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Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts

February 14, 2024

Indian Muslims Electoral Choices | Ram Puniyani

Indian Muslims and Electoral Choices | Ram Puniyani 

 

As the 2024 General Elections are looming on the horizon some Muslim elite are appealing to Muslim community to give a relook at BJP They claim that Indian Muslims are not being discriminated against. Such intellectuals also argue that BJP is giving special attention to Pasmanda Muslims and the Sufi Muslims. They also argue that Muslims are beneficiaries of BJP’s schemes for social welfare: food; housing; gas; water among others and lastly that there has been no major communal violence since 2014 and that India has been most peaceful during the last fifty years. 

Such appeals are based on half truths and ignore the core problem which shapes the lives of Muslims in India. True, some elite Muslims may not be facing the problems so severely but overall the central issue of insecurity, marginalization and ghettoization as a whole is not accounted for in such appeals. The point that there is no major violence against Muslims since 2014 is a blatant lie. The horrific Delhi violence in the aftermath of massive Shaheen Baugh movement, instigated by BJP worthies, (Goli Maro, and ‘we will get them removed from the place of Dharna’) led to the death of 51 people, 37 of those being Muslims. Day in and day out bulldozers are on the streets to target the Muslim properties, on one or the other pretexts. In BJP ruled states there seems to be a competition as to who can inflict more damage to Muslim properties. AP Shah, a retired chief justice of the Delhi High Court, affirmed to the news portal Coda, “Mere alleged involvement in criminal activity cannot ever be grounds for demolition of property.” While the cow beef politics has led to stray animals causing accidents on roads and in attacks on the standing crops on one hand on the other it has led to initiation of a new phenomenon of lynching on Indian streets. 

Starting from Mohammad Akhlaq there are many cases where Muslims (and also dalits) have been the target of the incited mobs. The case of Monu Manesar who was part of the crime of Nasir and Junaid is most frightening. Harsh Mander who visited victims’ families wrote “I am profoundly chilled as I scan social media pages of Monu Manesar. He and members of his gang live stream as they openly brandish sophisticated firearms, sound sirens mimicking police jeeps, shoot at vehicles, and brutally thrash the men they catch.” The proper data of bovine related violence is not available as the state wants to hide it, but it has created a fear among large sections of Muslims. In Mewat in particular where Muslims deal with dairy business face a tough time. Just a couple of horrific incidents which give us chills in our spine are when Shambhulal Regar not only killed but videotaped brutal killing of Afrazul in Rajasthan. 

We saw those accused of murdering Kalimuddin Ansari feted by Jayant Sinha, a Union Minister at the time. Such incidents have now become ‘new normal’. We also saw the scare created around Love Jihad and then types of Jihad were tabulated, UPSC, Land Jihad among others. The amusing one was Corona Jihad, where the Tablighi Jamaat meeting was blamed for the spread of Corona, the Muslims hawkers were denied entry into societies. Islamophobia is reaching new heights by the day. 

This intimidatory atmosphere is leading the rise in the process of ghettoisation of Muslims in the cities. Muslims are being denied housing in the mixed localities in most places. This is accompanied by the decline in their educational and economic status. One example of this is the scrapping of Maulana Azad Fellowship, the major beneficiaries of which have been the Muslim students trying to pursue higher education. The economic climb-down of the community continues in recent years. Gallup data shows that, “For both groups, (Hindus and Muslims) perceptions that standards of living were worsening shot up between 2018 and 2019, as the Indian economy entered a deep slowdown. Among Muslim Indians, the percentage jumped to 45% in 2019, up from 25% the previous year. And among Hindu Indians, the percentage saying the same hit 37% in 2019, an increase of 19 percentage points from 2018.” 

The threat of disenfranchising the Muslims through exercise of NRC, CAA is very much there. The Assam exercise showed that among the 19 Lakh people who did not have proper papers the majority were Hindus. For Hindus the safety clause of CAA is in place and for Muslims, detention centers are coming up. The present show of sympathy for Pasmanda Muslims is a mere eye wash. We understand the majority of victims of violence inspired by majoritarian politics are Pasmanda Muslims. The Muslim Ashrafs do need to ensure better treatment of the Pasmandas, but the bigger threat for the community as a whole is the insecurity, which affects them both and makes a fertile ground for orthodox elements to flourish. Reform amongst Muslim community is a must, however the point is reforms remain in the backyard till the community feels the threat to their existence and to their citizenship. 

