardens, Delhi.


FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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NATA R A J A S A N A , Sivananda Yoga Farm, Grass Valley, U.S.

P A R I V R T T A A R D H A C H A N D RA S A N A , Sasha

VR I S CHI KAS AN A , Sivananda Centre, Vietnam.

Belousova, Zorba the Buddha, Delhi.


77

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

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HANUMANASANA,

Ayurvedagram,
Bengaluru.
EK A P A D A
S I RS A S A N A ,

Sivananda Yoga
Farm, Grass
Valley, U.S.

EKA P A D A UTTAN A S A N A (variation), Sasha Belousova, Lodhi

Gardens, Delhi.
79

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80

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S A RV A N G AS AN A ( VA R I A TI ON ) , Sasha Belousova,

Zorba the Buddha, Delhi.

D H AN UR A S A N A, Ayurvedagram,

Bengaluru.
81

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ANJA L I MUD R A , Sasha Belousova, Lodhi Gardens, Delhi.


FRONTLINE .

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BOOKS in review

Green future
The book explores the possibility of sustainable use of biodiversity and
associated traditional knowledge with economic benet for the
communities and countries that have conserved them for generations.
BY S . G O P I K R I S H N A W A R R I E R

HERE is an irony related to biodiversity


and economics. Communities that live in close contact with biodiversity-rich
forests are economically
poor, whereas people who
live in biodiversity-poor
urban centres and make
commercial use of the biological resources are economically rich. To stretch
the theory further, biodiversity-rich tropical countries
are
usually
economically poor, whereas developed industrialised
countries, which use biological resources to manufacture
industrial
products, are rich.
This paradox came into
international focus in the
early 1990s with the signing of two international
agreements. The rst was
the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), designed and announced at
the United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development held in
Rio de Janeiro in Brazil in
June 1992; the second was
the Trade-Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS) Agreement, which was part of
the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Agreement
envisaged in Marrakesh,
Morocco, in 1994.

Commercial Use
of Biodiversity
Resolving the
Access and
Benet Sharing
Issues
By Shivendu K.
Srivastava
Sage
Publications
Pages: 344
Price: Rs.995

The CBD was pathbreaking in the sense that


it declared biological diversity and the traditional
knowledge associated with
its use as a sovereign national
property.
This
marked a paradigm shift
because until then biological diversity was considered a part of the global
commons. The CBD aimed
at promoting three objectives: conservation of biodiversity
(and
the
associated
traditional
knowledge), its sustainable
use, and fair and equitable
sharing of benets arising
from its use.
The objective of the
TRIPS Agreement, on the
other hand, was to protect

and enforce intellectual


property rights (IPRs) in
order to promote technological innovations and ensure transfer of technology.
The larger goal of the WTO
agreement was to promote
multilateral trade across
countries.
Since biological diversity can be the starting point
for much of the research
and commercialisation in
agriculture, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and
many other sectors, it
comes within the interface
of the two international
agreements. This interface
gets routinely played out in
India, since it is a global
biodiversity major and was
the rst country to imple83

Contact : @Razkr

ment a Biodiversity Act


and create appropriate intellectual property laws.
The book under review
looks at this interface, its
past history, and future
ways to improve access and
benet-sharing. The author, Shivendu K. Srivastava, a retired senior Indian
Forest Service (IFS) officer, says he intended the
book to be a toolkit for the
natural resource managers
involved in the business of
biodiversity.
The main thrust of Srivastavas narrative is not
on questioning why the
communities and nations
living in biodiversity-rich
areas are poor. That would
have called for a socio-economic analysis of the
Marxist kind. He limits his
scope to understanding the
legal systems in operation
internationally and in India, highlighting case studies of benet-sharing
projects and showing how
access and benet-sharing
can be improved.
It is interesting that an
IFS officer is looking at
these issues in depth because he brings to the narrative the perspective of a
natural resource manager
and an understanding of
what is practical and possible. Usually, these thinkFRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

throughs are done by academics or non-governmental


organisations
(NGOs), which, despite
their conceptual clarity
and ideological correctness, may not always have
practical applicability.
Of the nine chapters in
the book, only the last
three deal with a plan of
action for the future. What
would have otherwise been
an overkill of historical
contextualisation
gets
moderated because of the
complexities of the CBDTRIPS interface that the
book helps to clarify. Of
use is a table in chapter 5,
which
compares
the
TRIPS and the CBD agreements and the Indian Biodiversity Act.
The rst six chapters
seek to recall what has
happened since the early
1990s when the CBD and
the TRIPS agreements
came into force. It was an
interesting period in Indian environmental history,
since Parliament started
the process of drafting two
pieces of legislation in relation to these international
agreementsthe Biodiversity Act of 2002 and the
Protection of Plant Variety
and Farmers Right Act of
2001and an amendment
to the Patents Act, where
exemptions from product
patents were removed for
all industrial produce.
The successive governments at the Centre in the
1990s (a period that saw
frequent changes in government)
encouraged
public discussions on the
drafting process. The parliamentary
committees
tasked with drafting the
relevant laws organised
public hearings. Thus,
many of the issues that Srivastava talks about were
discussed threadbare in
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

the public domain.

ed), the JNTBGRI licensed


the technology for manufacturing Jeevani to AVP,
transferring the right to
manufacturing the drug
vide an agreement signed
in 1996 for a period of seven years. In addition to the
licence fee of one million
rupees, the JNTBGRI was
also to receive royalty of 2
per cent on any future sales
of the drug.
In turn, the JNTBGRI
reached an agreement
with the Kanis. These
benets were accruing
from the TK [traditional
knowledge] held by the
Kani people, and, therefore the JNTBGRI decided
to share the benets with
the Kani community in
general, with substantive
share going to the Kani
guides who provided the
clue that led to the development of the drug,
writes Srivastava. The
JNTBGRI decided to
share half of the licence fee
and future royalties with
this group of Kanis. A trust
fund, with nine Kanis as
trustees, was established
in 1997.
The benet-sharing arrangement, however, went
through some chaotic
phases. The Forest Department had reservations
about declaring Arogyapacha a minor forest produce, for fear of its
over-exploitation. There
was a lack of unanimity
among the Kani people
about their understanding
of the benet-sharing and
the trust arrangement.
Then there were the complexities relating to who
owned the resource and
the traditional knowledge
and whether the plant was
growing on private or government land.
Similar issues, confusions and conicts have

A TREK WITH KANIS

There were far more questions than answers. The


Jawaharlal Nehru Tropical Botanic Garden and
Research
Institute
(JNTBGRI) in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, entering into an agreement
with the Kani tribal people
of the Western Ghats was
one of the efforts taken to
work out a benet-sharing
model with the conservers
of biodiversity and associated traditional knowledge. Scientists of the
JNTBGRI discovered the
energy-giving qualities of
the fruit of a plant called
Arogyapacha (Trichopus
zeylanicus) during their
trek into the forests in 1987
for an ethnobotanical survey with elders of the Kani
tribe as guides. Even as the
scientists panted as they
climbed the steep slopes,
the tribal elders showed no
signs of fatigue. The reason
for this, they found out,
was Arogyapacha fruits
they consumed.
An agreement was
worked out between the
Kanis, the JNTBGRI and a
private company Arya Vaidya Pharmacy Ltd (AVP),
to bring this biodiversity
product and the associated
traditional knowledge into
greater public use by developing a commercial
drug called Jeevani. The
JNTBGRI scientists identied and isolated 12 active
compounds from the fruit
and led two patent applications on the drug.
Discussing this case
study, the author says: In
order to bargain from the
wonder drug, following
the guidelines of the Council for Scientic and Industrial Research (to which
the institute was affiliat-

emerged from other places


in the world, too, where
benet-sharing
models
were worked out. The book
talks about projects in Costa Rica, Suriname, Nigeria,
southern Africa and Morocco.
Nevertheless,
these
projects are the stepping
stones for future development of access and benetsharing frameworks which
not only promoted sustainable use of biodiversity
and associated traditional
knowledge, but also increased economic benet
for the communities and
countries that have conserved
them
for
generations.
Srivastava
writes:
There can be no model
bio-prospecting arrangement as each project
would have a different set
of biological resources,
each indigenous and local

84

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

S. MAHINSHA

A KAN I E L D E R harvesting Arogyapacha from the Kottoor forests in Kerala. An


agreement was worked out between the Kanis, the JNTBGRI and a private company to
bring this biodiversity product and the associated traditional knowledge into greater
public use by developing a commercial drug called Jeevani.

community may have a different cultural tradition


and even the local laws
may be varying according
to its own social goals and
priorities. Even the very
initiation of a project may
be the catalytic effect from
different institutionssometimes by a government
institution, at times by an
international environment
organisation, or in some
cases it may be initiated by
a small company, and not
necessarily by an indigenous and local community
or an active NGO.
Despite these limitations, efforts have to be
made to continuously
strengthen benet-sharing mechanisms. Otherwise, those communities

that national and local


laws have to be strengthened and all the stakeholders must be involved in the
process.
The earlier models of
benet
sharing
were
worked out at a time when
there were no national
laws on access and benet
sharing. Now, several
countries are in the process of putting these
together.

and countries that had


conserved biodiversity and
associated
traditional
knowledge for generations
may themselves become
over-exploiters of the resource for commercial use.
Here comes the role of
the mechanism of benet
sharing, and this mechanism will be more robust if
the benets drawn are
enough to sustain a particular habitat of the biodiversity. Quite naturally,
in order to draw adequate
benets that are proportionate to the value of the
resource, the source countries have got to have a relook on how to bargain
maximum from the resource-user countries, the
author says. This means

THE NAGOYA
PROTOCOL

Also, the Nagoya Protocol


on Access and Benet
Sharing, an offshoot of the
CBD, came into force in
October 2014, mandating
countries to enact laws to
protect these elements.
85

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The protocol aims to facilitate access to genetic resources and share benets
from their commercial use
with the communities in
an internationally acceptable manner, which has legal
certainty
and
transparency.
Interestingly,
India
had most of the elements
of the Nagoya Protocol as
part of its Biodiversity Act
of 2002. Thus, it has much
of the framework required
for commercialising biological diversity and associated
traditional
knowledge in a sustainable
manner.
Srivastava concludes
with three recommendations to strengthen benet
sharing. He says that there
is a need to develop a cadre
of professionals with scientic and legal expertise
to facilitate access and
benet sharing. Each of
the stages of developing a
benet-sharing project has
to be gone through with utmost care, since there is no
one-size-ts-all solution.
The
biodiversity-rich
countries should continue
to work towards making
TRIPS more amenable to
benet sharing through
the international negotiations mechanism.
Srivastavas
conclusions and recommendations may not be the last
word on the subject as it is
constantly evolving. But,
his effort to comprehensively include in the book
all aspects of access and
benet sharing will certainly enable managers,
researchers, activists and
representatives of the indigenous community to
negotiate better deals in
the future.

S. Gopikrishna Warrier is
an environment journalist
and blogger.
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

BOOKS in review

New facets of
the Mughals
The book frees Mughal history of preconceived
notions and carefully brings out the strands of
pluralism that helped weave the Mughal fabric.
BY Z I Y A U S S A L A M

BOUT four years ago,


the historian William
Dalrymple surprised many
book lovers with a ne
study of painting and literature during the Mughal
age. Students of history
knew well the miniature
works done during the
time of the Mughal ruler
Jahangir and, indeed, had
more than a passing fancy
for the pietra dura technique of that period. Yet,
when Dalrymple claimed
that there was a owering
of art and culture after the
decline of the Great Mughals with the death of Aurangzeb in 1707, more than
a few eyebrows were
raised.
But Dalrymple persuasively sought to prove in
Princes and Painters in
Mughal Delhi, a book he
co-edited with Yuthika
Sharma, that the political
decline of the Mughals did
not necessarily mean a decline in the world of pen
and brush. Yes, Mughal architecture suffered as the
state was no longer in a position to nance lofty monuments, but the loss of
architecture was the gain
of the arts: Urdu ourFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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Culture of
Encounters
Sanskrit at the
Mughal Court
By Audrey
Truschke
Penguin Books
Pages: 364
Price: Rs.699

ished, poetry reigned supreme and, in the world of


painting, Ghulam Ali
Khans brush was said to
equal Ghalibs pen. Ghulam Ali Khan was in the
limelight during the reign
of
Mohammed
Shah
Rangeela (grandson of
Bahadur Shah I), otherwise dismissed as a nohoper by some historians
for his political inadequacies. However, it was during Rangeelas reign that
artists who had moved to
Sikh and Rajput courts
came back to the Mughal
court. And yes, the last of
the Great Mughals, Au-

rangzeb, was a pragmatic


ruler who patronised Hindu institutions. He employed more Hindus in his
imperial
administration
than any of his predecessors did. So, Princes and
Painters in Mughal Delhi,
replete with photographs,
was a step in the right
direction.
Audrey Truschkes Culture of Encounters: Sanskrit at the Mughal Court is
several steps forward. It
comes at a time when efforts are being made to selectively wipe out traces of
Indias composite heritage.
It is not a book that has

come too soon. Well researched, persuasively argued


and
patiently
explained, the book lls a
vacuum that one did not
know even existed. After
all, Dara Shukohs (Shah
Jahans eldest son) fascination for the Upanishads
and the Bhagvad Gita is
well known. One has even
heard of Akbars Sulhi Kul
(policy of religious reconciliation). His court is
known for the navratna
(nine gems), the nine courtiers of extraordinary talent
assembled
independent of their religion or caste. Yet, nobody
had thought it t to study
Sanskrit at the Mughal
court. After all, the empire
was all about Turkish and
Persian. But the Mughals
were shrewd masters; they
understood the local pulse
better than the local people
themselves. Hence, the use
and encouragement of
Sanskrit was not just inevitable but natural.
With this painstaking
work, Audrey Truschke also buries for good all prejudiced arguments that the
Mughals were invaders
who killed for pleasure,
looted out of habit, demolished temples and indeed
wiped out all vestiges of local culture with impunity.
The picture that was presented was often jarring,
almost always provocative.
The author, an assistant professor of South
Asian History at Rutgers
University, Newark, United States, seeks to redress
the balance admirably. In
the past, history has often
been a prisoner of stereotypes: Akbar was a model
of excellence; Jahangir and
Shah Jahan were able suc-

86

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

cessors during whose time


art and architecture owered; Aurangzeb was the
much-despised tyrant who
converted Hindus under
fear.
Audrey Truschke frees
history of preconceived
notions with a work that
unfurls so gently and deceptively that you could be
forgiven for initially believing that she has little
new to say. It is when you
are halfway through the
book that you realise that
the author has been handholding you, leading you
through paths that you did
not know had even existed.
In terms of interpretation
of history, it is a laudable
intervention, one that,
hopefully, will fuel greater
research into the strands of
pluralism that helped
weave the Mughal fabric.
In the preface and acknowledgements, the author tells us what to
expect:
For roughly one
hundred years the Mughal
elite poured immense energy into drawing Sanskrit
thinkers to their courts,
adopting and adapting
Sanskrit-based practices,
translating dozens of Sanskrit texts into Persian,
and composing Persian accounts of Indian philosophy. Both Persian- and
Sanskrit-medium authors
blazed new paths with
their respective literary
cultures in response to this
imperial agenda. When all
was said and done, Mughal-Sanskrit engagements
constituted one of the most
extensive
cross-cultural
encounters in precolonial
world history, rivalled by
the likes of the Abbasid engagement with Greek
thought in the eighth to
tenth centuries and Chinese translations of Budd-

P O RT RA I T S O F Akbar and Jahangir. Having inherited the master imperial copy of

Akbars Ramayana, Jahangir called the book beyond comprehension.


hist Sanskrit materials
during the rst millennium C.E.

His apprehension probably stemmed from his


faith. Ironically, he had
translated several Sanskrit
texts into Persian at Akbars command. Badauni,
taken by surprise at the
Emperors decision to have
the introduction or preface
by him, wrote: (Akbar) ordered me to also write a
preface (to the Ramayana) in the style of the authors. Because I found
little benet and also had
to write the khutbah without praise of the Prophet, I
desisted. I seek refuge in
God from that black book,
which is so rotten as the
book of my life.
Badaunis refusal to
pen the introduction had
to do with the politics at
the court. The emperor
was seen as a liberal adherent to Islam while Badauni
was more of a hardliner.
And, as Audrey Truschke
writes, in the past he had
been upbraided by the emperor for interpolating Islamic theology into the
Mahabharata. The authors narration is insight-

AKBARS
TRANSLATION

The Mughal rulers engagement with Sanskrit


was not free of surprises.
For instance, the Akbari
translation of the Sanskrit
Ramayana, which was
never published. In this,
Akbar idealised Rama as
the model Indian monarch. Importantly, the
book suggested that Akbar
was an avatar of Vishnu,
just like Rama. It was an
attempt at fusion of state
and belief, yet at the same
time a radical departure
from the established practice of the age when the
emperors faith used to be
the faith of the common
man.
There is another anecdote relating to the Ramayana. Badauni, the
historian in the Mughal
court, otherwise much
lauded in history books, refused to write the introduction to the translation.
87

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ful and thought-provoking


and what she says between
the lines completes the picture. For instance, without
seeming to compare the attitude of Akbar and Jahangir, she reveals Jahangirs
less-than-wholehearted
appreciation of the local
culture. Yet, at the same
time, she shows the difference in the approach to
stories in Persia and India.
Having inherited the master imperial copy of Akbars Ramayana after
ascending the throne, Jahangir calls the book beyond comprehension.
This book, the Ramayana, is one of the celebrated books of the
ancients of India. My father ordered it translated
into Persian. It contains
strange and incredible stories that are truly incomprehensible
to
the
intellect. As for the two
styles of narration, Jahangirs sense of amazement
and wonderment at the
book probably arose out of
his Persian perspective
and the presence of talking
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

COURTESY : NATIONAL MUSEUM

TANS E N A N D A K B A R (in disguise) visit Swami Haridas in Brindavan. Akbar

considered himself to be the ruler of all, not just Muslims.


animals in the epic. Interestingly, the stories that
come to light go beyond
the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata. For instance, we have Abu alFazl relating the story of
Sivas wife who sacriced
herself as a mark of protest
against the disrespect
shown to her husband at
her father Dakshas sacricial ceremony and was
subsequently
dismembered and scattered across
the subcontinent. Even
more intriguing is the
Mughals relationship with
Kashmir. Here, the author
lets Abu al-Fazl do the
talking as she seeks to nd
parallels between Zayn alAbidin, the Kashmir king,
and Akbar. Abu al-Fazl
offers an approbative account of Zayn al-Abidin (r.
1420-1470),
describing
him in markedly similar
terms to how Akbar is
praised in Sanskrit texts
from the late sixteenth
century. For example Abu
al-Fazl acclaims the Kashmiri rulers compassion in
cancelling the taxes on
non-Muslims and forbidding cow slaughter. He alFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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so celebrates that Zayn


al-Abidin refused to eat
meat [and] dissuaded
men from hunting, sentiments that Akbar also expressed (at least in
moderation).

of research but also quietly


tells us that we have not
been fair to the Mughals in
projecting them in black
and white. The reality with
the Mughals, as indeed
with other things in life, lay
in shades of grey. They got
the Hindu scriptures
translated into Persian,
they got books on the Hindu thought processes
translated, too. And they
did get many other books
of every use, like texts on
medicine or law translated
as well. But their contribution was bigger than the
sum of the parts. They embraced a way of life, a way
of thought that was remarkably different from
theirs. They did not so
much as acquiesce as assimilate. The author puts it
aptly: Scholars have long
ignored the very existence,
not to mention the political ramications, of connections between the
imperial Mughal court and
Sanskrit
intellectuals,
texts, and knowledge systems. Many Mughal historians
have
relied
exclusively and uncritically on Persian histories,

NEW FACETS

Step by step, Audrey


Truschke reveals new facets of the Mughals. They
were great patrons of art
and culture. They were the
votaries of Perso-Arabic
traditions. Akbar considered himself to be the ruler
of all, not just Muslims.
But there was much more
to them. They were not indel-slaying, angry monarchs who lived in a social
vacuum. They were politically savvy kings who were
open to beliefs, customs
and traditions beyond
their own. Hitherto, most
historians had concentrated on tapping into the Perso-Arabic reservoir, the
Sanskrit treasure was
delved into for the purpose
of establishing literary renaissance during the
Mughal period.
Culture of Encounters
not only uses fresh sources

usually produced under


royal support, which frequently offer a purposefully inaccurate vision of
Mughal culture as limited
to Perso-Arabic traditions.
Additionally, the false notion remains prevalent
that Sanskrit literary developments
unfolded
without reference to political events and social
changes.
Audrey
Truschke is successful in
avoiding their errors, relying happily on the social
links between the Mughal
elite and Jain and Brahman Sanskrit intellectuals
and the series of literary
engagements that they
separately and jointly produced. Interestingly, the
Mughals, once they had established themselves in India, did not regard
Sanskrit to be the language
of the subjects. Rather they
saw in the language the key
to understanding Indias
socio-literary traditions.
They expended considerable energy into incorporating
Sanskrit
intellectuals, stories, and
knowledge systems into
their court culture.
Dalrymple.
Yuthika
Sharma. Now Audrey
Truschke. More and more
authors are taking a fresh
look at the Mughals. Just
as the political elite seeks
to unravel the contiguities
of the past, we must earnestly strive to bring to the
common mans domain
the joys of a shared past,
the age when Persian and
Sanskrit were used simultaneously in the court of
the same emperor. While
the
narrative
ows
smoothly, the author does
not try to make her point
too loudly. In that understated silence lies the
strength of the book, and a
lesson for our times.

