Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Laundry List of Issues That Matter

2014 marked the beginning of a new hope for a change away from a promise of a dream to a promise of something concrete via a resounding mandate to a CM who proved that he can deliver the spoken words.

The changed mandate posed it's own challenges of a deranged opposition & media molded in a certain ideology over three quarter of a century. A constructive opposition and media have, barring a few instances, almost always been a bane for India, and opposing for opposition sake is the expected norm, lesser said about the mainstream media the better.

In these circumstances the only way out seems to be the new voice assuming the role that a constructive opposition and the mainstream media voices ought to take in a noteworthy democracy. By new voice I mean that voice which challenged the mainstream media and brought it to it's knees and has set the agenda of mainstream discourse ever since, i.e. till it suddenly found itself on the same side it came into being criticizing about sometime during the second innings of the super bureaucrat PM and the once invincible Idea of India Eco system that he led. Such formidable was the control that this incestuous group, at it's peak exerted, that most of them still believe that the role reversal is just a regular bad dream they'll wake up from the very next day.

Not surprisingly, the issues that everyone found himself debating and vehemently defending his position on were actually non issues that concern only those people who have nothing better to engage in. Sample: mock terrorist in a mock terrorism drill found to be wearing a skull cap; people converting, re-converting and re-re-converting their religion, and so forth. The real issues got buried deep under this cacophony.

Everyone has his laundry list of things that he wants the govt to address here is mine:

1. One third of world's extreme poor live in India.

Jan dhan yojana is nice beginning but ultimately they would need jobs to pull themselves up from poverty.

The 100 smart cities project has to get going, and the focus of these smart cities must be job creation for the extreme poor and improvement in quality of life for all inhabitants.

Manufacturing must get rolling, if China could attract manufacturing due to cheap labor, there is no reason why India could not.

2. Current account must be in surplus.

Oil dependency must end on one hand and we must go green on the other. Solar, Wind, Hydro, Nuclear, clean coal & Bio fuel, not specifically in that order, all of them will be needed to power our economy

The more India travels on Train, the less oil will be needed to be imported. Trains should be the preferred mode of travel, not only between cities but within cities through Metro trains as well. Metro rails should render cars useless.

Subsidizing cycles, e-bikes & pedelecs will pay rich dividends.

Railways needs to upscale many times over and monopoly is not the way to go, competition will bring efficiency & improved service. Railways need to be debottlenecked by laying of multiple lines where needed, make trains weather, especially fog proof. More than high speed trains, we need high capacity trains running on multiple tracks that are not required to stop to let other trains pass.

3. Jobs

China's last decade was fueled by construction, be it high speed railway, cities or projects of gargantuan proportions, global recession could not derail the Chinese economy. India need to take a page out of that book. Energy independence, railways and smart cities themselves are huge enough projects to create enough jobs & fuel the economy.

4. Barring a small section, quality of life in India is one of the worst in the world.

When things as planned finally do fall in place it ought to reflect in the quality of life, and not just that of the affluents & the middle class, but across the board.

Picture from here

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

A Few Thoughts on Hindutva

Credit for this post goes to Center Right India's debate on similar theme. I begin with a simple question - Is Hindutva a subset of Hinduism or a superset?

Nowhere is Hindutva described as an exclusivist ideology. Savarkar described Hindutva as - those who consider India to be their motherland, fatherland, as well as their holy land, irrespective of his caste, creed and religion. Hinduism, according to Savarkar is only a derivative and a part of Hindutva, and he lets the subjects themselves decide rather than deciding who is included in Hindutva. For the record, Savarkar was an atheist. (link)

According to RSS, Hindutva "is inclusive of all who are born and who have adopted Bharat as their Motherland". Even that does not exclude any Indian citizen out of Hindutva's fold on any basis whatsoever. (link)

Supreme Court's three judge bench says the following about Hindutva: "it may well be that this word is used in a speech to promote secularism or to emphasise the way of life of the Indian people and the Indian culture or ethos". (link)

"Hinduism" on the other hand has a strict hierarchical Caste system and, exceptions apart, is largely an exclusive domain of not only people following a particular religion but also discrimates according to the Caste within that religion as well. Casteism is a characteristic of Hinduism - the religion, not Hindutva. Having said that, it's also pertinent to add that Hinduism is also said to be the most tolerant and relatively liberal among all major religions and unlike others doesn't have an expansionist agenda. Since Sandeep seems to have covered Hinduism really well in the Center Right debate so will not delve further on that.