The BJP Government in different states is now planning things which are further discriminatory against Muslims. With Ram Temple inaugurated the RSS-BJP’s majoritarian politics may become more assertive. Already Muslims have been losing representation in the political institutions. We remember that in this Hindu nationalist party not a single MP is a Muslim. Even earlier governments could not alleviate the suffering of this community. The major obstacle in this direction has been the opposition from RSS-BJP. Sachar Committee has been an example of how any affirmative action for this deprived community is marred. In the aftermath of this report, the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh stated that deprived and marginalized communities have the first right on national resources. That was propagated as if Singh is saying that Muslims have the first right on national resources. And then there was a brake in any initiative to alleviate the miseries of this community. BJP’s claim that its free rations etc. are reaching all sections of society. Such schemes and the very concept of Labharthis is so much against the democratic ‘Rights based approach’. We do need to introspect about electoral choices in general for all the communities, and of course the luring of Muslim community is a hollow drum bereft of any substance.

December 14, 2023

2023 Assembly Elections and impact on 2024 elections | Ram Puniyani

 https://www.indiancurrents.org/article-assembly-elections-2023-are-they-the-semifinals-for-2024-ram-puniyani-1919.php

Assembly Elections 2023: Are they the Semifinals for 2024?

 

Ram Puniyani

The recently concluded Assembly elections of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Telangna and Mizoram have been the matter of great interest for various reasons. As BJP has been ruling in the center for close to ten years, it has implemented policies, which have a frightening impact on the country. Be it the demonetization, GST implementation or the sudden ‘Corona lockdown’ the average people have suffered a lot. The rising authoritarianism and decline in freedom indices is a matter of great worry. The increasing hunger index and declining wellbeing tell the rest of the story. The ruling BJP has also abrogated Article 370, with the claim that it will reduce militancy, but the results are far from what they claim. The targeting of Muslim minority continues unabated, the scattered anti Christian violence is another painful phenomenon. It is in this background the opposition parties have been trying to form an INDIA alliance. It was expected that the opposition parties would try to preserve ‘the Idea of India ‘as envisaged in our Constitution. A lot has been hoped from this alliance in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

The assembly election results seem to have put a spanner in this hope. The Congress party state level leaderships, in a high handed manner ignored the other parties of alliance, in the process of annoying them and putting a lot of challenge to the process of resuming the journey of alliance in times to come. Congress could win only Telangana, while losing the Hindi heartland states. Though Congress lost in these three states, the results are a bit surprising. Most of the Exit Poll results were giving a fair edge to Congress in these states. So the defeat of Congress is a bit enigmatic on one hand.

True, its alliance with other national and smaller parties would have improved its performance; still, its defeat in these states is beyond logical explanation. This is the aspect which the allies of INDIA have to keep in mind while chalking out their strategy for Lok Sabha election.

A side aspect of these results is that now most of South Indian states are BJP mukt (free from BJP rule). Some commentators are arguing that the appeal of Hindu Nationalist BJP politics is restricted predominantly to Hindi speaking states, the Cow belt. Congress on its part and other parties have also to see that despite its claims BJP is not on a very solid wicket. In the present elections if we see the total votes polled in the five states, Congress has polled 4.92 Crores in comparison to 4.81 Crore votes of BJP. At the top of that Mizoram, which was part of the NDA alliance has now slipped out of NDA.

Various speculations in the air are about demoralization of Congress party workers. It may sound true as an instant reaction. As the time passes the party workers can not only feel spirited with the win in Telangana and significantly having polled more votes than the rival BJP. With time the feeling of depression will get over, as now the new leadership is trying its best to proactively deal with the situation. ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ was a major step in this direction. The background work of many Congress workers and its reviving the spirit of dynamism, may yield a positive result in strengthening the spirit of the party.