88

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

BOOKS in review

Britain & Arabs


This book is a fair account of the roots of the tragedy
that has overtaken the Arab world. B Y A . G . N O O R A N I

T a time when the entire Arab world presents a tragic spectacle of


sheer ravage, it is instructive to read this erudite
documentary study as its
author calls it. Dr Younan
Labib Rizk was Professor
of History at Ain Shams
University in Cairo and a
regular columnist in AlAhram, a highly respected
daily. The book falls into
two parts: one is the authors analyses, with full citation of sources, while the
other contains whole texts
of documents, almost all of
which are published for the
rst time. He has consulted, in the archives in London, documents of the
Foreign Office, the Colonial Office, the India Office
and the (Second World)
War Cabinet. This should
put New Delhi to shame.
Even the records of the
Simla Conference in 1914,
in which British India, China and Tibet participated,
are kept under lock and
key, including the papers
on the India-Tibet accord
on the McMahon Line.
PERFIDIOUS BRITON

The book fully establishes


the truth of Shakespeares
taunt on le perde Albionthe perdious Briton. At Mansion House in
London, Foreign Secretary
Anthony Eden, who spoke
Arabic uently, declared
on May 29, 1941, that Britain should adopt a posi-

Britain and
Arab Unity
A Documentary
History from the
Treaty of Versailles
to the End of World
War II
By Younan Labib
Rizk
I.B. Tauris
Pages: 261
Price: 25

tive view on Arab unity.


Ironically, he ruined his career a decade later in a foolish attempt to bring down
the most articulate champion of Arab unity in the
last century, Gamal Abdel
Nasser.
The author writes:
British documents reveal
that in the four years intervening between Edens
declaration at Mansion
House and the establishment of the Arab League,
the British did their best to
obstruct efforts to forge
Arab unity. They used all
possible methods at their
disposal, from issuing
warnings to Arab governments, to actually threatening them, to attempting
to actively incite conict
between them. Finally, it
worked arduously to conne efforts towards Arab
unity to the cultural and
economic domains. This
overwhelming reliance on

British official documents,


and the minute details they
contain, helped bring the
full picture of Britains attitude towards Arab unity to
light.
Dr Rizk sheds much
light on Britains parallel
moves on behalf of the
Zionists, which culminated
in the famous Balfour Declaration of 1917 promising
a national home for the
Jewish people. Included in
the volume are the texts of
the secret Sykes-Picot
Agreement, the Arrangement of May 1916 between
Britain and France on the
division of the territorial
spoils of war in Arab lands
between them after the
First World War. It violated the solemn pledges
which Britain gave to Emir
Faysal bin al-Husayn to secure Arab support against
the Ottomans during the
war. The Arabs revolted
against the Ottomans and
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kept their part of the bargain. Britain reneged.


JUDAISATION OF
PALESTINE

Dr Rizk meticulously records the Judaisation of


Palestine, Arab efforts at
unity and British obstruction. One of the most revealing documents in the
book is the full text of a
memorandum on Arab
Unity prepared by the research department of the
Foreign Office dated June
4, 1943. It traces the Arab
movement for liberation
which began in the latter
half of the 19th century. Secret societies were formed
to avert notice by their Ottoman overlords. It recalled that throughout
negotiations the Sharif
Hussain envisaged a single
Arab State, covering the
whole of that territory of
Western Asia inhabited by
people of Arabic speech,
namely Greater Syria (including Palestine and
Transjordan), Iraq and the
Arabian
Peninsula.
Throughout the war too
the claim to set up a single
Arab state was maintained,
and in November 1916 the
Sherif was actually acclaimed King of the Arab
countries. This title, however, was never officially
accorded him, and in January 1917 he was recognised
by the Allies as King of the
Hejaz.
Abdul-Aziz Al Saud
ousted him in 1926 to become the King of Saudi
Arabia. His descendants
are in a tacit alliance with
Israel now to checkmate
Iran. This book is a fair account of the roots of the
tragedy that has overtaken
the Arab world.

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

DR THOMAS MATHEW

HERITAGE

AN E LE V A T E D view of the Rashtrapati Bhavan.

A peep into the past


Abode under the Dome documents the signicant events that the
Rashtrapati Bhavan hosted during the 1950s and 1960s and weaves a
narrative around these events to give readers a glimpse of Indias
emerging diplomatic excellence. B Y A J O Y A S H I R W A D M A H A P R A S H A S T A
FRONTLINE .

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cally asked his staff to let India know


of his preference for Indian coffee
and Indian cigarettes, and also his
aversion to goat meat, curd and
cheese. Abode Under the Dome, authored by Thomas Mathew, Additional Secretary to the President of
India, is full of such interesting anecdotes and documents the visits of
state dignitaries who stayed at Rashtrapati Bhavan between 1947 and
1967. Brought out by the Publications Division, the book makes a signicant
contribution
to
understanding the building of a new
nation, its values and its glorious tradition of hospitality. The author
stresses that the philosophy of atithi
devo bhava (guest is akin to god) was
taken very seriously by Rashtrapati
Bhavan. The author has culled details from various sources, including
news reports, archival photos and ofcial papers, to create narratives that
give readers a sense of Indias initial
diplomatic history. He does this successfully by providing a political context around each world leaders visit.
THE WONDER THAT WAS INDIA

The photographs and the context


presented in the book go well beyond
the itinerary of every visit and build a

diplomatic narrative by highlighting


the great camaraderie India enjoyed
with world leaders soon after it became independent. The stories clearly give the reader the impression that
India intrigued many leaders. They
wanted to know, see and understand
the cultural enigma that was India.
For instance, U.S. President Dwight
D. Eisenhower, during his visit in
1959, said that his desire to visit India was partly because he was intrigued by it. The evincing of sudden
interest was understandable. Until
Independence, India was a colony,
whose material and human resources could be harnessed at a short
notice and at will, by orders from
London. All this changed and an independent India could now voice its
own opinion, support and oppose issues, positions and nations. This
freedom exercisable on international
issues was a new dimension that other powers had to factor in their strategic calculus. Equally important
was the sustainment of the pluralistic political system in India, more
so for the unpredictable consequences its failure could spawn, writes
Matthew in the introduction.
In this context, a signicant part
of the book is devoted to Indias role

PHOTO CELL, RASHTRAPATI BHAVAN

IN 1973, Rashtrapati Bhavan ofcials received an uncommon request just ahead of the visit of Leonid
Brezhnev, the general secretary of
the central committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
(CPSU). The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) had just managed to neutralise the United States
tilt towards Pakistan, and India,
therefore, viewed Brezhnevs friendly-official visit as a great possibility
to strengthen its relationship with
that country. Brezhnev had visited
India in 1961 as the president of the
CPSU, but this visit as the general
secretary of the party was deemed
much more important because of the
unwavering support the Soviet
Union extended to India during the
Bangladesh war of 1971.
The unusual request was to place
a Lifebuoy soap bar in every room.
Lifebuoy was a soap which India
manufactured and made popular
among the masses. It was meant as a
token of respect for India. Although
bewildered, the officials put Lifebuoy soaps, along with other brands
of soap, in each room.
Similarly, Premier Zhou Enlai of
the Peoples Republic of China, during his visit to India in 1956, speci-

VIC E PR E S I D E N T S. Radhakrishnan with USSR President Leonid Brezhnev at the Rashtrapati Bhavan in December 1961.
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PHOTO CELL, RASHTRAPATI BHAVAN

P R E S I D E N T Rajendra Prasad and Queen Elizabeth II arriving for the Republic Day parade on January 26, 1961.

P R E S I D E N T R A J E N D RA P RA S A D and Yugoslavian President Josip Tito trying their hand at music at the Rashtrapati

Bhavan in December 1954.


FRONTLINE .

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PHOTO DIVISION, I&B MINISTRY

and leadership in the Non-Aligned


Movement (NAM). India after Independence asserted its right not to be
part of the Cold War dynamics. At
one level, it refused to be an ally of
either of the superpowers, at another
level it drew strategic support from
both to chart its own neutral path of
development. As a result, world leaders were intrigued at the condence
that India showed. Indias rst Prime
Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, owing
to his extensive knowledge of history
and politics and a genuine interest in
pure sciences, commanded respect
like no other Asian leader did. His
efforts to form a formidable front in
NAM by uniting developing nations,
which had a history of colonialism,
drew praises from not just within but
also outside the country. His statesmanship, impartiality and judiciousness were unquestionable even when
world leaders differed with his opinions.

PHOTO CELL, RASHTRAPATI BHAVAN

PHOTO CELL, RASHTRAPATI BHAVAN

P R I M E M I N I S TE R

Jawaharlal Nehru
and the First Deputy
Chairman of the
USSR, Anastas
Mikoyan (right)
enjoying Holi at the
Rashtrapati Bhavan
in March 1956.
(Left) Nehru,
Radhakrishnan,
Chinese Premier
Zhou Enlai and
Rajendra Prasad in
June 1954.

The visits of NAM leaders like


Gamal Abdel Nasser, the president
of the United Arab Republic (now
two different nations, Egypt and Syria), and Josip Broz Tito, the Yugoslavian President, and Ghanas
Kwame Nkrumah, therefore, became extremely important. These
leaders were welcomed with great
pomp and show that later became a
normal practice whenever any world
leader stayed at the Rashtrapati Bhavan. Matthew writes about Nassers
visit thus: After the welcome ceremony, President Nasser drove to
Rashtrapati Bhavan in the Indian
Presidents Mercedes Benz. The 10mile drive afforded President Nasser
a view of the enthusiastic crowds that
had lined the streets. They waved paper ags and cheered as the motorcade drove past, adding to the joyous
mood of the city that was in the grip
of excited anticipation of the two important festivals of Dussehra and
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Durga Pooja that were fast approaching. Buntings and streamers


welcoming President Nasser added
more colour to an already festooned
city and even Parliament Street
which [is] not normally decorated
had a paper arch of owers.
DIPLOMATIC INITIATIVES

In a similar vein, the book delves


deep into Indias initial efforts to nd
peace with aggressive nations like
Pakistan and China. The six visits by
Pakistans Presidents and Prime
Ministers and four visits by Zhou Enlai provide an astute understanding
of the diplomatic initiatives India
made. It was Defence Minister V.K.
Krishna Menon who extended an invitation to the Chinese Premier during the Geneva Conference of 1954,
which was held to bring an end to the
Korean War. Zhou Enlai accepted
the invitation, but his visit was kept a
secret until he arrived. Nehru postFRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Recording events for posterity


Interview with Thomas Matthew, Additional Secretary to the President.
BY A J O Y A S H I R W A D M A H A P R A S H A S T A

What prompted you to write this


book?
The honourable President is a
historian who likes to record things
for posterity. After he became President, he wanted to record the history of Rashtrapati Bhavan, how it has
been at the centre stage of international diplomacy as far as India is
concerned. Until about 1975, all the
visiting world leaders stayed in
Rashtrapati Bhavan. It was a matter
of prestige for them to stay in Rashtrapati Bhavan. We looked at some
documents which were here with us
and then stitched the story around
it. If you see the bibliography, it includes 10-20 newspapers. We
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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looked at banquet
speeches, declassied
documents of the United States, autobiographies and biographies.
A new nation, the
second most populous
country, had broken
free from the colonial
yoke; India interested
the world. The West did
not know on which side
the huge human resources and great
natural resources would be. India,
under the leadership of Prime Minister [Jawaharlal] Nehru, became a
powerful voice in international diplomacy. The New York Times
called us the hotspot of diplomacy.
The idea was to befriend India
because it was a great democracy.
People were astounded by the mysticism of the country, the pluralism
of India, and what the future held
for the country. In that context, we
have tried to document as much as
possible the views of foreign leaders,
what they saw in the country, and
how they would help it build its
democratic traditions. People were
curious about the future of this
country. For instance, the AIIMS
[All India Institute of Medical Sciences] was constructed with the
help of the New Zealand government. Canadian Prime Minister
PTI

DR Thomas Matthew,
Additional Secretary to
the President, is a man
of many interests. Apart
from being a prolic
commentator on national and international
issues, he is an accomplished photographer
and an enthusiastic
birdwatcher. The enthusiasm with which he
talks about Rashtrapati Bhavan and
its characteristics reects his strong
passion for Indias syncretic culture
and heritage. His published works
include In Search of Congruence:
Perspectives on India-U.S. Relations under the Obama Administration, Development of Nuclear
Energy Sector in India, and Winged
Wonders of Rashtrapati Bhavan,
the most comprehensive documentation on the birds at the presidential residence. In this interview with
Frontline, he speaks about his latest
book, Abode Under the Dome, and
explains what inspired him to write
it and the efforts he and his team
had to make in the process.
Excerpts:

John Diefenbaker ensured that India got nuclear technology.


Similarly,
the
Indo-Soviet
friendship treaty was extremely crucial for Indias political crisis with
Bangladesh because of the millions
of refugees who had migrated to India. The Soviet government helped
India a lot in managing the crisis.
The Western nations also helped India, but from the records available I
found that the kind of assistance the
Western nations gave India was not
as much as what the USSR gave.
Soviet President [Leonid]
Brezhnev came at very crucial phases of Indian history. He came as the
President and when he was the party secretary and also when he was
holding both positions. We created
the conditions that made all of them
feel at home. That is the Indian traditional conceptatithi devo bhava. That is why we call the book
Abode Under the Dome.
The book comes across as a visual
history of international diplomacy
from 1947 to 1967. Was it meant to
convey a certain message about
Indias initial political history?
India had to become a major
player in the Non-Aligned Movement. There was an intense desire of
both superpowers, the U.S. and the
USSR, to get India into their respective camps. India chose to steer clear
of the Cold War mechanisms and
follow its own foreign policy to ensure its own enlightened interests.
Josip Tito and Gamal Abdel Nasser
played a very dominant role, along
with India, to chart out its own diplomatic path. We have tried to document that period and its rich
history.
Tito came here many times. Every visit has its own interesting features. For instance, the rst time he
came in a yacht called the Ghalib,

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PHOTO CELL, RASHTRAPATI BHAVAN

P R E S I D E N T Rajendra Prasad with U.S. Vice President Richard Nixon (right)


and Patricia Nixon in the Mughal Gardens at the Rashtrapati Bhavan in
December 1953.

which means seagull. He came to


Bombay and was received by our
staff. From Bombay to Delhi he
took a train. They say it was the
most well-appointed train ever. It
had its own theatre and many other facilities. I have quoted The
New York Times, which said that
although Maharashtra was a dry
State, a special permit to serve alcohol in the train was given. Then
the cutlery and crockery were specially imported from London. The
railways handpicked about 40
trained personnel for Titos hospitality.
He was one of the most important leaders of the NAM, so was
Nasser. I brought out an instance
of how highly inuenced Nasser
was by Nehru in a meeting on the
Nile river.
The book also extensively
highlights the visits of Pakistani
leaders. At a time when IndiaPakistan relations are not at their
best, the book becomes
important.
I cannot comment on the con-

temporary relations, but historically I nd that there was a desire


on the part of the leaders of both
countries to settle their outstanding issues. At least this is what the
records say. It was the personal
friendship of the leaders from
both countries that helped a lot in
making serious attempts to settle
the boundary issues.
The book, in many places, quotes
world leaders praising the
welcome they were given by the
Rashtrapati Bhavans staff. Could
you talk a little about that?
I met bearers, butlers and
many other officials who, after retirement, have settled in places
outside Delhi. I was curious about
their sense of duty in the initial
days of an independent nation.
In fact, I have interviewed one
of the persons who opened the
door for Eisenhower. He remembers that Eisenhower put his hand
out to greet him and thanked him
for opening the door. Most of the
guests went back with great memories.
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poned his customary 10-day trip to


Shimla that was planned during this
time. In a welcoming gesture, India
sent a special aircraft to bring him
and his 15-member entourage to
New Delhi from Geneva. Because of
such attempts, Zhou Enlai told the
Indian press during his fourth visit to
India in 1960: The Chinese government holds that Sino-Indian friendship is of extremely great signicance
between the 1,000 million people of
the two countries and to the Asian
and world peace. This friendship
should not be, nor can it be, jeopardised because of the temporary lack
of settlement of the Sino-Indian
boundary question.
In 1950, when Indias rst President, Rajendra Prasad, invited Pakistans rst Prime Minister, Liaquat
Ali Khan, to stay in Rashtrapati Bhavan, he readily accepted. His meeting
with Nehru over contentious issues,
especially over Bengal, which was
torn apart by communal clashes,
lasted over two hours. The book
draws upon various documents
which show that there was great optimism between the leaders and both
tried to bridge the widening gap after
Partition.
Later, Pakistans Prime Minister
Mohammed Ali Bogra and Governor-General Malik Ghulam Mohammed also visited India. Matthew
writes about the grand civic reception India gave to Bogra at the Red
Fort in New Delhi: The entire route
from Rashtrapati Bhavan to the Red
Fort was lined by enthusiastic
crowds that cheered the motorcade
of the leaders as it drove by. At the
venue of the reception, too, the enthusiasm to see Bogra was no less. A
sudden drizzle did nothing to damp
the excitement of the 10,000 people,
including ministers and diplomats,
who had gathered at the Red Fort.
The Pakistani Prime Minister
was demonstrably moved by the
warmth of his welcome and he described it as warm, cordial and exuberant. He said, I feel that I am in no
foreign country and I am no stranger
to you and that Delhi has given me a
right royal reception and I shall cherish this memory for the whole of my
life.
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

PHOTO DIVISION, I&B MINISTRY

L OR D A N D L A D Y M O U N T B A T T EN and the Maharani and Maharaja Padma Shumsher Jang Bahadur Rana of Nepal
climbing the steps to the Durbar Hall of Government House (now Rashtrapati Bhavan) in March 1948.