It is conclusively proven that Hindutva is a superset of Hinduism that is inclusive of followers of any religion or theism, shuns caste system, and is more secular and liberal than Hinduism. On the other hand, the people on the far right are followers of unadulterated Hinduism, not Hindutva, and can be termed as Hindu fundamentalists. Let's not conflate Hindu fundamentalism which is a subset of Hinduism with Hindutva which is a superset of Hinduism. Yes, Hindu fundamentalism is also a subset of Hindutva as much as White Supremacism is a subset of European and American culture and so forth. So given a choice the left liberals should have problem with Hinduism with it's exclusiveness and casteism, instead of Hindutva. If they have no problem with Hinduism then they should have none with the more inclusive Hindutva. if the word Hindu is what troubles them then they can coin a new term, everything else being equal.

So here we have some people who are trying to get all Indian citizens into an inclusive single cultural unit, ok they are not the Harvard types, but instead of a genuine critique we simply club them with the far right fundamentalists who could be found in every society.

Be that as it may, coming to the oft repeated question from the detractors of Hindutva in general and BJP in particular - Are there closet Hindu fundamentalists in BJP? That's like asking - are there closet Fascists in Congress? or are there closet Maoists in CPI(M)? The answer to all three questions is - yes it's possible, but have these parties declared that as their stated objectives? No they haven't, they all have reiterated their commitment to the Indian Constitution and that's what should matter to us.

Picture from here

Friday, July 27, 2012

Assam Riots: How Should India Deal with Illegal Migrants?

Like any other region of India, Assam too has seen large scale migration throughout history. By the time India got independence in 1947, Assam was a multi ethnic region consisting of Ahoms, various hill tribes of Nagaland, Meghalaya and Mizoram, indegenous tribes - Bodos, Mising etc, migrants from peninsular India brought by the British to work in Tea Industries, Sikhs living in villages near Nowgaon since pre-colonial era and other migrants from rest of India who came for trade and mainly inhabited cities, besides others. That was the time when Indian Nationhood as we know it came into being, and we became a republic a couple of years later. Not that it's not common knowledge, but it's central to the debate.

The first wave of large-scale migration post-independence was around 1971 when native Bangladeshis being persecuted by erstwhile West-Pakistani Army migrated in millions into Assam, many of them never returned and started competing with the native Assamese for land and resources. Predictably Assamese started to agitate for deportation of Bangladeshi refugee turned immigrants and the agitation reached it's peak during early 80s. It's common knowledge that the ruling Congress struck gold in terms of huge number of assured votes in the form of grateful Bangladeshis. That was one of the first instance of Congress's perhaps hugely successful experiment with vote bank politics that entire India is familiar with today.

Ruling Cong tried it's best to maintain status quo as it suited them. It tried to divide Assam by driving a wedge between Bodos and Ahoms, it was the same time when demand for a seperate "Bodoland" started to emerge and enacted the highly controversial IMDT Act of 1983 that made it near impossible for a Bangladeshi migrant to be deported from Assam. It took 22 years for the Supreme Court to repeal IMDT Act as un-constitutional in 2005. The economic disparity between Bangladesh and India coupled with a govt friendly to illegal immigrants and a corrupt security force manning borders ensured that large scale immigration continue unabated.

Assam agitation culminated in "Assam Accord" signed by the central govt and representatives of All Assam Students Union. Which was largely an economic package and along with Illegal Migration Determination by Tribunal (IMDT) Act enacted two years before the accord virtually regularized illegal migrants from Bangladeshis who migrated into India up to March, 1971 and even beyond. Peace was bought through a financial package on one hand, and status-quo prevailed in terms of accepting Bangladeshis who migrated before March, 1971 as Indian citizens on the other. The vote bank was saved. Constitutionality of such an accord between a students union and central govt was never questioned.

What followed was rise of armed rebellion by United Liberation Front of Assam demanding independence from India, it became yet another outfit from North East asking for freedom from India, after National Socialist Council of Nagaland and Mizo National Front. President's rule ensued and AFSPA was applied to quell the "militancy". ULFA militancy was controlled by sustained military action on one hand and rival militancy of outfits like National Democratic Front of Bodoland and Muslim United Liberation Tigers of Assam etc. on the other. If rumors are to be believed the other outfits were created and sponsored by state as counterweight to ULFA. How far is that true is anybody's guess.