The core point remains: can all those parties who committed to the formation of INDIA alliance, will repose the faith in the alliance yet again, which has partly been shaken by election results? In a way the defeat of Congress in three major states, will make the Congress leadership sit-up and try to rectify the slips due to which the parties which committed to the alliance are showing reservations. These opposition parties know it well that alone, left to themselves, they cannot take on the mighty electoral machinery of BJP, well armed with manpower, money power, muscle power and the media, which is bowing to the feet of the current ruling party at the center.

The opposition parties also realize that BJP is not alone as it is well assisted by the Swayamsevaks and Pracharaks of RSS. They also know that all RSS affiliates, VHP, ABVP, Bajrang Dal, Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram and a large number of RSS affiliates make it a point to totally commit to the victory of BJP at every election. They also have realized the power of electoral bonds, the NRI support to Hindu nationalist ideology, the big Corporate solidly standing with BJP, as BJP is giving them lots of concessions, beyond what is obvious.

The opposition parties also realize that BJP has been inching towards a Hindu Nation. It has been eroding the values of the Indian constitution in an overt and covert way. The use; rather abuse, of ED, IT, CBI against the opposition parties is yet another point which will make these parties try to stick together with some give and take. It is well known that among top Congress leadership, Rahul Gandhi, Mallikarjun Kharge in particular, the spirit of accommodation is very high. Though this duo could not fully prevail over state leadership in the state Assembly Elections, they are most likely to put their foot down and try to stitch an alliance. Rahul Gandhi has stated that Congress will be willing to do any sacrifice for the united opposition. He has correctly stated that it is an ideological battle and not just an electoral fight.

So at the moment it may seem that different opposition parties are pulling in different directions. Much before the Lok Sabha election dates are announced, it is very much possible that the INDIA alliance will be stitched together with solid glue and it will make itself ready to take up divisive politics of BJP-RSS. The hatred spread by this majoritarian politics is not compatible with the survival of our democracy. Opposition should be worried by the deep infiltration of Hindu nationalists in different institutions of the state, including the education system.

One can assume that putting all these things together the opposition will come together, and if that happens they will certainly be able to win the election and ensure that the first step in coming out of the grip of Hindu nationalist agenda, which is on ascendance at present, is achieved.      

December 15, 2022

India: 2022 Gujarat Elections - Polarization to the Fore | Ram Puniyani

https://www.southasiamonitor.org/open-forum/bjps-gujarat-electoral-victory-polarizations-fore

BJP’s Gujarat Electoral Victory 2022: Polarizations to the Fore

 

Ram Puniyani

 

In the recently held elections, MCD, Himachal Pradesh and Gujarat, BJP came with thumping majority in Gujarat, while losing badly in MCD to AAP and Himachal to Congress. In Himachal though the total votes polled by Congress and BJP are having a narrow margin, Congress won with a reasonable majority of 40. While BJP was loser in Delhi and Himachal, its Gujarat victory is being hyper projected by the party and the media bowing to BJP. One purpose of this over projection of Gujarat is also to hide its debacle in two other states which went to polls recently. (November-December 2022).

In Gujarat it seems that Congress did not put in necessary energy and the Patel factor this time was with BJP, with CM being a Patel, who was also projected to be the future CM of the state if BJP wins. Along with this Hardik Patel’s rerun to BJP gave a big fillip to BJP. The KHAM or KHAM like factor of Congress was no match to Patel-Hindutva politics of BJP which not only increased its seats but also increased its vote parentage. While decline of Congress is also accompanied by a decline of its vote share, most of it has shifted to AAP. There are reports that in the minority dominated areas EVM machines were slow and many other irregularities also were observed, but not taken a serious note of by the Election Commission. Incidentally many Muslim candidates were propped up (Apart from AIMIM) where Congress Muslim candidate had good chances of winning.

Social dynamics of Patel factor was very significant this time and probably more important was BJP’s polarizing politics, which was prominently to the fore. AAP, with whatever its goal; kept a studied mum on the release of culprits of Bilkis Bano, BJP on the other hand used every opportunity to give the polarizing messages. The very release of the culprits undergoing life imprisonment, and they being garlanded and welcomed with flowers-sweets was a matter of shame, but it came as a signal of majoritarian politics. BJP further deepened the signal by giving ticket to Chandrasinh Raulji, who was part of the committee which recommended the release of these guilty. Incidentally, the release was sanctioned by Home ministry, headed by Amit Shah.