The book is not meant to be a


critical appraisal of Indias diplomatic history. It documents the significant events that the Rashtrapati
Bhavan hosted during the 1950s and
1960s. However, Matthews success
lies in the way he weaves a narrative
around these events to give readers a
glimpse of Indias emerging diplomatic excellence. His academic
training as a PhD in international
relations helped him do so, he said.
The book presents an eclectic mix of
photographs, stories, events and important details of the presidential
residence to present a comprehensive picture to readers.
Readers may choose to read it as
a coffee-table book or a document
that tells you about Indias emergence as a global power. In both
ways, it is an entertaining and informative journey.
THROUGH THE PRESIDENTIAL
RESIDENCE

The foregrounding of the 29-room,


three-storey guest wing or northFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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west wing of the Rashtrapati Bhavan


as witness to these events also provides a visual history of the early period of the Indian political system.
The hospitality the Rashtrapati Bhavan extended to all its guests embodies the spirit of atithi devo bhava, as
has been noted in the book. The book
tells the readers of the immense efforts on the part of the officials to
arrange for a memorable stay for the
guests.
Matthew got in touch with retired staff of the Rashtrapati Bhavan
to recreate stories around that time.
As a result, the book becomes an important resource to understand how
Indias founding fathers asserted its
independence in the world and how
the most signicant colonial heritage, the Rashtrapati Bhavan, played
an important role in it. Eisenhower,
who stayed in the guest wing in 1959,
said: Although I have, through
many years, become largely insensitive to the appointments to the quarters where I lay my head, I must
confess I experienced a feeling of

amazement in the Rashtrapati


Bhavan.
At a time when there is a sustained attempt to erase histories
written by the founding fathers of
our nation, the book comes across as
a document of immense value.
Looked at in todays context, the
book is a must-read to assess the
changes and continuities in Indian
diplomacy.
It is also important to know how
India got the respectability it has in
the world because it chose to remain
outside the Cold War dynamicsa
vision envisaged by Nehruand
chart its own course as a republic. It
made itself truly independent when
it came to the question of aligning
with nations. Sometimes, it was strategic, and sometimes it was moral. In
all these tactical moves, India showcased its pluralistic and syncretic
character, an aspect that intrigued
all the world leaders. Finally, the
book is about the warmth and compassion that India showed to the
world.

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URBAN ISSUES

Killer lifeline
IT is 5 p.m. on a weekday at
Mumbais Churchgate station. The
rush hour is beginning and every
inch of free space on the four platforms is lling up fast. By 5:30 p.m. it
is a sea of office-goers waiting to
catch their regular train home. As
each train approaches, a crush of
people race to enter the coaches.
Somehow, there appears to be a
method in the madness because
thousands of people eventually manage to nd, if not a seat, at least a
foothold in the compartments. It is
not any better in the morning, say
commuters. Peak hours begin as
early as 7 a.m. for commuters to reach Mumbais business district or
government offices by 9 a.m. Each
day is a struggle, but there are few
alternatives.
For lakhs of regular commuters
this is a daily routine. Twice a day
they push their way into crammed
trains, travel long distances to workplaces, spending an average of four
hours commuting. Mumbais suburban rail lines form a well-oiled system that transports a staggering 75
lakh people to various destinations
every day. Unfortunately, the burgeoning city and its rapidly growing
population are putting the local railway network under huge pressure
and it is now struggling to cope with
the massive overcrowding.
A dreadful consequence of the
overcrowding and poor infrastructure has been the alarming rate of
accidents and deaths on the tracks.
Mumbais suburban railway network
records an average of nine deaths on

VIVEK BENDRE

The alarming rise in the number of accidental deaths on Mumbais


suburban railway network points to the urgent need for remedial
measures. B Y A N U P A M A K A T A K A M

C O M M U T ERS trying to board an overcrowded train at the Borivali


station in Mumbai.
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the tracks every day. The injuries sustained are innumerable. According
to figures released by the Government Railway Police (GRP), there
were 3,305 accidental deaths in
2015; the gure was 3,429 in 2014.
For the January-March period this
year, the GRP reported 694 deaths.
According to the railway police,
Mumbai records the highest number
of deaths across the worlds metropolitan cities that have a public rail
transport system. Some 60 per cent
of the deaths reportedly happen because of trespassing. The rest are owing to falls from trains, suicides or
natural causes. The statistics show
that in 2015, 846 people died after
falling off trains or slipping through
the gap between the train and the
platform, which typically happens
when coaches are overcrowded.
It took the case of 21-year-old
Bhavesh Nakate, who slipped from a
footboard and was crushed to death
under the tracks in November 2015,
for the authorities and even the commuting population to rise out of their
inertia and address the issue. Nakates death is no different from the
many reported daily. He jumped on
to a moving train and held on to a
pole at the entrance of a compartment that is meant as a support for
standing commuters. As the train
gathered speed, Nakate lost his balance and fell. In his case, however,
the tragic incident was caught on a
mobile phone by another commuter.
The clip went viral and the outrage
grew. Eventually, the Railway Ministry took cognisance of the case and
the issue of accidental deaths and
began to implement remedial
measures.
The problem is that at rush hour
all trains are crowded. We heard
about Nakates case but every day
people put their lives at risk. He was
unlucky. How much earlier does one
come to manage a seat or standing
space? Commuting to office is a
nightmare, said Rihan Majumdar, a
banker who travels about 25 kilometres from the Andheri neighbourhood in the west to the business
district of Nariman Point ve days a
week. I do not step out of my area
during the weekends or go near a
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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train because it is so tough during the


week, he added.
The accidental deaths are a
grave problem which has to be addressed on a war footing, said Subash Gupta, a member of the
Divisional Railway Users Consultative Committee (DRUCC) of the
Central Railways in Mumbai. The
DRUCC looks after commuter issues
and liaisons between passengers and
the Railways. Sometimes the injuries are so severe that it is sad to see
them live in such an unfortunate
state. For instance, a young boy losing both arms or both legs. What
kind of life is that? he said.
According to Gupta, until quite
recently the Railways did not consider it their duty to look after commuter safety, believing that their job was
to run the trains and work the lines.
However, ever since the media began
to highlight the issue of accidents
and poor infrastructure, the Railway
Ministry has been specically looking at Mumbais suburban railway
problems and attempting to nd solutions to problematic areas, he said.
Owing to the increase in accidents, several public interest litigation (PIL) petitions have been led in
the Bombay High Court. Last November, while delivering the judgment on a case where a man lost both
legs, the court took serious note of
the deaths and said: [In] no other
country would so many deaths not be
taken seriously, in India we just sit
on the sidelines and watch on.
The court also said: There is
complete lack of vision and planning
on the part of the Railways. The situation of overcrowding in the local
trains has gone out of control. It
lamented that none of the authorities
concerned were taking the issue seriously and that these deaths would
continue to occur unless the Railways and the state took immediate
steps to rectify the situation. People
are dying on the trains and the tracks
daily and the authorities cannot continue to keep their eyes shut. If you
act now and succeed in saving even
just one such life, your actions will
make a large difference.
Rajendra B. Aklekar, who has
written extensively on the Railways

and documented the history of the


Railways, said: When 7.5 million indisciplined commuters travel every
single day on Mumbai's open-door
trains along unfenced lines, 10 dying
daily is a low gure given the sheer
number. Many fall off, some cross
tracks, others climb on to the rooftop
and what not. At about 11 paise per
kilometre, it is the cheapest mode of
public transit in the world. The reality is that Mumbais railway system
has become saturated. The population kept growing, but the rail tracks
did not. The local governments failed
to see this and never built any alternative options like a sturdy metro
system. Everyone that has to commute a signicant length in this city
falls back on trains.
Of course it is a tragic and real
problem, said Ravinder Bhakar, the
chief public relations officer of Western Railway. As the demand in-

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PTI

WOMEN commuters struggle with the pressures of crowded trains in Mumbai.

creases, we are working on fast


expansion and improving safety features. Bhakar said 60 per cent of the
deaths were because of trespassing,
irresponsible crossing of tracks
some times people have ear plugs
on and cannot hear the trains comingnot using the foot overbridge
and, in general, the lack of boundary
walls at some critical areas. He said
80-90 per cent of those who died
were male commuters between 25
and 35, the agile ones risking life and
limb by jumping on to moving trains
or hanging on to footboards.
Capacity enhancement has been
given priority, Bhakar said. The Railways are introducing many more 15car trains. Work on two lines in addition to the existing four lines has
begun. With large numbers of commuters residing in northern suburbs

such as Virar, track distances are also


being increased. Furthermore, platform heights have been and will be
increased. This is expected to solve
the problem of people slipping
through the gaps. Awareness campaigns have been launched and will
be stepped up on how to be more
careful while travelling, he said.
The reality is that Mumbai is an
island. It does not have the land to
help the Railways expand. Besides,
we face restrictions on the acquisition of land all the time. This stalls
work and we run behind on projects,
Bhakar said.
The Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation (MRVC) is responsible for
executing projects under the Mumbai Urban Transport Project
(MUTP) sanctioned by the Ministry
of Railways. This includes Mumbais
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suburban railways. Speaking to


Frontline on the challenges and the
plans in place, MRVC Chairman
Prabhat Sahai said: With few alternatives available in the city, all the
pressure is on the Railways. We need
to nd another solution in an allweather transport system.
Sahai said the MRVC had been
working on the issue of accidental
deaths and trespassing for a few
years now but the increasing load on
the trains made every solution that
much harder. In July 2012, a study
on trespassing on railway tracks,
done by the JJ School of Architecture
and commissioned by the MRVC,
found that the main reasons for trespassing were that the platforms were
too narrow and commuters preferred to cross the tracks rather than
climb the foot overbridges, which
were in insufficient numbers at stations. Senior citizens and physically
challenged people nd it hard to use
platforms that have no ramps or
climb the foot overbridges to reach
the next platform.
The study said that human settlements along the tracks, small-time
vendors on trains who often crisscrossed tracks to catch trains, people
who did not buy tickets and ragpickers added to the trespassing woes.
Additionally, the inadequate height
of the fencing between tracks encouraged people to jump from the
platform to the track and climb the
fencing to reach the next platform,
thus leading to serious trespassing.
In conclusion, it said that improving some of the amenities, such
as the foot overbridges which were
narrow and crowded, along with
raising the height of boundary walls,
using RCC to build them, and increasing the railings, would make
movement on platforms smoother
and lead to less trespassing.
Further, Sahai said, the MUTP,
which began in the mid-1990s, had
gone into the MUTP-II A and B
phases, and had largely improved the
local suburban railway network. This
included conversion from direct current to alternating current, procurement of rolling stock, measures to
control trespassing, and adding fth
and sixth lines between Kurla and
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST).


MUTP-II A is expected to be completed by December 2016 and increase the passenger capacity by 35
per cent. MUTP-II B will add another 20-25 per cent capacity by 2019.
The MRVC has toyed with the
idea of introducing automatic closing doors in coaches and reducing
the seating space to create more
standing room. Additionally, there
has been a move by the State government to stagger office timings or give
a 10-30 minute leeway past the official time to bring down the peak hour
rush. The GRP, which has instituted
ambulances at every station and enhanced the level of emergency care,
recently asked the Railways to
amend their policies and take accident victims to hospital without issuing a memo.
MUMBAIS LIFELINE

Mumbais local railway network,


called the citys lifeline, has four arterial lines, the Western, Central, Harbour and Trans-Harbour lines.
Spread over 319 route kilometres via
approximately 116 stations, the local
railways operate 2,800 services a day
from 4 a.m. to 2 a.m.
The suburban railway lines are
fed by a complex network of buses,
which make the two dependent on
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

each other. Buses and taxis are an


alternative form of commuting but
cannot cope with the numbers or distances that the railways can. Local
people may complain but agree that
it is the most efficient, dependable
and economical mode of transportation available to them. In fact, if the
trains stop, the city comes to a grinding halt.
Nothing can beat the efficiency
of the Bombay locals, said Prakash
Mhatre, a railway employee who has
travelled on the Virar fast for close to
25 years. But I retire in a few months
and I will be glad to see the last of my
commuting days. It is time to go back
to the village. Enough of Bombays
madness.
In 2002, when I began work, it
was not so difficult, said Mahendra
Jadav, a bank clerk who travels from
Virar to Churchgate. Now getting in
is difficult and getting out even harder! Jadav says the frequency of
trains reduces from Borivali to Virar.
Therefore, that line is always crowded. I have seen many fall off the
train. Fortunately, none of them lost
their lives. But it has become very
dangerous.
Jadav also said that since residential accommodation was affordable in the northern suburbs, a large
chunk of people live there and travel

to the island city for work. The local


train, while being the most efficient
and inexpensive way to get around, is
also the only mode of transport for
long-distance commutes. Buses do
not ply and would take too long even
if they did. Adding to the problem are
the industries that have come up in
Virar. People need to commute
northwards as well and again it is
only the trains that can help them.
Mumbais suburban railway network traces its roots to the beginning
of railways in India. Aklekar, in his
book Halt Station India, says: Indias rst train ran in 1853 from Bori
Bunder in the southern tip of the
vertical island of Bombaystretching 34 km northwardsto the town
of Thana. A decade later, another
line began on the western side of the
island. This came from Surat all the
way down to Colaba (which was later
discontinued and Churchgate became the last station). Eventually, as
the city grew into a major business
hub, the train became an essential
part of public transport.
From Mumbais famous dabbawalas to the working class, nance
executives, domestic helps, school
and college students, traders and the
sherfolk, everyone somehow nds a
place or, in todays world, ghts for a
place on the train.

100

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

PTI

P R OTE S TE R S

block the tracks


after a student was
run over by a local
train near CST
station in Mumbai
on February 16.

SOCIAL ISSUES

In the name
of tradition
Discrimination against Dalits thrives in Karnataka as mainstream
political parties continue to frame the issue of Dalits entry into temples
or other public spaces in terms of tradition and custom instead of
basic rights. B Y S A T H I S H G . T . IN HASSAN
Vijay Kumar, 36, a journalist and a
native of the village, narrated the
events that followed the death of Dasappa, an aged Dalit, on December
11, 2001. The 11th day ceremonies,
which mark a closure to the period of
grieving in many communities in India, was conducted in the community hall that had been constructed a
few months earlier. Following tradition, non-vegetarian food was served
at the event, which was also attended

T H A Y A M M A and other Dalit women who were ned for entering the

Basaveshwara temple in Sigaranahalli narrating the events to Manjula Manasa,


president of the Karnataka State Commission for Women, in September 2015.
101

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by two young Vokkaliga men, to the


surprise of the Dalits.
Vijay Kumar told Frontline:
Outraged by the participation of upper-caste youths in the ceremony,
their leaders imposed a ne of
Rs.250 each on the four Dalits who
served food to the two boys. Besides,
the leaders prohibited Dalits from
organising any event in the local
community hall. A few days later the
name of the building was changed.

PRAKASH HASSAN

ON April 24, as the result of an


eight-month-long struggle of the
Holeya community (a Scheduled
Caste) of Sigaranahalli village in
Hassan
district,
Karnataka,
Thayamma and her neighbours of
the Dalit colony in the village walked into the Basaveshwara temple.
For the past eight months, the
Dalits of the village had been demanding entry into the temple and
the local community hall, which was
built with public funds but named
Vokkaliga Samudaya Bhavan in order to appease members of the upper
caste. Like Vokkaligas, we were also
born in this village. Basaveshwara is
a local deity for us as he is for them,
said Thayamma, a former gram panchayat member. She was among the
four Dalit women who bore the
brunt of the upper-caste anger for
daring to visit the temple on August
31, 2015. They were part of a womens self-help group (SHG) that visited the temple after a meeting of the
group. The leaders of the village, who
are from the dominant caste, imposed a ne on the SHG and asked it
to pay for the purication of the
temple.
This was not the rst time Dalits
of this village were forced to pay a
penalty. Their struggle to seek entry
into the community hall, a public
space, dates back to December 2001.

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

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manded that Dalits be taken into the


temple and allowed to participate in
the Kariyamma Jatra, the temples
annual fair that was to begin on April
1 this year, like upper-caste people.
Following the request, officials escorted Dalits to the temple. However, the upper-caste people of the
village cancelled the event to prevent
Dalit participation in it.
The governments role is to ensure protection of the constitutionally guaranteed rights of the people.
The authorities and peoples representatives hardly make an attempt to
ensure this. Instead, in the name of
restoring peace, they only pay attention to the dominant sections. That is
what happened in Sigaranahalli too,
said Dharmesh, Hassan district secretary of the Centre of Indian Trade
Unions and a pro-Dalit activist.
The Dalits of Sigaranahalli who
participated in a meeting in Hassan
on April 13 wanted District Incharge Minister A. Manju and others
to escort them to the Basaveshwara
temple and the community hall, before taking part in the Ambedkar anniversary celebrations, scheduled for
the next day. Neither the Minister
nor the Deputy Commissioner paid
any heed to this plea. Peace should
prevail in the village rst. Taking you
into a temple is not a Herculean task
if there is harmony. We will take you
to the temple once the upper-caste
people are convinced, the Minister
told the Dalits.
FIRST STEP

He assured them that the issue


would be resolved by April 20. Member of the Legislative Council M.A.
Gopalaswamy visited the village and
held talks with people of both communities. As the rst step, the name
Vokkaliga Samudaya Bhavan on the
community hall was painted over in
the presence of the police on April
20, and three days later the hall was
given a new name board with the
words Samudaya Bhavan, indicating that it did not belong to any particular community. Dalits gained
some condence in the district administration because of this. Superintendent of Police of Hassan R.K.
Shahapurwad, Assistant Commis-

S A T H IS H G . T .

Sigaranahalli, a village of 330


households, is just two kilometres
away from the native village (Haradanahalli) of H.D. Deve Gowda, national president of the Janata Dal
(Secular) and former Prime Minister. There are just 30 Holeya families
in this predominantly Vokkaliga village. All the Dalits are farmers with
small holdings of less than ve acres
(one acre is 0.4 hectare). All these
years, we remained silent in the face
of the atrocities heaped on us, but
how long should we continue to suffer? asked Raju, 35, of Sigaranahalli. He said: Since we raised our
voices against the penalty imposed
on our women, we have been subjected to social boycott. Our children
are not given chocolates in the shops
run by upper-caste people. To uppercaste folk this may appear silly, but
for us the indignities imposed on our
children are a serious matter. Dalits
have to go to the neighbouring villages for their basic needs because of the
boycott.
The Hassan district administration has attempted to enforce the
Dalits constitutionally guaranteed
rights. It held several meetings on
the issue, and its officials even escorted a few Dalits to the Basaveshwara
temple on September 8, 2015. But
this was met with protests from the
Vokkaligas, who initially stopped
visiting the temple and then conducted rituals to clean it in the runup to the Durga Parameshwari Jatra
beginning on April 1.
Vijay Kumar and others submitted a memorandum to the district
administration seeking entry into
the temple during the annual fair. As
senior officers reached the village on
April 1 to escort Dalits to the temple,
violence broke out. Several policemen, the Superintendent of Police
and senior officials of the Revenue
Department suffered injuries.
Arakere village in Arasikere taluk
was also in the news recently for a
similar reason. Dalit families in the
village had, for many years, been
kept out of the Kariyamma temple,
which comes under the State governments Muzrai Department. Kiran
Kumar, 30, who has a postgraduate
degree, and a few of his friends de-

sioner E. Vijaya and others worked


out a plan to resolve the issue by
taking the temple into the custody of
the district administration.
Officials of the Revenue Department walked into the temple on the
evening of April 23 and announced
that they were taking the temple into
their custody. They invited ve village residents, including two Dalits,
for the mahajar, the official process
wherein evidentiary material is collected in the presence of witnesses.
The officials seized the valuables belonging to the temple and announced that the temple would be
open to all from the next day.
Raju, one of the Dalits who was a
witness to the mahajar, said: We
were told that an official from the
Hariharapur gram panchayat would
keep the doors open between 8 a.m.
and 10 a.m. and from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
every day. Anybody can visit the temple. The next day around 35 people
from the Dalit colony visited the
temple. The upper castes have since
kept themselves away from the temple. No one from the Vokkaliga families has visited it.
Disturbingly, the peoples representatives from the area have openly
sided with the dominant community, which has alienated the Dalits.
We are being represented by a former Prime Minister in the Lok Sabha. His son [H.D.] Revanna

102

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

S A T H IS H G . T .

DAL IT S A T T H E B A S A V ES H W A RA T EM P LE (above and right) in Sigaranahalli village on April 24.

represents us in the State Assembly.