The other consequence of Assam agitation and accord was All Assam Students Union (AASU) developing into a full fledged political party - Assam Gana Parishad (AGP), first credible opposition to Congress in Assam, it had two, including a partial tenure, clueless, lacking in vision, and largely unremarkable tenures as govt in the state. In the last elections Assam United Democratic Front (AUDF) representing the now substantial Muslim population of Assam overtook AGP to become the second largest party after Congress in state assembly.

The Bangladeshi migrants who came as refugees initially struggled to make a living and gradually started competing for land and resources with villages in hinterland leading to violent clashes with the natives the worst of which we are witnessing in Kokrajhar that saw more than 40 people killed and close to 200000 people mostly Bodos displaced from their home and rendered refugees.

Predictably, Congress is in the same denial mode refusing to accept that Illegal Bangladeshi Migrants are the source of problem, taking refuge behind Assam Accord which they signed with AASU to legitimize Bangladeshi migrants, ably supported by the mainstream national media that has over the years become an appendage of the state. Whereas rest of Assam is helplessly watching from the sidelines as the state is still under AFSPA and under a rule of heavy presence of security forces under a hope that Army/SFs will take care of the situation and restore their rights as citizens, as they ought to have in normal circumstances. Or may be they have resigned to vote bank politics which they know is a reality they have to live with and the only ones agitating at the riots are the ones displaced from it.

Assam accord which I consider dubious, that legitimized millions of Bangladeshi immigrants who came in before 1971 instead of taking 1947, the year of independence as the only acceptable point of time as it ought to have since India became Republic, is at the heart of the debate. The matter was far more important than leaving it to an inexperienced students union and the ruling party to decide through an economic package that was anyway needed for the state. The matter should have been decided at least by the parliament after a thorough national level debate. If the issue of Citizenship and the Citizen's rights over Foreign Migrants is a regional issue then by that stretch even the issue of Territorial Integrity should also be a regional one.

Having said that, Bangladeshi migrants are a reality that we as a nation must acknowledge. The economic disparity we have with Bangladesh that drives migration can not be overlooked. We have to deal with them and decide the approach we want to take, should we confine them to refugee camps - the approach many countries take, or allow them to legitimately earn a living as non citizens - like in Dubai for e.g. is a call the Nation has to take collectively through parliament.

Certain amount of labor migration from various countries comprising South Asia is to be expected for economic reason considering the disparity in the economies of various countries. So the first approach that involves confining all illegal migrants to camps and treating them as convicts, even though it's the most popular method being used by the western world including US to deal with the issue of illegal migration, may not be practical or desirable in India's case. Hence the second approach of allowing them to legitimately stay, with limited rights, and earn a living, knowing fully well that they will compete with Indian labours, increasing supply in the labour market, seems to be the best available alternative.

Having infiltrated into India, illegal migrants would either head for cities for jobs, or look for pieces of fertile land to own. Our Villages are ill equipped to handle more than handful of migrants to help them as farm hands or at odd jobs, least of all share their agricultural lands with them. Cities on the other hand have a voracious appetite for labours, and they are better equipped than the villages in terms of availibility of sufficient police force to take care of law & order situations, utilities, and job opportunities to make it possible for the migrants to make a living without land ownership, the downside of which is driving down of wages in the labor market.

If we "must" have migrants from other countries, we must have them in cities which are better equipped to handle them and their cosmopolitan nature reduces friction between communities and provide a support base for various communities, which can not be expected from villages anywhere, and any attempt at forcing villages to accept and share resources with foreign migrants will lead to bloody clashes the kind of which we are seeing in Assam.

IMDT Act enacted by the ruling Cong in 1983 that replaced the Foreigner's Act of 1946 was clearly driven by political agenda of vote bank, Supreme Court declared the act unconstitutional in 2005, but 22 years were enough to change the demographic alongwith electoral landscape of Assam. The rights of Scheduled Tribes like Bodos etc. and also that of non tribal villagers need to protected at all cost. And rights of foreign migrants can not be put on the same pedestal as those of citizens.

There is no dearth of practical solutions and ideas as expressed by the opinion leaders, well informed and good intentioned people like here and here, which thanks to a democratic social media have made it possible for people to express and spread. Thanks to them a renewed and much needed debate on a national level on the crucial issue of how to deal with Illegal Migration has been set rolling which till now was sadly absent in the main stream media. Whatever be the solution that emerges from the debate can only be better than dubious accords and flawed legislations like IMDT.

Picture from here