Raulji further went on to justify the release by buttressing salt into the wounds of victims and the marginalized community by saying that these who are being released as sanskari Brahmins (Cultured), and so deserve to be released. "They were Brahmins and Brahmins are known to have good sanskaar. It might have been someone's ill intention to corner and punish them…" To cap it all not only did he get the BJP ticket to him, he also won with a big margin!

The atmosphere of hate against Muslim minority is intensifying all over the country and likes of Parvesh Varma, Anurag Thakur and the clones of Yati Naasinghanad are proliferating in the country all over. This ‘Hate other’ was expressed by Amit Shah when as per whom Congress had been behind the violence for vote bank politics! A real case of reality being made to stand on its head! He rubbed it in by saying, “But after they were taught a lesson in 2002, these elements left that path. They refrained from indulging in violence from 2002 till 2022. BJP has established permanent peace in Gujarat by taking strict action against those who used to indulge in communal violence,” While what he means by ‘They’ is more than clear, Election Commission let it pass as no particular community was named.

 As such the real culprits of violence, the likes of Maya Kodnani and Babu Bajrangi, undergoing life imprisonment, have been released. One also sees that the culprit of Naroda violence Manoj Kukrani, who was put behind the bars is currently on parole. His daughter was given the ticket and won the election with thumping majority.

While Amit Shah states that the guilty have been taught a lesson, the ground reality of Gujarat is that right wing workers have become more aggressive and assertive. Most of the Muslims have been put in the ghettoes, and the physical and emotional barriers between the two communities have become close to complete. The mixed culture and social life has been given go bye and most of the minority community has to live the life of second class citizens bereft of social dignity and opportunities.

The recent case of public flogging of Muslim youth by tying them to pole was horrific. It took place in front of hundreds of Hindus of the village. It happened in Dabhan near Undhela. By now it has become a norm that Muslim youth cannot participate in Garba (Navratri Festival dance in honor of Goddess Durga). In the newly erected pandal near a Mosque, The program was organized. It went on peaceful for more than an hour. Later some of the Garba participant threw Gulal (red power of celebration by Hindus) towards the mosque.

On the complaint of the Sarpanch (Village chief) many Muslim youth were taken to the police station and cases were lodged against them. They were brought back and tied to the pole one by one and beaten mercilessly. We had been a society where joint celebration of festivals was part of our culture. Now we have come to a pass where provocative actions are planned to ensure the divisive trajectory in the society.

The BJP victory in Gujarat may be an indicator of the type of politics, which may follow in the future. While Bharat Jodo yatra is trying to put a soothing balm the strained intercommunity relations, the huge political and electoral machinery of BJP associates have resorted to divisive politics all through. The emotive issues, Ram Temple, Cow, Love jihad have been spread through diverse mechanisms. This has been intensified by the overt hate speech of the likes of Narsinghanand, who go on unchecked spreading the divisive ideology through and through.

Hinduism teaches us ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbkam’ loving the whole World as one family, here we are in a dark tunnel where ‘hate other’, ‘othering the people of diverse religions’ becomes the central focus around which politics is unleashed.

January 06, 2022

India: Politics of hate has hit UP’s development - Zoya Hasan (The Tribune, Jan 6, 2022)

 The Tribune, Jan 06, 2022

Politics of hate has hit UP’s development

The stage is set for a high-voltage electoral battle in UP in the coming months. This is the moment when the state government must be held to account as regards its performance. This has acquired urgency as the BJP seeks to alter the very basis of politics to create a permanent ethnic voting bloc, privileging the majority community to establish Hindu dominance, with economic issues relegated to the background and matters of jobs, price rise and public health thrown out of the poll fray.