Both are senior politicians with considerable inuence among the Vokkaligas, Vijay Kumar said.
Even as the Dalits entered the
temple on April 24, Deve Gowda said
at a press conference in Hassan that
he was deeply hurt by the developments in Sigaranahalli. He found
fault with those demanding entry into the temple, the District In-charge
Minister and officials of the district
administration. He did not spare
newspapers that carried reports on
the issue either.
Deve Gowdas stand on the issue
of Dalits seeking entry into the temple was known as early as November
3, 2015. Addressing newly elected
gram panchayat members, Deve
Gowda dubbed the Dalits demand a
non-issue. There are some customs
in some temples whereby only people
of a particular community are allowed inside. If we go to Tirupati, do
they allow us inside the sanctum
sanctorum? Forget us, even certain
sections of Brahmins are not allowed
to enter the Sringeri temple. Now,
Dalits of Sigaranahalli want to enter
the sanctum sanctorum of the temple. Should we discuss all these
things? he asked.
The Dalits, however, say, the issue has never been one of their being

allowed entry into the sanctum sanctorum; they want access to the temple just like everybody else in the
village. Revanna is an MLA for all
the people in the constituency, but he
has openly sided with the upper
castes on this issue, alleged
Thayamma.
Twenty-nine people of the upper
caste were sent to judicial custody
after the recent clashes. On April 4,
Revanna and other Janata Dal (Secular) activists staged a protest in
front of the Deputy Commissioners
office in Hassan opposing the arrests. Revanna maintained that a few
people, including Vijay Kumar, were
behind the incidents in the village.
People of the upper caste and Dalits
have been living in harmony in my
constituency. There were no differences all these years, said Revanna.
He alleged that clashes broke out only after Vijay Kumar submitted a
memorandum to the district administration seeking unfettered access to
the temple. I cannot intervene on
matters of traditions and customs
followed by a certain section of people. The tradition should not be altered, he remarked.
The Bharatiya Janata Party,
whose Hindutva ideology supposedly espouses a pan-Hindu identity,
has been noticeably silent on the is103

Contact : @Razkr

sue. The party, which has only a feeble presence in the district, has not
organised any protests against the
denial of basic rights to Dalits.
Across the State, upper castes
have restricted the entry of Dalits
into temples. Wherever Dalits have
protested, they have faced opposition and physical assaults. Three
young men were murdered at Badanavalu in Nanjangud taluk of Mysuru on March 25, 1993, for
demanding entry into the renovated
Siddeshwara temple. Similarly,
Kemparaju, a Dalit in Mandya district, was assaulted after he entered
the Chowdeshwari temple in March
2012. Similar incidents were reported from Gani village in Bagalkot district in April 2014, where two Dalits
were severely beaten up for entering
the Hanumantha temple.
Some Dalits are of the view that
instead of ghting for the right to
enter temples the community should
reject temples because they are unequal spaces. However, Dharmesh
does not agree. A temple is a public
place. The issue is of the right to
access a public place, not just about
Dalits attaining moksha [salvation]
by visiting a temple. When any person or even a dog can enter the temple, why must Dalits be prevented
from doing so? he asked.

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Societal involution
Recent social and political trends in the U.S. and in parts of Europe
point to regressive tendencies that seek to recreate a past that now
seems less complicated, but only manage to intensify unhappiness.

HE term involutionwhich
means to turn into oneself, or
to shrink, or to reverse a process of evolvingmay seem like a
strange one to apply to societies. Yet,
that is the term that increasingly
comes to mind when considering recent social and political trends in the
United States and in some parts of
Europe.
Consider the United Kingdom,
currently in the throes of a heated
debate before the referendum that
will be held about whether or not Britain should stay in the European
Union (E.U.). Many issues and concerns have been raised on both sides,
and politicians and business leaders
inside and outside the country, from
top nanciers to U.S. President Barack Obama, have pitched in with
their own views and warnings about
the implications of Brexit. But within the country, public discussion appears to be focussed essentially on
only one issue: immigration.
Rightly or wrongly, in the British
public imagination today, membership of the E.U. appears to have become a proxy for more open borders
for the movement (or inow) of peoFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

ple. And in this discussion, all sorts of


issues come up, even if they are not
directly affected by membership of
the E.U. and do not necessarily result
from greater in-migration.
It is true that some of the expressed concern is about the ability
of other Europeans to enter the U.K.
and feed off the social welfare system, including health services. Sooner or later, references are made to the
Polish migrants who may be lling
critical labour market gaps but do so
by lowering market wages, and are
perceived to have taken over parts of
London like Hounslow, partly displacing earlier South Asian migrant
communities.
The fear and even distaste about
having to take in more refugees eeing from zones of conict in the Arab
world are clearly present. The implicit and sometime even explicit argument
is
that
misguided
do-gooders in the rest of Europe,
such as Chancellor Angela Merkel in
Germany, have opened the oodgates for the entry of all sorts and
numbers of people. It is interesting
that relatively few people are willing
to recognise or acknowledge the role

of Europeor at least of European


governmentsin
destabilising
countries like Libya and Syria and
Afghanistan that now generate ever
larger waves of people desperate to
get away from the chaos, insecurity
and unutterable violence that has resulted. Interventions in these countries by Europe are still largely
perceived as well-meaning and humanitarian in its intent, and the British people seem to shrug off any
responsibility for the outcomes. Certainly, they generally do not seem to
feel any moral imperative to give
them refuge.
Then there are other concerns,
which have little to do with the rest of
Europe really, but are still clubbed
together in this general feeling of discontent. The lack of sufficient job
opportunities, especially for the
young, and the poor quality and
greater insecurity of most newly created employment, are ascribed to
immigration of workers who mess up
domestic labour markets. The British government, seeking to deect
attention from the inadequacies of
its own policies, has insidiously
played up to this, and is only now

104

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

LUCY NICHOLSON/REUTERS

AT A M A Y D A Y R A L L Y in Los Angeles, supporters of immigrants rights


denounce Republican presidential candidate Donald Trumps stand.

discovering the political costs of this


strategy.
The housing market in London,
currently in the throes of another irrational bubble driven by state policies, is another irritant. High house
prices in Greater London and the
south of England are blamed on the
inux of people from abroad, even
though this results from the continued availability of easy credit and the
U.K. governments strategy of trying
to attract the rich from all countries
(not just Europe) into the city with
various incentives. It is probably the
case that central London is now unaffordable for most former residents
not because of mass immigration at
all, but because London is seen as a
safe haven by Russian oligarchs, Chinese elite, Indian businessmen like
Vijay Mallya and tax dodging global
celebrities, along with their less famous counterparts from across the
world. This tendency will be unaffected by British departure from the
E.U., but the inchoate resentment
among Londons residents does not
distinguish the different causative
factors clearly and so migrants end
up being blamed for everything.
PERCEPTIONS & ANOMALIES

These social perceptions create some


interesting anomalies. A taxi driver
from Myanmar, himself resident in
Britain for 17 years and with every
intention of staying on with his wife
and children, defends those who
want the U.K. to leave Europe on the
grounds that its a small island.

Where is the room here to take in


everybody who wants to come? A
shop assistant whose parents came
from Hungary half a century ago bemoans the latest inux of east and
central Europeans because they do
not try to absorb the local culture and
integrate with British society. A student of mixed Muslim-Christian parentage worries about the patriarchal
attitudes and untoward behaviour of
Arab male migrants.
So the tendency of closing in, of
hunkering down and putting up barriers, is not conned to any particular
ethnic
group,
although
presumably it is more widespread
among the white English population.
Rather, it reects something that we
in India knew as third class compartment syndrome, whereby those
who managed to get in and get seats
in the crowded railway carriages
would try and limit the numbers of
new entrants, to prevent overcrowding and congestion.
From here it is but a small step
towards even more explicitly racial
and religious overtones in the discussion. And in this, sadly, Britain is
hardly an outlier in Europe today,
where anti-Muslim sentiment has
gone from being a murmur in the
shadows to being a mainstream and
acceptable position.
In Germany, for example, the recently created right-wing party Alternative fur Deutschland has just
approved a manifesto that declares
that Islam is not part of Germany
and orthodox Islam is not compat105

Contact : @Razkr

ible with our legal system or with our


culture. It has called for bans on the
Muslim call to prayer and the wearing of face-covering veils by women
in public. This new party is also Eurosceptic, and it made substantial inroads in provincial elections in
Germany in March. Opinion polls
suggest that it will go on to gain further strength and win seats in the
Bundestag (Parliament) elections in
2017.
In France, the openly anti-immigrant party of Marine Le Pen is
doing extremely well and she is a
serious contender for the presidency,
seen as the one to beat in the next
election. Right-wing parties that are
openly anti-immigration, implicitly
racist and generally Islamophobic
are signicant presences, often even
part of the government, in many European countries, from Hungary and
Finland to Serbia, Armenia and Austria. They are on the ascendant in
crisis-ridden countries such as Spain
and Greece.
These tendencies are not conned to Europe, as the rise and rise of
Donald Trump in the U.S. now
makes clear.
The man who is now almost certain to be the Republican candidate
for President has declared publicly
that Mexican immigrants tend to be
rapists who bring in drugs to the
U.S., and that all Muslims should
simply be barred from entering the
country.
Those with a sense of the material underpinnings of social change
would see in this extraordinarily
widespread process in the advanced
countries, the outcome of forces of
nancial globalisation that have rendered advanced economies stagnant,
given inordinate power to capital
and made life more insecure and
fragile for workers.
The irony is that the economic
forces that have created this are rarely blamed or sought to be even partially controlled or reversed, and the
ascendancy of global capital remains
supreme. Instead, societal involution
creates regressive tendencies that
seek to recreate a past that now
seems less complicated, but only
manage to intensify unhappiness.
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

LITERATURE

A WRITER FIRST, THEN A


Interview with the noted author-poet Sukrita Paul Kumar. B Y
THERE are many layers to the
poet-author-painter Sukrita Paul
Kumar. For old-timers, she is the
daughter of the illustrious Urdu
short-story writer Joginder Paul,
who passed away on April 22. For
those who are involved in the world
of translations, she is an honest
translator, one who keeps the soul of
a story or a poem intact. For those
who frequent the rareed world of
art, her work is notable for its remarkable affinity to nature. For
those who like their poems short and
not necessarily sweet, she comes up
with some unputdownable stuff.
Sukrita Paul Kumar notched up a
rst to her name when Vani Prakashan launched the companion volumes of her Dream Catcher and the
small book titled Behind the Poems at
the same time. Yes, Sukrita Paul Kumar wears many hats with ease.
Then, fate decided to deal her a
new hand. Her father, a much-admired part of the Progressive Writers
Movement, lost his battle with a prolonged illness. While it left a vacuum
in her life, it also left the world of
Urdu literature much poorer. A
writer rst, then a father, she said of
her father. After the generation of
Krishan Chander and Rajinder
Singh Bedi, Paul was an icon along
with the likes of Intizar Hussain and
Qurratulain Hyder. But the loss of,
rst, Qurratulain Hyder, then Inti-

zar Hussain and now Paul means


that the generation who saw Partition at close quarters is lost to us. In
this interview, Sukrita Paul Kumar
told Frontline about her fathers contribution to the world of Urdu short
stories, the effect of Partition on him,
and his ability to use long silences,
often termed understatements. She
also explained how Paul, who taught
English for a living and spoke Punjabi at home, was able to express himself best in Urdu. Excerpts:
As a daughter, how would you
assess the contribution of Joginder
Paul to the world of Urdu short
stories?
For as long back as I can remember, I have known this man, Joginder
Paul, as a writer, someone who suffered acute creative pangs, agonised
over long periods over writing stories
and also one who savoured moments
of frenzy at the completion of each of
his stories. A writer rst and then a
father! All his professional preoccupations as a teacher, an education
officer in Kenya, a professor and the
principal of a college in India were
secondary to him, even though he
performed all those roles passionately. His ardent commitment to life
came from his deep commitment to
writing. He lived literature, taught
literature and breathed literature.
I say all this to highlight the qual-

ZIYA US SALAM

ity of his engagement with ction; he


was a very genuine writer, one who
never associated the idea of writing
with fame or any gain in mind.
As far as his contribution to Urdu
short stories goes, I believe after the
generation of Rajinder Singh Bedi
and Krishan Chander he stood tall as
one of the leading Urdu writers, dismissing old forms and ideas and capturing contemporary times with new
perspectives.
I think he, with Qurratulain
Hyder, Intizar Hussain, Ram Lal,
Surendra Prakash and some others,
demolished stereotypes and reinvented both modernity and progressivism in Urdu literature. His short
short stories [afsaance] are extraordinary in their brevity, sensitivity
and impact.
Partition affected different writers
differently. For instance, one can
see Saadat Hasan Mantos searing
intensity and Krishan Chanders
candid expression of pain and
sorrow. How would you assess
Pauls handling of Partition as a
writer?
As in the case of many other writers, he too did not write Partition
stories for a long time, nearly three
decades, after the experience of Partition. What seems to have dominated his mind the most was perhaps
the experience of being a refugee;

V.V. KRISHNAN

His [Joginder Paul] commitment to life came


from his deep commitment to writing. He lived
literature, taught literature and breathed
literature.Sukrita Paul Kumar

FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

106

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

when my own dialogues with Gulzar


sahab on Urdu language, ction and
poetry began. In fact, I have really
been a medium between the two!
There has been a quiet dense bond
between them. Not too much talking
but a mutual respect for each other,
with Gulzar sahab always looking for
a pat on his back from Bhai sahab,
my father, for any new story.

1947 meant leaving home forever. I


dont think he ever found home
again. His spirit of alienation, deep
pathos and indeed compassion (he
always said suffering and poverty
taught him that) kept translating into short stories. It was only in the
eighties and nineties that he directly
wrote Partition stories. Dariyaon
Pyas, Dera Baba Nanak and Fakhtaein are stories that are reminiscent of delicate but charged
moments and memories of the past
carried from one side of the border to
the other. For Deewane Maulavi Sahib of his well-known novel Khwabro [Sleepwalkers in English], it was
best to remain couched in his madness, to be totally oblivious to Partition, just to be able to continue living.
Deeply experiential yet not merely
subjective truths of Partition are interspersed in these writings that portray anguished displacement.
Understatement was a constant
companion in the works of your
father. At the same time, he could
be brutal in his assessment of
literary trends around him. How do
you explain these two seemingly
opposite strands?
I think the deeper his sense of
involvement in writing, the greater
the meaning in every word he used.
He used to be very brutal with himself and his writings. I remember
how he tore up the entire manuscript
of a novel he had written because it
sounded inauthentic to him. The
search for authenticity led him to be
brutal or cruel to any writing that
he found unconvincing, his own or
that of another. But then, he knew he
needed to be extremely gentle with
his characters he had to let them
have their autonomy by eliminating
his own self! As far as understatement goes, I wont call it that. I think
his effort was to create meaningful

S. SUBRAMANIUM

FATHER

J O GI N D ER P AUL, a 2010 picture.

silences around words, phrases,


metaphors.
He earned his bread and butter as a
teacher of English. His mother
tongue was Punjabi. Yet he chose to
write in Urdu.
But it was literature all the way!
English literature took him to literatures translated from many languages. He was very fond of French
literature. And teaching English really grounded him further in literature, the learning of which, I think,
he brought to his writing. As for Punjabi, that gave him his roots, his Sialkot carried by his mother who was
with him in Kenya throughout. His
language of writing had to be Urdu, a
language he was schooled in and a
language which has a rich literary
tradition. Urdu was closer to Punjabi
(which he could not read or write)
than English. Did he have a choice
then? His pen could work itself from
the right to the left on the page with
greater ease.
For somebody who guided Gulzar to
write short stories, Paul never once
talked about it with the media. When
did you rst realise that he shared a
special bond with Gulzar?
Gulzar sahab has always venerated my father as a master of the art
of writing short stories. I have known
this since the late nineties which is
107

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As Pauls daughter and a writer and


a poet in your own right, what has
been the single most important
lesson that you have imbibed from
him?
To be true to my conviction in
writing and action but, rst, to
make sure that the conviction is
right. No pretension, no hypocritical
compromise.
Recently, you had companion books
launched at the same time. It was in
many ways a rst for the world of
literature here. Could you please
throw some light on them and how
they came about?
I think you are talking about
Dream Catcher, a volume of my poems, accompanied by a small book
entitled Behind the Poems, published
by Vani Prakashan. I did want to be
self-reexive about the creative process I engage in while writing poetry,
and in this little book I give myself an
opportunity to do so. I am very curious to see how they will be received
by the readers. In the writing of this
small book, I attempted to identify
the nature of my creative journey.
The companion volume contains poems that are like half-dreams or
some as fully dreamt dreams.
You translated Gulzars poetry in the
past. Do you see yourself as a
translator in the days to come?
I really dont know. I would like
to write more and more and also
paint more, which is not to say that I
will not translate. When I read something compelling I do feel like participating in the creation of that work.
Translation helps me do that. I do
not plan the nature of my creative
ventures too much. Lets see. All I
know is that I have a lot to do. The
calling is loud and clear!

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

LABOUR ISSUES

A self goal
The NDA government restores the EPF interest rate under pressure
from trade unions, but it will have to pay a heavy price for its move to
trie with working peoples social security. B Y T . K . R A J A L A K S H M I
ALL we have from the National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) government is empty rhetoric. It promised
to adopt pro-people policies after it
came to power in 2014, but the actions by some of the Ministries, particularly the Ministry of Finance,
have proved that the government is
keen more to project a pro-industry

Contact : @Razkr

face than to listen to the common


people, even the middle classes, considered its key support base.
The government sought to introduce several measures that were perceived to deal a blow to the salaried
class, such as levying a tax on the
Employees Provident Fund and lowering the interest rate on EPF. The

manner in which it moved these proposals took even the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS), the trade union
ideologically affiliated to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), by surprise.
On April 16, the Central Board of
Trustees (CBT), a tripartite body
chaired by the Union Labour Minister and consisting of representatives

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

from the Finance Ministry and the


trade unions, as an interim measure,
unanimously decided that the rate of
interest on EPF would be 8.8 per
cent. The idea was to aim for an upward revision. This was a promise
the NDA government had made. But
the Finance Ministry overturned the
recommendation and scaled down
the interest rate to 8.7 per cent, the
lowest rate of interest offered in the
last three years, in what was seen as
another instance of high-handedness. Ten Central trade unions, including the BMS, expressed their
disapproval of the cut. The BMS organised protests at about 46 EPF ofces across the country. The other
trade unions gave a call for a nationwide protest on April 29.
When the matter was raised in
the Budget session of Parliament, the
Labour Minister informed the
House that the interest rate had been
cut and the action had been ratied
by the Finance Ministry. While the
MPs of the Left parties raised the

issue in both Houses, Congress


members chose to remain silent. The
protests started to gain momentum
as no rationale could be found for
reducing the interest rate except that
the government was seeking, one, to
keep parity with the interest rates of
small saving schemes, such as the
Public Provident Fund (PPF), which
had been brought down to 8.1 per
cent; two, to keep the surplus at
Rs.1,000 crore; and, three, to credit
interest into inoperative accounts
the government had little option but
to roll back the interest rates.
In their editorials, leading newspapers attempted to convince the
government about the pitfalls of rolling back the decision and urged it not
to bow down to pressure. Notwithstanding such counsel, the government backtracked on the rate cuts
following a backlash from trade
unions, and workers themselves.
A.K. Padmanabhan, president of the
Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), claried that as far as the burden of interest on inoperative EPF
accounts was concerned, since 2011
no interest had been paid into such
accounts. It is the money of the subscriber. If the government is holding
on to it, it should pay interest. This is
what the unions believe, he said.
STATE GOVERNMENTS
LABOUR REFORMS

G.R.N. SOMASHEKAR

The Central government has been at


loggerheads with trade unions over a
slew of decisions, such as a sweeping
labour reform of Central labour laws,
which has had the effect of different
State governments patterning their
own labour laws on similar lines. The
general signal was that State governments were free to make changes in
their own labour laws as per their
requirements.
In 2014, Rajasthan amended its
Factories Act, Industrial Disputes
Act and Contract Workers Act, despite protests from workers and their
representatives. Other BJP-led govO N T H E S EC O N D day of protests

against the amendments to the EPF


rules at the Peenya industrial area on
Tumakuru Road in Bengaluru on
April 19.
109

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ernments followed suit. On March


31, the Haryana government introduced three pieces of legislationthe
Industrial
Disputes
Amendment Bill, allowing enterprises employing up to 300 workers to
lay off without the governments permission; the Contract Workers (Regulation and Abolition) Haryana
Amendment Bill, 2016, proposing to
do away with registration of industrial establishments employing up to
50 workers (raising the threshold
from the existing 20); and, the Factories (Haryana Amendment) Bill,
exempting from the Factories Act
those units that employ up to 20
workers with the aid of power and 40
workers without the aid of power.
These reforms were similar to the
ones introduced by the Rajasthan
government. Interestingly, a survey
conducted by the PHD Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (PHDCCI)
in ve districts of Rajasthan showed
that investment had not picked up
despite labour law reforms.
Madhya Pradesh also ushered in
labour laws on the lines of Rajasthan
to relax retrenchment norms. The
new law allowed companies employing up to 300 workers to retrench
workers or shut shop without government approval against the
threshold of 100 workers earlier. The
only silver lining was that workers
would be entitled to a three-months
notice and three-months salary. Earlier, either of the two was allowed
and employees were paid 15 days
wages for every year they were on the
rolls. It is learnt that Maharashtra
had contemplated similar reforms,
but changed its mind in the last minute.
The BMS, which, of late, has not
been part of any joint trade unions
action, has been feeling the pressure
from its own constituents. Though
hard-pressed to defend the government owing to its ideological affinity,
it was compelled to stage protests
against the NDA governments decision on EPF interest rates and labour
reforms initiated by BJP-ruled
States. Virjesh Upadhyay, national
general secretary of the BMS, told
Frontline that a delegation of the
BMS met the Haryana Chief MinisFRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

G.R.N. SOMASHEKAR

TH E PO L I C E dispersing protesting workers in the industrial estate.

ter and expressed its concerns over


the implications of liberalising labour laws. The Rajasthan experiment had a cascading effect.
Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and
Gujarat followed suit and amended
their labour laws on similar lines for
the ease of doing business.
But more than the unpopular labour reforms introduced by the various State governments, it was the cut
in the EPF interest rates that rattled
the Union Labour Ministry. The
CBT was after all headed by the Labour Minister and it was after a consensus decision that the interest rate
had been arrived at. Union representatives argued that when the CBT
decided on an interest rate of 8.8 per
cent, it was on the understanding
that there was money available and
that even if an interest rate of 8.95
per cent was given, there would still
be a surplus of Rs.91 crore. Even the
8.8 per cent was provisional. The
idea was that workers would be given
more, said Padmanabhan.
The Finance Ministry had to retract its proposal to tax 60 per cent of
EPF withdrawals. In February, the
Union Labour Ministry issued a notication restricting the EPF balance
to subscribers until they reached retirement age. The excuse was social
security. Padmanabhan said the noFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

tication was not only unfair, but


created unnecessary confusion. The
unions raised the matter at the
March meeting of the CBT and objected to the cap on withdrawal. It is
subscribers money. How can the
government decide not to allow access to them? he asked. In February,
the government notied that a worker could not withdraw the employers
share from the PF before superannuation. Of the employers contribution of 12 per cent, 8.33 per cent went
to the Employees Pension Scheme
while 3.67 per cent was deposited in
the PF account.
The government decreed that
employees could not withdraw the
employers contribution to the EPF
until after they retired. This triggered protests, particularly in the Visakhapatnam Special Economic
Zone and in Bengaluru. Thousands
of women working in Brandix Apparel India City, Atchyutpuram, Visakhapatnam,
went
on
strike
demanding a hike in wages and the
lifting of the embargo on withdrawal
of PF deposits.
K. Hemalatha, national president of the All India Coordination
Committee of Working Women,
said: In many establishments of the
garment industry, there is no job security and it is very rare for women to

remain employed until the age of 58.


Many of them leave once they get
married, so the government notication naturally created a lot of panic
among them. They often require this
money for special occasions.
On April 18, traffic on a sevenkilometre stretch on Hosur Road in
Bengaluru came to a standstill for
several hours when some 15,000
women garment workers from ve
garment units took to the streets protesting against the government notication. The police used tear gas
shells and other means to disperse
them. A similar protest was organised on the Bengaluru-Mysuru
highway. Trade union leaders told
Frontline that the protest was a
spontaneous one and not organised
by any trade union in the area. The
fear of losing their savings triggered
the uproar. The government notication was supposed to come into
effect from May 1.
Padmanabhan said: The EPF is
a form of social security. But workers
need the money, otherwise they
would have to borrow at high rates of
interest. What is in the EPF is their
money and they have a right to withdraw it when they need it. The contribution of 3.67 per cent in any case
is hardly enough but when a worker
is hard-pressed for money, he or she
will want to dip into the savings.
The NDA government suffered a
major setback when it was forced to
retract the announcement.
In March, the Finance Ministry
notied rules allowing the transfer of
unclaimed deposits in the EPF, the
PPF and other small savings
schemes to a proposed Citizens Welfare Fund. Trade unions and the Labour Ministry objected to the
diversion of unclaimed EPF deposits. Trade unions and their representatives feel that the governments
targeting of peoples savings is a ploy
to do away with social security altogether.
Garment workers are paid as low
as Rs.6,000 a month in some units.
With little or no additional government support in the form of social
security, any perceived move to target the savings of workers is sure to
have serious consequences.

110

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

ESSAY
THE SHEIKH VS THE PANDIT

THE HINDU ARCHIVES

ROOTS OF THE
KASHMIR DISPUTE

PR I M E M I N I S T ER Jawaharlal Nehru with Sheikh Abdullah.

Reecting popular opinion,


Sheikh Abdullah was against
Kashmirs accession to India.
Reecting Indian opinion and his
own preferences, Nehru would
have nothing but accession. Both
knew how the Kashmiris felt,
hence Indias initial hesitation in
forging the accession.
BY A . G . N O O R A N I

Nahi kuch subha-o-zunnar ke phande mein girai/


wafadari mein sheikh-o-brahaman ki aazmaish hai
(The loop of the rosary and the sacred thread cannot hold
any one/ The real test of the Sheikh and the Brahmin is in
their faithfulness).

irza Ghalibs couplet accurately sums up the


roots of the Kashmir dispute. It also provides a
clue to the ever deteriorating situation in the
State. Sheikh Muhammad Abdullahs Kashmiri nationalism clashed with Pandit Jawaharlal Nehrus Indian
nationalism. The clash was inherent in their relationship
even at the best of times. Nehru arrogantly spurned
conciliation and resorted to brute force, with the aid of
the army, by ousting Abdullah from the office of Prime
111

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

KASHM I R I N A T I O N A L I S M

is as alive now as it was in 1947. A le photograph of protesters in Srinagar.

Minister of Jammu & Kashmir on August 9, 1953, and


imprisoning him for 11 years. What is little known is that
he subjected his prisoner and erstwhile friend to hardships; denying visitors access to him and foisting a conspiracy case which he knew to be falseplotting for
accession to Pakistan and waging war against India.
To all outward appearances, India riveted its control
over the State after the Sheikhs ouster. But today, more
than ever before, grim realities have surfaced, to the
shock of many, to demonstrate that Kashmiri nationalism is very much alive and kicking despite New Delhis
repressive policies and the armys sustained record of
outrages. Indias government, much of its media, especially television, and academia, and its stooges in Kashmir who have feasted on the crumbs New Delhi throws at
them from the high table prefer to envelop themselves
cosily in a state of denial. The reality is unbearable to
witnessIndia governs Kashmir against the wishes of its
people. They reject the very legitimacy of its rule. As Mir
Qasim, installed as Chief Minister by elections which he
admitted were rigged and who had supported Abdullahs
ouster in 1953, wrote: They clearly say that they would
not like to remain in India. They would like to go out of
India. They ask for a plebiscite so that they will be alFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

lowed to answer whether they want to remain in India or


go out of India (Mir Qasim, My Life and Times, page
298).
It was left to one of Indias foremost public intellectuals, Ashok Mitra, former Finance Minister of West
Bengal, to rip apart the veil of falsehood and expose the
havoc that Indias policies have wreaked. Behind the
faade of the constitutional apparatus rests the nittygritty of rude fact: the Valley is an occupied territory;
remove for a day Indias Army and security forces and it is
impossible to gauge what might transpire at the next
instant. Some of the stone-pelters may nurse illusions
about Pakistan, some may think in terms of a sovereign,
self-governing Kashmir, but they certainly do not want to
be any part of India the great Indian nation, with its
load of civilisation stretching 5,000 years, is extraordinarily mum.
The debauching of civilisation in Kashmir, no matter what its underlying reason, creates no ripples. One is
suddenly hit by a fearsome realisation Indians by and
large do not perhaps feel at all, this way or that, about the
Valleys people. In other words, the Indian nation is
alienated from Kashmir (The Telegraph, August 27,
2010).

112

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

tween our grievances and our aspirations. Aspiration is


azadi. Grievances are like, Centre does not hand over
power projects in Kashmir to the State government. Our
development needs and separatism are two different
things. We vote for development, but azadi will not come
without talking with Pakistan.
A 29-year-old teacher said that the bridges between
India and Kashmir have been burnt forever. For, the
bottom line is, India does not trust Kashmiris and Kashmiris dont trust India. The situation deteriorated steeply since the outbreak of militancy in 1989. But its roots lay
in the clash of Kashmir and Indian nationalism in 1947.
In a real sense, there is no alienation of people from the
Union; alienation implies previous affection, which the
people of Kashmir never had for India, not even at the
time of the accession, as both Abdullah and Nehru knew
very well. Reecting popular opinion, the Sheikh was
against Kashmirs accession to India, though he preferred its ideology of secularism to Pakistans two-nation
theory. Reecting Indian opinion and his own strong
preferences, Nehru would have nothing but its accession
to India. Both knew what the Kashmiris thought and felt,
hence Indias initial hesitation in forging the accession.
The record on the views of all threeAbdullah, Kashmiris and Nehruspeaks for itself.
SHEIKH ABDULLAHS AIMS

Mehbooba Mufti, head of the Peoples Democratic


Party (PDP)-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) coalition in
the State, loftily declared, on April 19, in the presence of
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, that there is a pain in
the heart of Kashmiris and we all have to heal it together.
What she added indicates all too well that the causes of
the pain elude her. She cited several tragic incidents in
the past and more recently in Handwara where innocent people were fatally caught in the vortex of violence (Yusuf Jameel, Asian Age, April 20; emphasis
added, throughout). Caught, not shot at. Earlier, on
March 26, she spoke of Mufti Mohammed Sayeeds mission of development and peace (Peerzada Ashiq, The
Hindu, March 27). She refuses to know why her people
are in pain.
Contrast this with Nirupama Subramanian and
Bhashaarat Masoods four reports in The Indian Express
(between April 20 and April 23, 2016), among the most
honest reports we have had in recent years. When the
Army does an encounter they come in hundreds for one
militant hiding in a house. Then they destroy the house.
They use heavy shells and mortars, a girl student in
Anantnag told them. The destruction of a whole house to
catch a solitary militant is an established practice in
Kashmir alone; it was never attempted in Punjab.
A teacher in Tral warned: Dont blur the lines be113

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BERT BRANDT/AFP

NISSAR AHMAD

1. On April 19, 1946, the Sheikh demanded in a telegram


to the British Cabinet Mission a right to independence

S E P TE M B E R 18, 1947: Mohammad Ali Jinnah, in


Karachi. In October that year, Pakistan sent raiders into
Kashmir with Jinnah's knowledge.
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

THE HINDU ARCHIVES

M IR Q A S I M . He was installed as Chief Minister through

rigged elections after Sheikh Abdullah's dismissal and


arrest.
because the Kashmiri nation resided in a unique region in India. This was asserted when the talk was of a
federal union, not partition.
2. After Partition, he was released from prison on
September 29, 1947. On October 3, he said: We will
choose the path which will lead to the independence of
the Kashmiris (Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah, The Blazing Chinar, Gulshan Books, Srinagar; pages 256 and
275).
3. On his release from prison, Abdullah said: If the
40 lakhs of people living in Jammu & Kashmir are bypassed and the State declares accession to India or Pakistan, I shall raise the banner of revolt and we face a
struggle. Since Maharaja Hari Singh was not going to
accede to Pakistan, this was clearly a warning against
accession to India. As late as on October 22, 1947, Abdullahs line was: Freedom before Accession. It was
reected in Khidmat, the organ of his party, the National
Conference, which said on the same day: What the
present moment demands and demands urgently is not
accession to Pakistan or India but power to the people.
Are we going to sell ourselves to the Indian capitalists or
the Pakistan Nawabs? (Quoted in Chitralekha Zutshi,
Languages of Belonging, Permanent Black, page 307; a
most insightful work.)
4. Abdullah conded to Phillips Talbot, later United
States Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and
South Asian Affairs, who was in India from 1939 to 1948.
He told me that Kashmir would be nished if it had to
join one Dominion and thereby incur the enmity of the
other. What he sought, he said, was an arrangement by
which Kashmir could have normal relations with both
countries (An American Witness to Indias Partition,
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

Sage, page 378). As we shall see, this was the line he


pursued right until 1964.
5. Prior to the accession, Abdullah sent one emissary
to Pakistan after another, Bakshi Ghulam Mohammed
and G.M. Sadiq. Neither was allowed to meet Mohammed Ali Jinnah or Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan.
Only the Chief Minister of West Punjab, the Nawab of
Mamdot, met them. Strangely, neither the admirers nor
the detractors of Abdullah care to probe into their brief.
What was it? It was obviously to full his plans for
independence. He had accepted an invitation by emissaries from Pakistan to meet Jinnah after his visit to New
Delhi. The tribal raid from Pakistan was launched while
Sadiq was in Lahore.
6. Even after the accession, Abdullah pursued his
plans, to the knowledge of Nehru, in a talk with Patrick
Gordon Walker, Britains Parliamentary UnderSecretary
for Commonwealth Affairs, in Nehrus home on February
21, 1948four months after the accession. Walker reported to London: 7. At this point Nehru fetched in
Sheikh Abdullah and said he would leave us to talk
together. Just before Nehru left Sheikh Abdullah said he
thought the solution was that Kashmir should accede to
both Dominions. I had not time to get him to develop this
idea before Nehru left the room but questioned him
afterwards. He said Kashmirs trade was with India, that
India was progressive and that Nehru was an Indian. On
the other, Kashmirs trade passed through Pakistan and a
hostile Pakistan would be a constant danger. The solution therefore was that Kashmir should have its autonomy jointly guaranteed by India and Pakistan and it would
delegate its foreign policy and defence to them both
jointly but would look after its own affairs. The two
Dominions share a common interest in Kashmir and it
would serve to unite and link them. I asked whether
Nehru would agree to this solution and he said he
thought so. He had discussed it with him. Since drafting the above I have seen Nehru again with reference to
paragraph 7 above. He says that he would be prepared to
accept a solution broadly on the lines of that proposed by
Sheikh Abdullah.
7. In New York as a member of the Indian delegation
to the Security Council, Abdullah approached the U.S.
Permanent Reprepresentative to the United Nations,
Warren Austin, on January 28, 1948. Austin recorded: It
is possible that [the] principal purpose of Abdullahs visit
was to make clear to U.S. that there is a third alternative,
namely, independence. He seemed overly anxious to get
this point across, and made quite a long and impassioned
statement on the subject. He said in effect that whether
Kashmir went to Pakistan or India the other dominion
would always be against solution. Kashmir would thus be
a bone of contention. It is a rich country. He did not want
his people torn by dissension between Pakistan and India. It would be much better if Kashmir were independent and could seek American and British aid for
development of country. (Foreign Relations of the United States, 1948 South Asia, page 292).
8. Abdullah even sought out Pakistans delegates. He

114

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THE HINDU ARCHIVES

complained to President Ayub Khan when they met in


Rawalpindi on May 26, 1964, that they would not even
talk to him. When he went to the Security Council the
second time, he did meet Choudhry Muhammad Ali and
told him that the only way to get the Indians out of
Kashmir was to agree to independence of the State
(Altaf Gauhar, Ayub Khan, page 264).
9. The Sheikh spoke to the U.S. Ambassador to India,
Loy Henderson, in Srinagar. He reported to the State
Department on September 29, 1950: In discussing future Kashmir, Abdullah was vigorous in restating that in
his opinion it should be independent; that overwhelming
majority population desired this independence; and that
he had reason to believe that some Azad Kashmir leaders
desired independence and would be willing cooperate
with leaders National Confederation if there was reasonable chance such cooperation would result in independence. Kashmir people could not understand why U.N.
consistently ignored independence as one of possible
solutions for Kashmir. It had held special Assembly to
deal with independence for Palestine, which was smaller
in area and population and less economically viable than
Kashmir. Kashmir people had language and cultural
background her own. Their Hindus by custom and tradition widely differed from Hindus [of] India, and outlook
and background their Moslems also quite different from
Moslems Pakistan. Fact was that population Kashmir
homogeneous despite of presence of Hindu minority.
When I asked Abdullah if he thought Kashmir could
remain stable independent country without friendly support India and Pakistan, he replied negative. In his opinion, independent Kashmir could exist only in case it had
friendship both of India and Pakistan; in case both these
countries had friendly relations with each other; and in
case U.S. through U.N. or direct would enable it, by
investments or other economic assistance, to develop its
magnicent resources. Adherence Kashmir to India
would not lead in foreseeable future to improving miserable economic lot of population. There were so many
areas of India in urgent need of economic development,
he was convinced Kashmir would get relatively little
attention (Foreign Relations of the United States, 1950,
Volume 5, page 1,434).
10. Abdullah was quite open about his aims, as Nehru
well knew. He went public in an interview to Michael
Davidson of The Scotsman published on April 14, 1949.
He said: Accession to either side cannot bring peace.
He declared, We want to live in friendship with both
Dominions. Perhaps a middle path between them, with
economic co-operation with each, will be the only way of
doing it. But an independent Kashmir must be guaranteed not only by India and Pakistan but also by Britain,
the United States and other members of the United
Nations. Would an independent Kashmir, I asked him, a
kind of Himalayan Switzerland, be feasible and constructive? Those areas of the present State which bordered
India and Pakistan and which had no affinities with the
people of the Vale could fall naturally to the Dominion
with which they were related by race or religionthe

THE S AD AR - I - R I YAS AT, Karan Singh (right),

administering the oath of office to Bakshi Ghulam


Mohammed as Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir
in July 1957.
Poonchis, who are Moslem Punjabis, belong obviously to
Pakistan, and the Hindus of Jammu, Rajput-Dogras are
surely Indians.
Abdullah replied: Yes, independenceguaranteed
by the United Nationsmay be the only solution. But
why do you talk of partition? Now you are introducing
communalism and applying the two-nation theory to
Kashmirthat communalism which we are ghting
here. I believe the Poonchis would welcome inclusion in
an independent Kashmir; if, however, after its establishment, they chose to secede and join Pakistan, I would
raise no objection.
I want a solution that is fair to all three partiesPakistan, India, and the people of Kashmir. But we wont
submit to a communal solution. There has never been a
religious problem in the Vale of Kashmir. Hindus and
Moslems, we are of the same racial origin, we have the
same customs, wear the same clothes, speak the same
language. In the street, you cannot distinguish between
Moslems and Brahman Pandits. Why, we even have a
mosque in the wall of which a Hindu temple has been
built. In Kashmir we have Hindu and Sikh refugees from
West Punjab and Moslem refugees from East Punjab.
When the Kashmir Moslem Conference also turned
communally-minded, most of us Kashmiris left to form a
National Conference, a non-sectarian movement conforming with the secular principles of the Indian Congress. Naturally we sympathise rather with India than
with Pakistan.
Religions have never been a cementing force, the
Sheikh declared. Christians ght Christians in Europe;
Japanese ght Chinese; Turkey wants to be Europe-

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anised; Moslems have warred against Moslems. Socially


and nationally there are more compelling interests, economic and ideological. The rst task for the Kashmiris,
Hindus and Moslems, is to win internal liberation from
exploitation. (The writer is indebted to Andrew Whitehead for the text of the interview.) The interview had
Vallabhbhai Patel foaming at the mouth (Durga Das,
Sardar Patels Correspondence, Navjivan Publishing
House, Volume 1, pages 266-271).