December 13, 2021

India: Nervous BJP up to old tricks of communal polarisation in UP as assembly elections approach | Bharat Bhushan Nov 13, 2021)

Business Standard

Nervous BJP up to old tricks in UP as assembly elections approach

Caste fractures in state present resistance to the BJP agenda of uniting Hindu voters on emotive religious issues

Topics
UP Assembly Elections | Yogi Adityanath | Narendra Modi

Bharat Bhushan 

March 02, 2021

India: Congress party’s Deputy leader in Rajya Sabha Anand Sharma slammed the alliance with Indian Secular Front (ISF), a Muslim outfit headed by a firebrand cleric, in West Bengal

 The Times of India


‘G-23’ leader slams Congress tie-up with ISF

TNN | Mar 2, 2021, 03.04 AM IST
‘G-23’ leader slams Congress tie-up with ISF

NEW DELHI: The dissenting ‘G-23’ bloc’s showdown with the Congress leadership sharpened significantly on Monday with deputy leader in Rajya Sabha Anand Sharma slamming the party’s alliance negotiations with Indian Secular Front (ISF), a Muslim outfit headed by a firebrand cleric, in West Bengal, saying it went against the “Nehru-Gandhi secularism”.

Sharma’s strong comments, coming a day after another leading ‘G-23’ member, Ghulam Nabi Azad, praised PM Modi for being “upfront” about his roots, dealt an embarrassing blow to Congress in the middle of seat-sharing negotiations for the election campaign in five states.
Referring to the joint Kolkata rally of Congress, Left and the ISF of Furfura Sharif cleric Abbas Siddiqui, Sharma tweeted, “Congress’s alliance with parties like ISF and other such forces militates against the core ideology of the party and Gandhian and Nehruvian secularism, which forms the soul of the party. These issues need to be approved by the CWC.”

He added, “Congress cannot be selective in fighting communalists but must do so in all its manifestations, irrespective of religion and colour. The presence and endorsement of the West Bengal PCC president is painful and shameful, he must clarify.” In Jammu over the weekend, where G-23 leaders attended a function to felicitate Azad, the J&K leader said though he and Modi were opposed politically, the PM did not "hide his reality".

The comments are a spoiler for Congress which was optimistic that the massive show in Kolkata would help it position itself credibly in the polls that have otherwise turned bipolar between Trinamool Congress and BJP.
This also came after the letter writers, at a public rally in Jammu, expressed concern that Congress was weakening by the day. Sharma’s barb suggested that tensions between Congress and the G-23 may be coming to a boil. “It may explode if the leadership does not become inclusive and listen to dissenters who are being blocked by a coterie,” a letter writer said.

While Congress and Left announced a deal among themselves last month, the ISF emerged as a late entrant in the alliance talks as the former were encouraged that its presence would consolidate Muslim votes in favour of the combine. The two parties also put a condition that the ISF should not join hands with the AIMIM of Asaduddin Owaisi.

Bengal Congress chief Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury was quoted as saying, “We are in charge of a state and don’t taken any decision on our own without any permission.” It implied that the state unit was going by the nod from the headquarters. Interestingly, Congress and ISF have not held talks and only the Left has negotiated seats with Siddiqui.

The red flag from within Congress may hurt the party’s morale in Bengal and Assam as Sharma’s denunciation rings close to the campaign theme of BJP that Congress is partisan towards “minority communalists”.

It also came on a day Congress’s Bihar ally RJD, led by Tejashwi Yadav, junked the ‘grand alliance’ to throw its lot with Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee and urged “Biharis” to vote for TMC.

While G-23 members refused to react on the issue, Punjab MP and dissenter Manish Tewari said, “My foremost objective is to defeat BJP. Like earlier, wherever the party asks me to campaign, I will be more than eager and willing to do so.”

The back-to-back comments from Azad and Sharma triggered unease in the dissenters’ bloc even as Congress wrestled with how to react to the developments. A senior letter-writer said negotiations with “minority or majority communalists” could be questioned but “the timing was bad and could not be supported”.

Source URL: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/elections/assembly-elections/west-bengal/g-23-leader-slams-congress-tie-up-with-isf/articleshow/81284200.cms


September 22, 2020

India : Letter to State Election Commissioner, Telangana state regarding Incident of 7 Dec 2018 - when MIM MLA warned officials about verifying veiled women's facial identity

 

Hyderabad  22 sep 2020

To
The State Election Commissioner
Telangana state
Hyderabad


Sub:  7 december 2018 election day - telangana assembly - What happened when contesting candidate from karwan assembly asked the officials at Polling Station-75, Karwan AC, to comply with rule and check veiled women's photo electoral identity by a women officer as laid down in the election rules?