Maharaja Hari Singhs letter

SRINAGAR, KASHMIR
23rd October, 1947

NEHRUS STAND

It is important to note that Nehru tried to secure Kashmirs accession to India while Sheikh Abdullah was still
in prison, regardless of his wishes or those of the people of
the State. His stand was revealingly summed up in the
blunt pithy assertion to Liaquat Ali Khan, I want Kashmir (Lionel Carter (Ed.), Weakened States Seeking Renewal: British Official Reports from South Asia, 1
January 30 April 1948, Manohar, Part I, pages 176 and
416; an invaluable collection of two volumes). Even before the Partition Plan was announced on June 3, 1947,
he began his campaign with a mention of Kashmir as a
difficult problem at a formal meeting with Mountbatten
and advisers on April 22, 1947. He followed it by a long
note to Mountbatten on Kashmir dated June 17, 1947, in
which he concluded: If any attempt is made to push
Kashmir into the Pakistan Constituent Assembly, there
is likely to be much trouble because the National Conference is not in favour of it and the Maharajas position
would also become very difficult. The normal and obvious course appears to be for Kashmir to join the Constituent Assembly of India. This will satisfy both the popular
demand and the Maharajas wishes. It is absurd to think
that Pakistan would create trouble if this happens. (Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru; Volume 3, page 229).
Pakistan did not count. He lavishly praised the Sheikh.
On July 4, he wrote to the Maharaja, whom he detested,
requesting a meeting and suggesting accession: I appreciate your difficulties (ibid., page 253). No talk here of
releasing Abdullah.
The sinister aspect of the plan became apparent when
the Maharaja asked for a standstill agreement on August
12, 1947. Pakistan agreed. India declined and asked for
negotiations. Nehru had himself revised the draft standstill agreement with all the States to include foreign
affairs (item 7); a virtual Instrument of Accession. Had
the Maharaja agreed, Abdullah would have been confronted, on his release from prison, the very next month,
with Kashmirs accession to Indiacarried out behind
his back. So much for respect for the popular will.
Nor were Nehrus later references to the Sheikh justied. His following was conned to the Valley. In Jammu
and the present Pakistan-administered Kashmir, Chaudhry Ghulam Abbas Muslim Conference held sway. Even
in the Valley Abdullahs voice was not decisive on the
crucial issue of accession (see Ian Coplands essay The
Abdullah Factor: Kashmir Muslims and the Crisis of
1947). The people followed him up to Kohala (that is,
locally) and Jinnah beyond it.
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I hereby authorise my Deputy Prime


Minister, R.B. Ram Lal Batra to sign the
document of accession of the State with
the Indian Union on my behalf, subject to
the condition that the terms of accession
will be the same as would be settled with
H.E.H. The Nizam of Hyderabad.

MAHARAJA
OF JAMMU & KASHMIR

WHAT LED TO THE ACCESSION

Chitralekha Zutshi holds that the Muslim Conference


reigned supreme in Poonch and Jammu in 1946 while
the Valley was split. Shops displayed photographs of
Jinnah, Iqbal and Abdullah side by side (pages 298 and
303). What is clear is that on the issue of accession the
overwhelming view was for Pakistan. Indias leaders
knew that very well. The Defence Committee of the
Cabinet, Nehru in particular, knew that. Hence his advice to Kashmirs Prime Minister, Meher Chand Mahajan, even as late as on October 21, 1947, just a day before
Pakistans tribal raids into Kashmir: I feel it will probably be undesirable to make any declaration of adhesion
[to India] at this stage (SWJN, Volume 4, page 274).
Kashmirs Prime Minister Janak Singh opined on August
13, 1947, that the bulk of Muslims will not accept (a)
decision to accede to India. Nehru told the Committee
on October 25, 1947: The question was whether temporary accession would help the people in general to side
with India or whether it would only act as an irritant.
There was bound to be propaganda to the effect that the
accession was not temporary and tempers might be inamedthat is, the people would resent Kashmirs accession to India. The next day, N. Gopalaswamy
Ayyangar said that immediate accession might create
further opposition. Nehru opined that he would not
mind Kashmir remaining an independent country [sic]
under Indias sphere of inuence. It was then decided to
accept the accession subject to the proviso that a plebiscite would be held in Kashmir. The Ministry of States
was directed to prepare a letter to the Maharaja on the
temporary acceptance of the Instrument of Accession

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THE HINDU ARCHIVES

State being a Hindu State, situated


(Prem Shankar Jha, Kashmir 1947,
in Muslim surroundings, nds itself
Oxford University Press, appendicin a very delicate and difficult posies IV and V).
tion In a letter of June 16, he
This explains why Mountbatten
wrote of Nehru: After all, he is also
told the visiting U.K. Minister Ara Hindu and that a Kashmiri Hinthur Henderson, on January 9,
du (ibid, page 3). One wonders
1948, that Kashmirs accession was
whether he would have called Hydon a temporary basis and subject to
erabad a Muslim State. Nehru
a plebiscite (Carter, Part I, page
would have been offended by Patels
154).
remark.
The Maharajas panic can be
One man, the brilliant Secretary
gauged from a quaint, forgotten epiin Patels Ministry of States, V.P.
sode which his Prime Minister,
Menon, kept his head. At a meeting
Meher Chand Mahajan, mentioned
on May 11, 1947, Mountbatten
in 1963: On 24 October the Deputy
noted that there were some States
Prime Minister left Srinagar for
which were geographically and ethDelhi carrying a letter of accession
nically almost bound to throw in
to India from the Maharaja (Looktheir lot with Pakistan. Nehru said
ing Back, page 150). In 1997, Alasthat the people of almost every State
tair Lamb remarked that India has
had openly declared in favour of
generally been careful to avoid spejoining the Union of India. He
cic reference to this document
asked what would happen if Hyd(Incomplete Partition, page 143). It
erabad wanted to join Pakistan.
was published for the rst time by
That is when V.P. Menon red this
the relentless researcher Andrew
deadly salvo. It would produce a
Whitehead in his book A Mission in
very similar situation to Kashmir
Kashmir (Viking, page 1,022). I am
joining the present Constituent Asgrateful to him for providing me
sembly of India (Transfer of Power,
with a copy of the letter dated OctoHMSO, Vol. X, page 764).
ber 23. It reads: I hereby authorise
During talks with the Secretarymy Deputy Prime Minister, R.B.
General of Pakistans Cabinet, MoRam Lal Batra, to sign the docuhammad Ali, in November 1947, the
ment of accession of the State with
latter asked whether a plebiscite was
the Indian Union on my behalf, subreally called for as Kashmir had a
ject to the condition that the terms
Muslim majority. V.P. Menon reof accession will be the same as
plied that he entirely agreed that
would be settled with H.E.H. The
Kashmir would go to Pakistan but
Nizam of Hyderabad.
emphasised in view of what had
Patel added his bit to get the
passed, a formal [sic] plebiscite
ruler to accede to India; signicantwas essential. On November 3,
M A H A RA J A H AR I S I N G H. His note
ly even before the Radcliffe Report,
1947, V.P. Menon met a delegation
(facing page) authorising his Deputy
which awarded to India the confrom Hyderabad. The minutes read:
Prime Minister to sign the instrument
necting link through Pathankot,
MR. MENON opened the discusof accession on his behalf betrays how
was out. You are aware that on 15
sions by making reference to the
jittery he was.
August, India, though divided, will
Kashmir problem the States fallbe completely free, and you also
know that by this time a vast majority of the States have ing within the Dominion of India should join the Indian
joined the Constituent Assembly of India. I realise the Union and those adjoining Pakistan should go with that
peculiar difficulties of Kashmir, but looking to its history dominion he believed that Kashmir should have joined
and its tradition, it has, in my opinion, no other choice the Pakistan Union and the Government of India never
desired the accession of Kashmir to the Union of India.
(SPC, page 32).
He played the communal card on June 18. The Kash- But it was impossible for the Government of India to sit
miri Pandits and the Hindus form a very small propor- silently when Kashmir and Jammu were being raided
tion of the population, and they are comparatively better and ruined by marauders and freebooters (Constituoff. The poorer majority which is getting conscious, is tional Discussions, Government of Hyderabad, Volume
trying to assert itself and the conict of interest is cre- 2, page 193).
In a taped interview to his predecessor as Reforms
ating a situation in which the minority nds itself in an
unenviable position and lives in a state of perpetual Commissioner, H.V. Hodson, in September 1964, V.P.
insecurity and fear, resulting in demoralisation. The Menon said: As for plebiscite, we were absolutely, abso117

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lutely dishonest. Nehru had other ideas. Less than a


month after Kashmirs accession and its accompanying
pledge to its people of reference to them and of plebiscite,
he had decided to back out.
He wrote to Abdullah on November 21, 1947: You
will appreciate that it is not easy for us to back out of the
stand we have taken before the world. That would create
a very bad impression abroad and more specially in U.N.
circles. If we said to the U.N.O. that we no longer stand
by a referendum in Kashmir, Pakistan would score a
strong point and that would be harmful to our cause. On
the other hand, if circumstances continue as they are and
the referendum is out of the question during these next
few months, then why worry about it now. There is no
difference between you and us on this issue. It is all a
question of the best tactical approach. I would personally
suggest to you not to say anything rejecting the idea of a
referendum. (SWJN, Volume 4, pages 336-337). This
makes one doubt whether he ever intended to hold
plebiscite.
CONCURRING INTERESTS

The interests of all coincided. Nehru, the Indian nationalist, and Patel, the Hindu nationalist, decided to renege
on the nations solemn pledges on plebiscite to the people
of Kashmir, to Pakistan, and as Nehru himself said, to the
world. Sheikh Abdullah, the Kashmiri nationalist, fervently went along because a plebiscite, as all three knew,
would have gone in favour of Pakistan. The Sheikh, therefore, sought desperately a settlement with Pakistan other
than by a plebiscite and retention of Kashmirs autonomy, meanwhile. The record shows that he was snubbed in
both ventures.
On August 25, 1952, Nehru sent him a note that he
had written in Sonamargnalise the accession through
Kashmirs Constituent Assembly. Both the U.N. and Pakistan were impotent. Kashmiris would submit. It must
be remembered that the people of the Kashmir Valley
and round about, though highly gifted in many waysin
intelligence, in artisanship, etc.are not what are called
a virile people. They are soft and addicted to easy living.
The common people are primarily interested in a few
thingsan honest administration and cheap and honest
food (SWJN, Volume 19, pages 328-329). No Kashmiri
would utter those words for his own people. Nehrus
outlook was moulded in the political climate of Uttar
Pradesh, to which he really belonged. It was exposed also
to the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Bogra,
when they met in New Delhi on August 17, 1953: Most
people, of course, were hardly political and only cared for
their economic betterment (Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Volume 23, page 332).
This is the Development Thesis of today: Kashmiris
have no soul. Feed them; they will submit. Abdullah
derived his power from the people. If their views on
accession to India continued to diverge, without any
hope of reconciliation, he refused to act as Indias stooge
and lose everything. Nehru, in contrast, was happy with
the facade of a popular regime headed by the Sheikh,
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regardless of the depth or quality of its popular support


a policy being pursued to this day.
Abdullah set up an eight-member committee of his
party in May 1953 to evolve a solution that Pakistan could
accept. Unbeknown to him, a couple of them had secretly
gone over to Nehru. He had the Sheikh arrested on
August 9 to replace the Kashmiri nationalist by a succession of stooges, bar an interval (1977-84).
Nehrus record is seriously blemished by two facts; he
knew that the people rejected Indias rule but, nonetheless, kept on promising to abide by their wishes from 1947
to 1954. Indira Gandhi had informed her father in a letter
from Srinagar on May 14, 1948: They say that only
Sheikh Saheb is condent of winning the people (Sonia Gandhi (Ed.), Two Alone Two Together, Penguin,
2005; the suspension marks, which suppress the rest, are
made by the distinguished editor herself for reasons not
hard to guess). A host of impartial observers agreed. Two
days before Independence, the British Resident in Kashmir reported to the Viceroys Principal Secretary, Sir
George Abell: I saw new Prime minister [General Janak
Singh] yesterday, and he is aware of the situation and
although inclining towards India as a Hindu, realises
bulk of Muslims will not accept decision. He therefore
wishes for agreement for both (Transfer of Power, Volume XII, page 696).
Major W.P. Cranston of the British High Commission stayed in Srinagar from October 10 to October 14,
1947, and wrote a report on The political situation in
Kashmir on October 18, giving his assessment. He
wrote: The future, however, is very uncertain and depends entirely on when the Maharaja makes his announcement as to whether Kashmir should remain
independent or accede to either of the two Dominions
it was thought probable that he would then declare the
accession of Kashmir State to the Dominion of India.
This would cause an immediate reaction throughout the
State by the Muslim population which numbers about 80
to 90 per cent and which is strongly opposed to any union
with the Indian Government (Lionel Carter (Ed), Partition Observed, Volume 2, Manohar, 2011, page 523).
Carter has also edited Completing the First Year of
Independence: British Official Reports from South Asia; 1
May17 September 1948 (Manohar, 2016). The documents he reproduces tell the same tale.
An official of the U.K. High Commission reported
from Srinagar on April 30, 1948: While everyone considered that a plebiscite would lead to an overwhelming
vote in favour of Pakistan, they could not believe that
India would voluntarily quit Kashmir. There was no
doubt in the minds of any of the Indians I spoke to that
the plebiscite would go in favour of Pakistan. .. I conclude, therefore, that the Indian Army, like most armies
of occupation, is strongly resented by the great majority
of Kashmiris (Part 1, page 178).
Sir Terence Shone, the High Commissioner, reported
to London on May 24, 1948: Two members of this High
Commission, who recently paid separate visits to Srinagar, came away with the impression that if a fair plebi-

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scite were held in the Vale of Kashmir it would go in


favour of Pakistan. Impartial sources also say that the
recent Independence Celebrations aroused far less popular enthusiasm than the Indian press suggested.
John Shattock, ICS, who had served in Kashmir,
reported to London on June 4: British missionaries who
live in outlying areas in the Vale of Kashmir all think that
a fair plebiscite would go in favour of Pakistan. As these
missionaries are very close to the ground and have no axe
to grind one way or the other, they must be considered as
pretty reliable exponents of public opinion.
A High Commission official who visited Kashmir
(May 14-19, 1948) reported in detail: It seems that
Sheikh Abdullahs position has been somewhat weakened as a result of: (a) The presence of the army of
occupation; the people are said to be terried of the
Sikhs. On the other hand Major General Thimayya said
that relations between the troops and the civil population
were excellent and that people were coming in from the
surrounding districts giving intelligence of the approaching raiders. Their cooperation with the Army was good.
(b) The lack of food supplies during the last severe winter
owing to the closing of the road to Rawalpindi. (c) Stories
of atrocities by the Indian Army brought up by refugees
from Jammu. (d) Dislocation of trade by reason of the
closing of the road to Rawalpindi. (e) High government
officials are going about in cars and generally living at a
high standard, whereas the common people are suffering
from shortages. The fact that the Indian Army saved
Srinagar seemed to be forgotten in view of the winter and
present discomforts.
Kashmirs trade outlet is to Pakistan rather than to
India and by the road to Rawalpindi. Its export(s) of
timber are by river and arts and crafts by road. Imports
were also via this road. The road over the Banihal Pass
cannot take this traffic and as a result trade is at a
standstill.
Alexander Symon, the Deputy High Commissioner in
New Delhi, had easy access to all. He reported on September 12, 1948, on what the U.N. Commission had
learnt. Almost all the members of the [Kashmir] government both individually and in groups had told the
members of the U.N. party that they were in favour of an
independent Kashmir. They were very apprehensive,
however, lest their views might become known to the
Indian government. On their return from Karachi the
main Commission had been considering this possible
solution, but almost all of them were very scared about it.
The members of the Kashmir government had also told
U.N. party that Sheikh Abdullah on behalf of the National Conference would be prepared to meet and talk with
Ghulam Abbas on behalf of the Muslim Conference.
Sheikh Abdullah himself and Afzal Beg (the Revenue
Minister and a comparative moderate) were the prime
movers in favour of this. A report by Symon directly to
Prime Minister Clement Attlee mentioned Sardar Ibrahim, in Pakistan-administered Kashmirs disclosure that
Abdullah had in fact been making advances to him.
We have an impeccable source in Jayaprakash Na-

rayans letter to Nehru on May 1, 1956. He warned: From


all the information I have, 95 per cent of Kashmir Muslims do not wish to be or remain Indian citizens. I doubt
therefore the wisdom of trying to keep people by force
where they do not wish to stay. This cannot but have
serious long-term political consequences, though immediately it may suit policy and please public opinion. From
the point of view of the desirability of establishing a
peaceful social order, it cannot but prove disastrous. I do
earnestly wish that this question be considered more
from a human rather than a nationalist point of view
(Bimal Prasad (Ed), Selected Works of Jayaprakash Narayan, 1964, Volume 7, page 115).
We learn every day from reports from Kashmir that
its peoples opinions have remained the same even fty
years later in 2016. They have not acquiesced in, still less
submitted to, Indias rule. They still ing in its face the
pledges made by Jawaharlal Nehru form 1947 to 1954,
when he publicly reneged on them. On a rough tabulation there are nearly 30 of them. Here are a few.
NEHRUS UNKEPT PROMISES

To Liaquat Ali Khan, on October 26, 1947: I should like


to make it clear that the question of aiding Kashmir in
this emergency is not designed in any way to inuence the
State to accede to India. Our views which we have repeatedly made public is that the question of accession in any
disputed territory or State must be decided in accordance
with the wishes of the people and we adhere to this view
(White Paper on Jammu and Kashmir 1948, page 46). It
was also sent to Attlee.
Further, our assurance that we will withdraw our
troops from Kashmir as soon as peace and order are
restored and leave the decision about the future of the
State to the people of the State is not merely a pledge to
your Government but also to the people of Kashmir and to
the world (ibid, page 51, paragraphs 5 and 7).
Vallabhbhai Patels speech at a public meeting in
Bombay on October 30, 1948: Some people consider
that Muslim majority area must necessarily belong to
Pakistan. They wonder why we are in Kashmir. The
answer is plain and simple. We are in Kashmir because
the people of Kashmir want us to be there. The moment
we realise that the people of Kashmir do not want us to be
here, we shall not be there even for a minute (The
Hindustan Times, October 31, 1948).
Nehrus speech at Calcutta on January 1, 1952: If
then, the people of Kashmir tell us to get out, we will do
so. We will not stay there by force. We did not conquer the
territory. There is no doubt about it that he [Sheikh
Abdullah] is the leader of the people of Kashmir, a very
great leader. If tomorrow Sheikh Abdullah wanted Kashmir to join Pakistan, neither I nor all the forces of India
would be able to stop it because if the leader decides, it
will happen. Since the matter has been referred to the
U.N., we have given our word of honour that we shall
abide by their decision. Indias pledge is no small matter
and we shall stick by it in the eyes of the world (SWJN,
Volume 17, pages 76-78).

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In Parliament on June 26, 1952: And I say with all


respect to our Constitution that it just does not matter
what your Constitution says, if the people of Kashmir do
not want it, it [the Army] will not go there. It might
pain us but we would not send an Army against them, we
might accept that, however much hurt we might feel
and we would change our Constitution about it (ibid.,
Volume 18, page 418).
In Parliament on August 7, 1952: So while the accession was complete in law and in fact, the other fact, which
has nothing to do with law, also remains, namely our
pledge to the people of Kashmir. If you like, to the people
of the world, that this matter can be reaffirmed or cancelled or cut out by the people of Kashmir, if they so
wish.We do not want to win people against their will and
with the help of armed forces, and if the people of Jammu
and Kashmir State so wish it, to part company from us,
they can go their way and we shall go our way. We want
no forced marriages, no forced unions like this. I hope
this great Republic of India is a free, voluntary, friendly
and affectionate union of the States of India. ultimatelyI say with all deference to this Parliamentthe decision will be made in the hearts and minds of the men and
women of Kashmir, neither in this Parliament, nor in the
United Nations, nor by anybody else (ibid., Vol. 18,
pages 293-296). This puts paid to the resolutions by
Parliament.
How is this consistent with his private resolve in
1948, as he admitted to Abdullah on August 25, 1952, not
to hold a plebiscite? As Indias forces launched an offensive, Mountbatten, architect of the accession, got
alarmed and wrote a stiff letter of seven pages on December 28, 1947 as your Governor-General warning him
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THE I N TE R N ATI ON AL Peoples Tribunal on Human

Rights and Justice in Jammu and Kashmir and Association


of Parents of Disappeared Persons conveners and members
Gautam Navlakha, Advocate Parvez Imroz, Zahir-ud-din,
Kartik Murukutla, and Khurram Parvez, release Structure
of Violence: The State in Jammu Kashmir, a report on
human rights violations in Kashmir, in September 2015.
that it would be morally unjustiable to try by force of
arms to inict our (sic) will on a predominantly Muslim
population. Did not this apply also to the entire State?
Nehru riveted Central control over the State once he put
the Sheikh behind the bars. Jinnah was as culpable in this
tragedy. He it was who red the rst shot, immediately
after the Partition, to launch a Cold War with India by
accepting Junagadhs accession. He went on to continuously egg on Hyderabad not to accede to India and
eventually sent the raiders into Kashmir on October 22.
They came with his full knowledge. On November 1,
1947, at Government House in Lahore, Mountbatten
presented him with a written proposal for plebiscite in
States where the rulers did not belong to the same religion as the people. Jinnah rejected it demanding exclusion of Hyderabad. The proposal envisaged that a joint
India-Pakistan force should hold the ring while the plebiscite is being held. Pakistans troops would have entered
Srinagar. In 1965, Pakistan launched a war. Had it won,
would it have held a plebiscite? How can it demand a
plebiscite after it lost at its own chosen forum, the battleeld? The 1971 war led to the Shimla Pact of July 3, 1972.
IMPACT OF INDIA-PAKISTAN WARS

The impact of the wars on the Sheikhs leverage is little

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PTI

NISSAR AHMAD

understood. The 1947 war extinguished the option of


independence; the 1965 war extinguished plebiscite; the
Shimla Pact buttressed the status quo. He signed a pact
with Indira Gandhi in 1975 in an abject surrender and
went on as before to preside over a corrupt and authoritarian regime. In 1947, he had thrown people across to
Pakistan-administered Kashmir, invoking the dreaded
Enemy Agents Ordinance. Eminent Kashmiris suffered
this fate. The Centre gained. In 1975 he accepted its
terms. In 1982, his son Farooq Abdullah emulated the
example of his predecessors in the years from 1954 to
1975.
The outbreak of militancy in 1989 found an inept
separatist leadership surcharged with ego and bereft of
sense and statesmanship. We owe it to the brave lawyer
Parvez Imroz and his team who have fought for redress
against the Army and the paramilitarys outrages since
1990. He set up the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons. Those who persist in denial should read
the 804-page volume, Structures of Violence: The Indian
State in Jammu & Kashmir (Khurram Parvez, The
Bund, Amira Kadal, Srinagar, Rs.400). The J&K Coalition of Civil Society pursues cases in court. The report
documents in detail extra-judicial killings of 1,080 persons and enforced disappearances of 170 people, besides cases of torture and sexual violence. There are
detailed case studies of extra-judicial killings and disappearances. A particularly useful part of the report is its
description of the armys set-up in J&K. It is a massive
document based on irrefutable evidence.
Do You Remember Kunan Poshpora? by Essan Batool, Ifrah Butt, Samreena Mushtaq, Munaza Rashid and
Natasha Rather was published in the Zubaan Series on

FA R OOQ AB D ULLAH addressing a rally in Anantnag on


April 21. He said that in Kashmir people love Pakistan and
not all the treasures that New Delhi cared to throw at them
would change that sentiment.

Sexual Violence and Impunity in South Asia (Zubaan,


page 228, Rs.395). Zubaan, which means the tongue, is
an independent feminist publishing house. This book,
published with the support of the International Development Research Centre, is a thorough exposure of rape
as a weapon to silence people. The book concerns the
mass rape, in the two villages (Kunan & Poshpora) of 31
women by the 4th Regimental Ries regiment of the
Indian Army on February 23, 1991 and is based on
documents and interviews. The late B.G. Verghese and
his Press Councils report is not the only one to be discredited in this episode. (See also Seema Kazis expose,
Sexual Crimes by State Personnel and Kashmirs Case
for Self Determination, in Narrator, April 2016). She
cites a report by Medicins Sans Frontieres entitled
Kashmir: Violence and Health.
Such misdeeds fuel popular wrath. The Army responds by refusing real accountability. Its demand for the
retention of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) reects its distrust of civilian authority. For, even
without AFSPA, no proceedings can be launched without
the governments sanction. What AFSPA guarantees is
total immunity from accountability.
Two more factors have come to the fore, the Modi
government and the Pandits. On New Years Day, 1952,
Nehru said: Just imagine what would have happened in
Kashmir if the Jan Sangh or any other communal party
had been at the helm of affairs? The people of Kashmir

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FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

Jinnah wanted Kashmir,


without Abdullah; Nehru
wanted Abdullah without his
people. The Sheikh wanted a
third way but failed.
say that they are fed up with this communalism. Why
should they live in a country where the Jan Sangh and the
RSS [Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh] are constantly
beleaguering them? They will go elsewhere and they will
not stay with us (SWJN, Volume 17, pages 77-78).
Yet, when, on April 10, 1952, Abdullah gave his famous speech at Ranbir Singh Pora in Jammu, Nehru
resented it. Kashmirs accession to India will have to be
[of] a restricted nature so long as communalism has a
foothold on the soil of India. The Sheikh was alluding to
the rise of the Jan Sangh established a few months earlier. The Modi government is pledged to Hindutva. It has
nothing to offer to Kashmir except promises of development, or to Pakistan except conditional promises of a
dialogueno substantial concessions to either.
It is a dismal situation. After 1965, secession is ruled
out. Is continued oppression the only alternative to it?
The Modi governments stand on the Pandits is in glaring
contrast to its indifference to the plight of Kashmiris
within Kashmir and outside within India; especially of
Kashmiri students.
Mridu Rai, who teaches history at Yale University,
has described their behaviour in her acclaimed book,
Hindu Rulers, Muslim Subjects (Permanent Black, page
297). She writes: It was the tendency of the Kashmiri
Pandits to turn to India, with its comfortable Hindu
majority, when in trouble in Kashmir that earned for
them the honour of being secular nationalists. In
contrast, the Kashmiri Muslims demands for a similar
protection of rights, denied to them as a religious community by both a Hindu Dogra and a secular Indian
state, has been all too easily misread as engaging in an
illegitimate politics of religious fundamentalism. This
duality in nationalist treatment is born, in the ultimate
analysis, of the fact that Kashmiri Muslims have, by and
large, chosen to tread a path all their own and certainly
one that leads them neither to Delhi nor to Islamabad.
Above all, the clamour by Kashmirs Muslims is for a
legitimate government. It is the helplessness in which
they were placed rst by their Dogra rulers and then by
Indian politicians, each neglecting to negotiate their legitimacy with the popular constituency of Kashmir, that
has provoked a militant response.
Omar Abdullah said twice, on October 28, 2009, and
July 2, 2010, that the youth of Kashmir did not pick up
the gun for money, or jobs, but for political reasons. It
is perfectly possible to conciliate Kashmiris as well as
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

Pakistan. Maximum autonomy, or azadi, for both East


and West Kashmir, in agreement with the people and
with Pakistan is a possible solution.
A former Research and Analysis Wing chief told this
writer what he found in track-two diplomacy: Pakistan is
a country with a grievance. Pakistan feels wronged by a
more powerful neighbours breach of commitment to
hold a plebiscite which it was powerless to prevent. That
explains why it makes Kashmir a core issue. This grievance will not vanish. It must be addressed. There will be
no peace in South Asia without a settlement of the Kashmir dispute acceptable to all the three parties. Neither
the people of Kashmir nor Pakistan will acquiesce in a
status quo established by armed force as envisaged in
Nehrus Note of August 25, 1952. The people will not
accept an accord with India unless Pakistan is also a party
to it; for Pakistan is not only a party to the dispute, it is
also a party present in Kashmir itself. On April 21, even
Farooq Abdullah testied: Here in Kashmir people love
Pakistan. Even if you [New Delhi] throw all your treasures upon them, you cant take away the sentiment from
their hearts (Greater Kashmir, April 22).
FAILED ALTERNATIVES

The alternatives that have been tried are ineffective and


sordid. A.S. Dulat, former RAW chief, tells us that the
Intelligence Bureau was most active, most feared and
most denounced in Kashmir. The ISI [Inter-Services
Intelligence] knew exactly how key the I.B. was to the
Central governments hold on Kashmir (Kashmir: The
Vajpayee Years, page 61). Is this how a Union should hold
a State? The I.B. does not collect intelligence in Kashmir.
It bribes politicians and others, besides playing other
sordid games. (See the writers article, Bribes and spies,
Frontline; October 30, 2013).
Operators like Dulat have a tunnel vision. He boasted
to Tehelka, on August 26, 2006, how he had wooed
Shabir Shah and set up a meeting in Kathmandu but
the Prime Ministers Office backed out. For all his years
in Kashmir, he does not realise that if the PMO had not
resiled, Shabir Shah would have been stripped of all
worth as a defector (Shah contests Dulats version). This
is the nub of the matterNew Delhi simply refuses to
reckon with the peoples views. The harsh reality is that
both Jinnah and Nehru coveted the land of Kashmir;
neither cared for its people.
Jinnah wanted Kashmir, without Abdullah; Nehru
wanted Abdullah without his people. The Sheikh wanted
a third way but failed and accepted defeat. The people
bitterly recall the Sheikhs abject surrender but also remember his sacrices and his treatment by Nehru. It was
he who held a vision before them for forty years, from
1935 to 1975. That vision moves the people despite memories of his wrongs.
In 1989, the latent wrath of the Kashmiri ared up.
Pakistan supplied the gun; India built up the wrath, and
that wrath will not subside now. It cannot be crushed by
bribery or force. Indian nationalism must come to terms
with Kashmiri nationalism.

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Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

SPOTLIGHT

Malegaons innocents
The nine Muslim men who were arrested and charged with serious
offences soon after the 2006 Malegaon blasts, but were not discharged
even after an evidence trail emerged to expose a possible Hindutva plot,
have been acquitted. Who will answer for the lost years of their lives?

PRASHANT NAKWE

BY ANUPAMA KATAKAM IN MALEGAON

SHAB-E-BARAT is considered
among the holiest nights by Muslims. Like thousands around the
world, the Muslim community in
Malegaon, a town 300 kilometres
from Mumbai, observes this night
with fervour and reverence. In 2006,
as the community prepared to attend
the prayers, a series of powerful
bombs exploded at Mushawerat

B A D A K A B RA STAN , one of the explosion sites in Malegaon in the 2006


attack. The order acquitting all the local residents who had been booked for the
attack was given by a sessions court in Mumbai on April 26.

Chowk and Bada Kabrastan in the


congested Muslim quarter. Thirtyseven people died and over 300 were
injured. It is widely believed that had
the blasts taken place later in the
evening, when the prayers were to
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Contact : @Razkr

begin, the death toll would have been


much higher. Within days of the
blasts, nine Muslim men from the
town were arrested.
A decade later, on April 26, a sessions court in Mumbai acquitted all
FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

The scapegoats
FRONTLINE met two of the eight
men acquitted in the Malegaon
blasts case and briey proled the
others through material gathered in
Malegaon.
Dr Farogh Iqbal Ahmed
Magdumi, 42
Magdumi has a popular unani
medicine practice in Malegaon. Local residents say he works hard on
his practice and often treats patients
for free if they cannot afford his fees.
He never turns anyone away and is
always willing to help the poor. He is
also deeply involved in spreading
religious learning. But he has a ery
temper and does not gladly suffer
fools. Magdumi, who fought his
own case, led 700 RTI (Right to
Information) applications while he
was in jail.
Following his acquittal, he
spoke to Frontline about the blatant
injustice and violations he has faced
ever since the 2006 Malegaon blasts
and his subsequent arrest.
They targeted me. I was coming
up in life and some people in the
town could not handle my success,
so they used the police, who came
after me. This was a vendetta game.
I used to help a lot of people and I
also taught the Quran to people. In
fact, I tried hard to make people
aware of fake godmen and other
such religious nonsense. I believe
some people wanted to get rid of me
and the police informers gave false
information to the authorities. I also

of them. The judge, V.V. Patil, said:


In my view, the basic foundation or
the objective shown by ATS [AntiTerror-Squad] behind the blast is
not acceptable to a man of ordinary
prudence. I say so because there was
Ganesh immersion just prior to
September 8, 2006. Had accused
No. 1 to 9 any objective that there
should be riots at Malegaon, then
they ought to have planted bombs at
the time of Ganesh immersion which
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

believe the police and investigative


agencies are very corrupt. They
make use of terror to increase their
budgets and then siphon the funds.
The ve years I spent in jail
ruined my life and my source of income came to an end. I spent all my
money on the courts and in jail. At
least ,I had some nances; the others charged had absolutely none. I
maintain my innocence and I am
prepared to speak publicly about
the wrong done to us and how our
constitutional rights have been
snatched. Anyone can check my
background. It is completely clean.
Even though I am bitter from
the experience, I am prepared to
work with anyone to serve my country. This will not affect the work I
do.
Raees Ahmed Rajjab Ali
Mansuri, 43
Mansuris connection to the
case was just that he was the brother-in-law of Shabbir Masiullah. Masiullah, who died in an accident last
year, was arrested in the case reportedly because of his links to Saudi

Arabia. He had just returned from


Saudi Arabia, where he worked as a
tailor. Masiullah was held responsible for procuring the RDX to make
the bombs and was called the chief
conspirator. Mansuri, who had also
lived in Saudi Arabia for a short period, came back to Malegaon in
2004 and started an imitation jewellery business. He lost his business
when he was arrested and is trying
hard now to reconstruct his life.
Noorulhuda Shamshodduha, 32
Noorulhuda
Shamshodduha
was a power loom worker and lived

S O M E O F T HE M E N acquitted by
the sessions court in April. (From
left) Maulana Abdul Hameed Azhari,
who provided legal assistance to the
accused men from Malegaon,
Salman Farsi; Dr Farogh Magdumi,
Noorulhuda and Raees Ahmed
Mansuri celebrating the verdict
outside the court.

would have caused death of most


Hindu people. It seems to me highly
impossible that accused No. 1 to 9,
who are from Muslim community,
would have decided to kill their own
people to create disharmony between the two communities, that too
on a holy day i.e., Shab-e Barat.
The judge noted that there was
not sufficient ground to proceed
against the eight men (the ninth accused, Shabbir Masiullah, died in an

accident early last year) and ordered


that they be set at liberty.
The complete story behind the
blasts may take time in emerging,
but this case once again reects how
awed Indias investigation process
is when it comes to cracking terror
cases.
It also brings to the fore divisive
political agendas and highlights severe human rights violations.
Nine men languished in jail for

124

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

could not afford the travel to Mumbai for the acquittal hearing.
Abrar Ahmed Gulam Ahmed, 31
This is the most curious case of
them all. Ahmed was once a police
informer. He apparently told the
police that he overheard some
Hindu doctors say on the day of the
blasts It is our people who did this.
After this, he claims, the police
betrayed him, moved him to
different cities, told him that he had
a bad name in Malegaon because he
was connected to the blasts, and
that any relatives he tried to contact

DEEPAK SALVI

on daily wages. The police arrested


him because they had been looking
for one Noorulhuda who supposedly belonged to the Student Islamic
Movement of India (SIMI).
Mohammed Zahid Abdul Majid
Ansari, 34
Ansari was in Yavatmal when
the blasts took place. He was an
imam and was once caught by the
police for putting up religious posters and hence was on their radar.
Ansaris only income now comes
through selling fodder in the morning and rewood in the evening. He

ve years (they were granted bail in


2011) with no defence. Most of them
were too poor to afford legal help. In
fact, one of them could not come to
Mumbai for the acquittal hearing because he could not afford the fare.
Their innocence was proved only
because investigative agencies did
not have enough evidence. It needs
to be asked why it took 10 years to
reach this conclusion.
In this time, lives have been

scarred and entire families destroyed


by crimes in which they were not
involved.
Is there any provision to compensate for the time lost? Further, why
were they not set free when evidence
emerged to implicate others for the
crime?
The Malegaon blasts case is a
murky one with multiple layers of
complexity. It led to the discovery of
a sinister plot involving Hindu fringe
125

Contact : @Razkr

would be shot. Ahmed also says he


met Sadhvi Pragya Singh and Lt
Col. Purohit along with police
officers. They reportedly told him
that he would be rewarded well if he
kept his mouth shut. (See
interview.)
Salman Farsi Abdul Latif Aimi,
44
Aimi is the uncle of Noorulhuda
Shamshodduha. The ATS claimed
he
planted
explosives
at
Mushawerat Chowk. After his arrest
he lost his livelihood. He now lives
in Nampur near Malegaon and
works in a medical emergency unit.
Aimi says he will ght for
compensation for the 10 years that
he lost.
However, he is relieved to be a
free man now and cleared of charges
of being a terrorist.
Asif Khan Bashir Khan, 43
The police claim he was a radical
as he fought for the rights of the
downtrodden in Jalgaon. They also
claim he was a member of SIMI and
brought Pakistani nationals to
Malegaon with the objective of
radicalising them.
He is acquitted in the Malegaon
case, but is on the death row for the
7/11 Mumbai train blasts. He hopes
that justice will prevail eventually,
says a source who knows Khans
story.
Shaikh Mohammed Ali, 45
Ali has also been accused of
harbouring Pakistani nationals. He
is serving life imprisonment for the
train blasts. He is also booked for
being a SIMI member.
Anupama Katakam

groups, which eventually led to the


exposing of rising saffron terror in
the country.
NO JUSTICE FOR THE
ACQUITTED

In spite of evidence leading to Hindu


extremist groups in the terror plot,
the Malegaon accused remained in
jail for many years. The ATS did not
drop the accusations against them. It
was only after the National InvestiFRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

THIRTY-ONE-YEAR-OLD Abrar
Ahmed, soft-spoken and mild-mannered, does not seem like a rebrand of any sort. He was one of the
key accused in the case. Ahmed is an
electrician and also a real estate
businessman. Ahmed, who was reportedly a police informer before
the blasts, turned approver in the
case after his arrest. A few days after
his acquittal, he spoke to Frontline
at his Malegaon residence, narrating slowly and carefully the interesting and disturbing story of what
happened to him after the bombings. Sources in Malegaon say
Ahmed was a known police informant who ended up being used as a
scapegoat. His case is a curious one.
For those who follow the case, most
of his account matches information
out in the public domain. Here is
what he told this correspondent:
When I heard of the blast, I
went to help the victims and take
them to hospital. At the hospital I
overhead two doctors say our people exploded this bomb. We were at
the Farhan Hospital, and there is a
record of my giving blood at that
time. I did not know what to do with
this information and felt I had to tell
someone. My wifes brother, Farookh Wardha, was at home and I
told him. He told me not to tell anyone. Five days later, the police came

gation Agency (NIA) took over the


probe in 2011 and said there was little evidence to prosecute them that
they got bail.
According to a source in Malegaon, the ATS, in complicity with the
local police, who were clearly under
pressure to produce answers after
the blasts, decided to pick up nine
local residents on cooked-up charges. Some of these men were targets
of local rivalries, others had vague
links to people connected to organisations. One of them just had a
name that sounded similar to that of
another wanted man, the source
FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

ANUPAMA KATAKAM

Double betrayal

A B RA R A H M E D . His is the most

curious case of them all.


home and said I should come with
them to give my testimony. They
would bring me back soon after.
I went with them. It would take
two years before I saw my family
again. The police took me to Jagtap
Colony in Nashik. My wife, Janat
Unisa, and Wardha joined me
there.
We waited for an entire day to
meet the judge, but it did not happen. When I asked to be allowed to
go home, Rajvardhan [S.P., Malegaon] told me some local papers
had carried reports that I was a police informer and it would be dangerous to go back. The three of us
were taken by road to Jaora in Madhya Pradesh. From there we were
taken to Indore and then Ujjain. A
policeman called Arun Bhog ac-

said. The conspirators were too


poor and scared to ght their cases.
The police allegedly told them that
any relatives they tried to contact
would be killed. They were also told
that people in Malegaon were angry
and would kill them if they came
back. These men are not empowered or equipped to take on the
establishment. Confessions were apparently forced and torture was part
of the process, the source said.
Finally, the Jamiat Ulema-eHind in Malegaon put together nances and arranged legal assistance
for the accused.

companied us through the journey.