With reference to above news item, it is mandatory as per election rules, that veiled women's photo identity should be checked by a female officer so that the choice of women to cast their franchise with a veil as well as the mandatory exercise of establishing the genuinity of any voter by checking with photo electoral rolls as well as the photo identity card and the facial identity is thoroughly undertaken. 

As such citizens who believe in free and fair electoral process should not have objections to avail of the facility of women election officials verifying veiled women's facial identity to comply with the laid down rules.

But contrarily, on 7th december 2018 on election day of telangana assembly, the MIM MLA from karwan Janab kausar mohiddin, brazenly violated election rules, and had stormed into the polling booth PS-75 along with more than dozen unauthorized people and warned the officials against any checking, questioned the co-contesting candidate what rules and who are you.  further, one of the unauthorized persons warned the candidate against speaking for rules.

Upon continuous petitions from the contested candidate  to Chief Electoral Officer, Telangana, from 7 december 2018 onwards, the DGP Telangana office and Hyderabad Police Commissioner office had submitted two inquiry reports to the CEO, Telangana.

Both the reports that are attached herewith for reader's perusal, are received from CEO Telangana dated 4 april 2019 and 30 march 2019 containing from DGP office and Hyderabad Commissioner office inquiries, respectively.

As per Hyderabad Police Commissioner inquiry report,The illegality and grave violation of unauthorized entry is documented as:

'sri Kauser Mohiuddin, AIMIM party, a contested candidate and current MLA of Karwan Constituency entered the PS No.75 at about 1030 hrs along with the group of about L0 people.' 

Whereas, the threats to election officials, contested candidate upon asking for implementation of verification of veiled women's photo identity, has been documented as :

'Both Dr. Lubna Sarwath and Sri kauser Mohiuddin had discussion among themselves and with the presiding officer about the poll process for about a minute and sri Kauser Mohiuddin and others left the place. One person from the group while leaving had a brief discussion with Dr. Lubna Sarwath on poll process,'

Further, the DGP Inquiry report documented as follows:

'The petitioner aLleged that on 07-12-2018, while she was informing the presiding officer on the discrepancies of non checking of the identitY of the veited women, despite the APO is a woman officer, Sri Kauser Mohiuddin, the then-MLA Candidate and now MLA, Karwan ConstituencY from AIMIM PartY, had barged into Polling station-75 along with group of people and threatened the presiding officer and then threatened petitioner also.  Similarly sri Kausar Mohiuddin, MLA warned the presiding officer  not to stop any women from voting and not to check any women by removing their veil and checking their identity.  He then questioned the petitioner, who she was and threatened her not to quote any rules and then he left.
One of the persons in his gang told the petitioner that it will not be good, if she keeps quoting rules'


Further, the inquiry is documented as follows:

'1) Presiding officer:- sri renneti Bharani Kumar ASo, (panchayath Raj Department, Tetangana State Secretariat) of p.S.No.75, stated that on election day i.e., 07-12-2018 at about 10.30 AM, petitioner entered into potting station and enquired about polling arrangements and atso checking the process of Mustim community women voters. He explained the petitioner that they will follow the guidelines issued by ECl. After some time, other contested candidate of Karwan Assembly constituency by name Mr- Kauser Mohiuddin, AIMIM party also entered inside the polling station atong with a group of about 10 people, to enquire about polling process. He also explained the polling process to Mr. Kauser Mohiuddin and both the petitioner and Mr. Kauser Mohiuddin started discussion on the guidelines to be followed during polling process. This discussion took place for about a minute.  However, during that time as a
measure of peacefu[ conduct of potting, he directed one of his polling personnel to call the police assigned for law and order duties at ps No.75.'


Socialist Party(India) appeals to all political parties and citizens to comply with all election guidelines including the guidelines laid for facial verification of veiled women voters with their photo electoral rolls and photo identity cards.  SP(I) encourages discussion and consensus to comply with the rules in an amicable manner and exhorts desisting from breaking the rule.