We were kept at guest houses and
made to visit some temples. I could
not understand what they were doing. Then one day I was taken to a
temple in Dewas, where I met Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur. She told
me: Give Rajvardhan your support
and we will give you anything. Then
I was taken back to Nashik and kept
there for at least 10 days. They took
me to Mumbai, saying I had to depose before a judge. The police told
me if I didnt agree my family would
face the consequencesWe will
shoot them (goli marenge), they
said. I was scared and told the court
that I had gone voluntarily to Indore and Ujjain. Once again I was
put on the road and taken to Deolali, where I met Col. Purohit, who
also asked me to cooperate with the
police. Rajvardhan was with me
then. I was brought back to Mumbais Chandan Chowki in Juhu.
Here they tortured me severely
kept beating me and telling me to
identify people in some photographs. These people would be
charged for the blasts. My nails fell
out because of the torture, I got fever and was nally taken to hospital.
When I told the doctors they told
me to approach the Mumbai police.
I was taken to meet a police officer,
Brijesh Singh, who told me to wait
for a few days to meet the judge who
would decide whether to let me go.
After another medical [examination], I was told I was going to a

Maulana Abdul Hameed Azhari,


who had helped the men in their legal battle, said: The fact is that these
men were framed. The police had no
answers and therefore caught some
Muslims and charged them. When
the truth about saffron terror came
out, they were still not released. That
is injustice and a violation of human
rights. If you look at their proles,
not one would seem to have a terror
background.
Mubasshir Mushtaq, a local journalist who has followed the case, said
the ATS shamelessly tried to build a
ctitious case against the men but

126

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

big house. This was Arthur


Road Jail in Mumbai. I spent
18 hours in this jail and then
was taken to another court.
Here I fainted from the exhaustion. I woke up in ward 46 of
the Byculla Jail. This would be
my home for a while.
Rajvardhan came to meet
me and again I was told to
cooperate. I was scared they
would kill my brothers and
signed whatever confession
they wanted me to.
It was around this time that
Wardha and my wife told me
they had sold me out to the
ATS. They said the police had
given them Rs.25 lakh and immovable property to bring me
in. Janat Unisa even gave the
police a photograph of me
meeting the Sadhvi in the temple. I felt deeply betrayed.
Strangely I bumped in to
the Sadhvi at the Byculla Jail
and she told me: Abrar stay
away from me or you will be in
trouble.
After Karkares investigation, we knew we had some
hope. I had nally contacted
my family and even though my
letters were censored I was able
to keep in touch. My older
brother and lawyer, Jaleel Ansari, helped in the case. I have a
lot more to say but will save it
for another day.
Anupama Katakam

failed miserably. Some of these men


got into trouble because of false information given by people who had
petty grievances.
FLAWED INVESTIGATION

A year before the Malegaon blasts,


explosives were found at the homes
of members of Hindu extremist
groups in different parts of Maharashtra. In Nanded, two Bajrang Dal
workers had died while assembling
explosives. Some mysterious blasts
had taken place in Parbhani, Purna
and Jalna and there were murmurs
of Hindu right-wing activists at-

tempting terror strikes. In December


2006, the ATS led a charge sheet
against the nine men they arrested
under MCOCA (Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act, 1999).
There was reportedly much anger
against the police in Malegaon, particularly against Superintendent of
Police Rajvardhan Singh, who reportedly framed people. The Central
Bureau of Investigation (CBI) then
stepped in but led only a supplementary charge sheet and then, curiously, moved away from the
investigation.
In 2007, when Shabbir Masiullah (he died in an accident last year)
led a writ petition in the Bombay
High Court questioning the constitutional validity of MCOCA, the Malegaon case went into a spin. After
the High Court dismissed his petition, Masiullah appealed in the Supreme Court. Unfortunately, his
lawyer, Shaheed Azmi, was shot, reportedly by a hitman from the Mumbai maa. The Supreme Court, after
hearing the case, reserved judgment
for a year. Eventually, in 2011, the
apex court asked the NIA to investigate the case.
From 2007 to 2008 several
things happened that changed the
tone of the case. Attacks took place
on the Samjhauta Express (February
2007), the Mecca Masjid in Hyderabad (May 2007), the Ajmer Dargah (October 2007) and once again
in Malegaon in October 2008. A pattern was emerging.
A decisive breakthrough came in
September 2008 when Hemant Karkare, the ATS chief who was gunned
down in the 26/11 Mumbai terror
strike, chased a lead on the ownership of a motorbike that held the
explosives. The bike was traced to
Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur, and investigations now held pointers to a
Hindutva plot.
Evidence led the police to Sadhvi
Pragya Singh Thakur, Sameer Kulkarni, an Abhinav Bharat member,
and to Lt Col. Shrikant Prasad Purohit, a serving army officer. Purohit
apparently provided the RDX (Research Department Explosive) for
the bomb and masterminded the operation along with one Ramji. The
127

Contact : @Razkr

news sent shockwaves across the


country.
In 2009, the ATS, under K.P.
Raghuvanshi, led a 4,528-page
charge sheet that included extensive
details on the real conspirators and
on the planning and execution of the
Malegaon blasts. Still, the case
against the nine conspirators who
were arrested in 2008 remained in
limbo. Swami Aseemanand, who was
arrested for the Samjhauta Express
blast, made a stunning confession in
2010. He told interrogators that he
and other Hindu activists were involved in bombings at various Muslim religious places as they wanted to
answer every Islamist terrorist act in
kind with a bomb for bomb policy.
He later retracted his statement. But
the magazine that broke the story
corroborated the information with
audio tapes.
Interestingly, when the NIA took
over the case, it absolved the nine
accused saying there was insufficient
evidence to link them to the bombings. It booked four Hindu extremists, Lokesh Sharma, Dhan Singh,
Rajendra Choudhary and Manohar
Narwaria, in the case. A week before
the MCOCA court was to hear the
discharge pleas of the Malegaon
nine, the NIA reversed its stand and
said the discharge could not be allowed.
We arent sure why this happened given how clear the NIA was
in concluding that the accused were
not involved in the bomb blasts, said
a rights lawyer. We suspect political
pressure, but that has been a problem with this case ever since the Hindu fundamentalist angle was
exposed, he said.
Recently, the public prosecutor
in the case, Rohini Salian, said she
was asked by the new government to
go soft on the accused of the 2006
Malegaon case. Last year, she led an
affidavit initiating contempt proceedings against the NIA for tending to hamper the judicial process,
resulting in weakening of the prosecutions case.
The Malegaon blasts case runs
deep. The false charges against the
nine men form just the tip of the
iceberg.

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

MOVEMENTS

Witch-hunt & protest


THE unrest in Jawaharlal Nehru
University (JNU) entered its third
month in May with the university
administration continuing to systematically target individuals and
showing no sign of reconciliation.
A ve-member high-level enquiry committee (HLEC) set up to probe
the events of February 9, when antinational slogans were allegedly
raised, submitted its report to the
Vice Chancellor in March. On the
basis of the inquiry, JNU came down
heavily on the students and recommended rustication of three of them:
Umar Khalid for one semester,
Kashmiri student Mujeeb Gattoo for
two semesters and Anirban Bhattacharya until July 15. Anirban Bhattacharyas academic year ends on
July 21, when he is to submit his PhD
thesis, and it would seem like the
administration was giving him a
small window to submit the thesis.
He said that as he had been barred
from the campus, he would not get a
chance to defend the thesis in the
viva voce or complete other formalities. Kanhaiya Kumar, and Saurabh
Sharma of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) were ned
Rs.10,000 each. Fourteen students
were ned between Rs.10,000 and
Rs.20,000. Two students, Ashutosh
Kumar and Komal Mohite, were denied hostel facility for a year and until July 21 respectively, and two
ex-students, Banojyotsna and Dhrupadi, were barred from the university
campus.
The university general body
meeting had earlier rejected the
HLEC as it did not have representaFRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

SHIV KUMAR PUSHPAKAR

The hunger strike in JNU over the action taken against students in
connection with the February 9 events marks the third month of the
protests and there is no truce in sight. B Y D I V Y A T R I V E D I

J N U S U P RESI D E N T KA N HA I YA KUM AR (extreme right) and other

students take out a torchlight rally on the campus in New Delhi on April 27.
tion from the marginalised sections
of society to which most of the students under scrutiny belonged. Calling the report revengeful and
draconian, the students rejected it
totally and demanded a rollback of
all punishments, including the nes.
There is no logic in the differential
punishments. The constitution of the
HLEC was biased just as in Hyderabad [Central University]. The entire thing was a farce and we were not
asked to present our sides at all, said
Anirban Bhattacharya. The students
rejected the report and burnt a copy
of it at the administrative block,
which has come to be known as
Freedom Square, and began a hunger strike which they say will continue until all the punishments are
revoked.
Stating that the punishments
were not severe enough and that
some students had been let off light-

ly, students belonging to the ABVP


commenced their hunger strike a
night earlier.
Responding to the recommendations, the affected students and their
supporters enumerated complaints
made in the past against ABVP students and the inaction against them
to date. In 2007, on the day of the
presidential debate before university
elections, the ABVP engaged in
physical violence. During the 2012
elections in November, they pointed
to girl students and raised slogans
such as Gujarat ke rapists ko ek
mauka aur do. Once, on Eid, they
poured alcohol inside Narmada hostel. Then, in front of Chandrabhaga,
they beat up a Muslim student of the
Students Federation of India so badly that his hand broke. There were
complaints made in the Proctors ofce against each of these cases, but
till today no action has been taken

128

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

against any of them, said a student.


Many observers felt that by releasing the HLEC report just before
the vacations, the JNU administration was trying to weaken the movement. But Umar Khalid responded
by saying that people who struggled
did not take vacations. Students and
teachers continued to visit the administrative block even as examinations were on.
On the night of April 27, following a mashaal juloos (torchlight rally), 19 students began an indenite as
well as relay hunger strike. On the
sixth day in a one-day solidarity
strike, more than 120 teachers from
JNU and Delhi University and 180
students took part. Programmes
continued to be held at Freedom
Square, and a large number of activists, artists, alumni and intellectuals
joined the hunger strike. Students
and activists in Bihar and Kolkata
(Jadavpur University) expressed solidarity through hunger strikes and
torchlight rallies. In Ara Jail in Bihars Bhojpur district, 20 prisoners
also expressed solidarity with the
students struggle. On May Day,
mess and sanitation workers in JNU
marched to Freedom Square. Delhi
University Professor G.N. Saibabas
wife, Vasantha Kumari, spoke at the
venue and the reggae band Delhi
Sultanate (Base Foundation Roots)
performed there. Contractual employees in Mumbai collected money
towards the ne that JNUSU president Kanhaiya Kumar had to pay.
Vice Chancellor Jagadesh Kumar
responded by calling the hunger
strike an unlawful activity and a
harmful method of protest that adversely affects students and asked
them to resort to constitutional
means to put forth their demands, if
any. He urged the students to call off
the strike and come for dialogue. He
even had separate meetings with the
students unions. Following the
meeting, the ABVP called off its fast
on the grounds that the Vice Chancellor had promised to reconsider the
punishment to Saurabh Sharma. But
the Left-affiliated groups were disappointed and decided to continue
with the strike until all the punishments were withdrawn.

In the midst of all this, a 200page report or dossier titled Jawaharlal Nehru University: The Den of
Secessionism and Terrorism submitted by 11 teachers to the JNU administration last year came to light.
It painted JNU as a den of an organised sex racket and suggested depoliticisation of the campus. It also
accused JNU teachers of engaging in
nefarious and anti-national activities. It racially proled Muslim and
Dalit students and students from the
north-eastern region and Kashmir
and took umbrage at the idea of a
discussion over a free Kashmir and
cultural practices of students from
the north-eastern region, among
other things.
It said: Almost 300 Kashmiri
and North-East separatist activists
are staying illegally in the hostels of
JNU. They are the main force behind
organising anti-India activities, protest demonstrations, talks and lectures by separatist leaders in the
JNU campus. Beef eating festival,
Mahishaswar Diwas, and Hate Hindu campaigns are the regular feature
in hostel activities and various seminars/ lectures organised by known
anti-Hindu and anti-national elements. In response to what the students from the north-eastern region
called ludicrous insinuations, hundreds of students gathered at Freedom Square and burnt a copy of the
dossier.
Meanwhile, a fresh set of notices
from the Proctors office were sent to
Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya for participating in the
screening of a lm, Muzaffarnagar
Baaqi Hai, last year. The organisers
of the screening had been hauled up
for it at that time and the matter was
thought to be closed, so it was a surprise when these two students were
singled out for being present at the
screening where hundreds of other
students were also present. It underlines the witch-hunt that we have
been talking about. I guess now we
should wait for more notices to be
sent to us for participating in other
events, said Umar Khalid.
A protest screening of the lm
was held amidst the hunger strike
and the ABVP attempted to disrupt
129

Contact : @Razkr

it by playing aloud patriotic and religious songs from Hindi lms. The
disruption of the screening of this
lm in both JNU and University of
Hyderabad (UoH) in August last
year sparked a chain of events that
disturbed the state of equilibrium in
both institutions.
Nakul Singh Sawhney, who
made the lm, was unable to come to
terms with this offensive following
the screening of the lm. He could
not understand how the screening of
the lm by students could be unpalatable when the government itself
had screened it at the Mumbai International Film Festival in February. If screening the lm is wrong,
then [Maharashtra Chief Minister
Devendra] Phadnavis [who inaugurated the festival and [Arun] Jaitley
[whose Information and Broadcasting Ministry organised it] should be
sent notices rst, Sawhney said.
Meanwhile, Kanhaiya Kumar,
even while on hunger strike, visited
various parts of the country and met
students, workers, farmers, activists
and politicians with the purpose of
concretising a counter-fascist force.
What the exact shape or the platform
of such solidarity might be was not
clear yet, but he was condent that it
would solidify into an effective political force soon. Would it be a political
party? We are not looking for an
alternative in politics. We are looking for an alternative politics, he
said and added that passing the Rohith Act was a priority.
Meanwhile, the ABVP students
on hunger strike, who were far fewer
in number compared with the other
students, brought in outsiders led by
Delhi University Students Union
(DUSU) president Satindar Awana
to raise slogans against the hunger
strikers on the opposite side. Even as
the health of several students sitting
on hunger strike deteriorated, Kanhaiya Kumar was admitted to the
JNU health centre on the eighth day
of the strike following a bout of vomiting and a sharp fall in his blood
pressure and blood sugar levels.
However, the students are clear
about one thing: they will not budge
until the punishments are revoked
totally.

FRONTLINE . MAY 27, 2016

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

LETTERS
Temple entry

THE Bombay High Courts decision to allow women entry into the Shani Shinganpur temple is heartening (Cover Story,
Winds of change, May 13). It will be
interesting to see how the temple authorities react to this development. They
should not forget every person is equal in
the eyes of God, irrespective of gender or
caste. It is men, the so-called stronger
gender, who have created this divide and
restriction to boost their egos.
BAL GOVIND
NOIDA, UTTAR PRADESH

THE Bombay High Courts ruling that the


state is duty-bound to end gender discrimination at temples is progressive. It
is shocking that the trustees of the Shani
Shingnapur temple joined hands with local people to prevent women from entering the sanctum sanctorum. After Chief
Minister Devendra Fadnavis instructed
the district administration to ensure that
the court order was followed in letter and
spirit, those opposing womens entry into
the temple relented. This sends a positive message and ends an archaic tradition that had no logic or reason.
K.R. SRINIVASAN
SECUNDERABAD, TELANGANA

I CONGRATULATE Trupti Desaiand other


activists ofthe Bhumata Ranragini Brigade on their efforts to enter the sanctum sanctorum ofthe Shani Shingnapur
temple. However, the photograph on the
cover showed Trupti Desai and others
pouring milk on the idol by emptying a
plastic pouch straight on it, which is not
the proper way to do a milk abhishek.
Themilk should have rst been poured
into a vessel made of copper/brass/
bronze/stainless steel.
R. NAMBIAR
PUNE, MAHARASHTRA

THE clamour for the entry of women in


FRONTLINE .

MAY 27, 2016

Contact : @Razkr

the 10 to 50 age group in the Sabarimala


temple is quixotic (Cover Story, Pressure on a hill shrine, May 13). The restriction on women, apart from being
part of the temples time-tested customs
and rituals, which are the bedrocks of
religious belief, is in the wider interest of
women themselves for safety reasons as
the temple is located in a forest. The
litigants do not represent the aspirations
of the overwhelming majority of the
stakeholders. When there are so many
issues pertaining to womens empowerment in the social, political and economic
spheres crying for attention, this controversy is much ado about nothing.
AYYASSERI RAVEENDRANATH
ARANMULA, KERALA

Temple tragedy
IT is not uncommon for tragedies to occur during festivals at places of worship
across the world because at such congregations faith and traditions take precedence over logic and reason (Template
for tragedy, May 13). Accidents can be
avoided and festivals conducted safely if
temple authorities and law enforcers
work in tandem to ensure that safety
norms are adhered to. The Thrissur Pooram nale was a ne example of how this
can be done.
K.P. RAJAN
MUMBAI

THE tragedy highlights Indians lackadaisical approach to safety. We do not


take even simple precautions to avoid
accidents, so tragedies are just waiting to
happen. While temple reworks, an ageold tradition, cannot be banned, at least a
simple drill should be conducted to
check whether safety precautions are in
place. Only competent people should be
allowed to handle reworks and be in
charge of their storage.
D.B.N. MURTHY
BENGALURU

Drug ban
THE article Faulty prescriptions (May
13) drew attention to the hazards of unsound xed-dose combination (FDC)
drugs and the professional patronage for
them. With FDCs,pharmaceutical companies can circumvent the drug pricing
and packaging regulations. It is surprising that State and Central drug authorities permit them to be marketed without
sound clinical data on their efficacy.
Meetings of physicians associations and
conferences and seminars that provide

Continuous Medical Education for doctors, have become opportunities to court


physicians over meals at appealing venues. They allow drug companies to pay
speaking fees to the favoured. The advertising and marketing budgets aresometimes higher than R&D costs, though
the industry is fond of claiming that drugs
are expensive because its spending on
research is huge.
H.N. RAMAKRISHNA
BENGALURU

Siddis
THE article African connection (May 13)
was a delightful journey to a forgotten
corner of Indian history and heritage.
Many more such stories, which nd no
place in our Anglo-centric history texts
and other writings, must be waiting to be
written. Some remarkably frank and perceptive observations regarding both Europeans and various native communities
can be found in the Australian John
Langs books based on his travels in India
in the 1850s. The extent of slavery in the
colonial period is perhaps worth a separate study because the practice was
prevalent the world over but is seldom
mentioned in the literature commonly
available here.
In a well-researched book mainly
about colonial Lucknow in the 18th century, Rosie Llewellyn-Jones says: Most
Europeans in Calcutta had one or more
slave children. Sir William Jones, the
scholar and founder of the Asiatic Society
of Bengal, had a slave boy called Otto.
Slave boats laden with children came
down the Hooghly, especially during
times of famine when parents would sell
them to traders. These children were Indians, but there were also negro slaves
from Africa, sometimes employed as domestic servants, but sometimes as soldiers, like the 25 Africans who fought for
Sir Eyre Coote during the siege of Pondicherry.
Elsewhere, she mentions that a proclamation against slavery had been issued
as early as 1789. There is surely a lot
more to all this, and one hopes that some
impartial historians can open up such
topics to the interested lay public for discussion.
T. THARU
CHENNAI
ANNOUNCEMENT
Letters, whether by surface mail or e-mail, must
carry the full postal address and the full name,
or the name with initials.

130

Raz Kr @letscrackonline , @razkrlive

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