Its every citizen's ethical duty to comply with every election rule, towards preservering the democracy of our country, at the heart of which lies the conduct of free and fair polls with an authentic and purified electoral rolls.

with upcoming GHMC elections, We trust State Election Commission ensures that no candidate would face the situation faced by dr lubna sarwath for trying to uphold fairness in voting, nor should polling be allowed in any polling station without the mandatory verification of voter with the photo electoral identification. 
We trust the SEC will lay down explicitly the strict action that awaits candidates and citizens who do not comply with this rule and those who stop from compliance of the rule.


best
dr lubna sarwath
state general secy,
Socialist party (India)


May 13, 2019

India - Himachal Pradesh: People made to pledge their votes in temples...(BBC Hindi Report)

 https://www.bbc.com/hindi/india-48245442

हिमाचल: क्या है 'लूण लोटा’ जिससे डराकर होती है वोट लेने की कोशिश


Image caption प्रतीकात्मक तस्वीर
हिमाचल प्रदेश की गिनती भारत के सबसे शिक्षित राज्यों में होती है. 2011 की जनगणना के अनुसार 68.6 लाख की आबादी वाले इस छोटे से पहाड़ी प्रदेश की साक्षरता दर 81.85 प्रतिशत थी.
मगर हिमाचल प्रदेश के कुछ हिस्सों में अब भी ऐसी प्रथाएं और परंपराएं हैं जो काफ़ी चौंकाने वाली हैं.
इन्हीं में से एक है- देवताओं का डर दिखाकर या देवताओं के प्रति आस्था का दोहन करने के लिए क़सम खिलाकर लोगों को किसी काम के लिए मजबूर करना. इनमें चुनाव के दौरान अपने पक्ष में वोट करवाने के लिए ब्लैकमेल करना भी शामिल है.
सुनने में यह बात भले ही अजीब लगे मगर हिमाचल प्रदेश के दूर-दराज के पिछड़े हुए पहाड़ी इलाक़ों में इस तरह की परंपरा अब भी मौजूद होने के संकेत जब-तब सामने आते रहते हैं.
इस प्रथा की बात अभी चल रहे लोकसभा चुनाव के दौरान भी उभर कर आई. अप्रैल महीने में कुल्लू से कांग्रेस के विधायक पर घाटी के अराध्य देव रघुनाथ की क़सम देकर कांग्रेस प्रत्याशी के पक्ष में वोट मांगने के आरोप लगे. हालांकि उन्होंने इस आरोप को ग़लत बताते हुए कहा था कि उनके बयान को तोड़-मरोड़कर पेश किया गया.
इमेज कॉपीरइट Getty Images
Image caption प्रतीकात्मक तस्वीर
इसके राज्य सरकार में कृषि मंत्री रामलाल मारकंडा पर लाहौल-स्पीति के पूर्व विधायक ने आरोप लगाया कि उन्होंने माला फेरकर लोगों को वोट देने की क़सम दिलाई. मारकंडा भी इस आरोप को निराधार बता रहे हैं.
यह मामला चुनाव आयोग तक भी पहुंचा है. हिमाचल प्रदेश के मुख्य निर्वाचन अधिकारी देवेश कुमार बताते हैं कि अभी इस मामले की जांच चल रही है.
मगर उन्होंने स्पष्ट किया कि धर्म के आधार पर कोई भी चुनाव प्रचार नहीं कर सकता. उन्होंने कहा, "धार्मिक आधार पर अगर कोई परंपराओं को इस तरह से इस्तेमाल करता है तो इसे आचार संहिता का उल्लंघन माना जाता है."
क्या है यह प्रथा
हिमाचल प्रदेश के अलग-अलग इलाक़ों में यह प्रथा अलग-अलग रूप में मौजूद होने की घटनाएं सामने आती रही हैं. उदाहरण के लिए शिमला और सिरमौर के आंतरिक इलाक़ों में इसे 'लूण लोटा' कहा जाता है.
जिन देवताओं के नाम पर क़सम या शपथ दिलाए जाने की बात आती है, वे मुख्यत: गांवों के देवता हैं. इन देवताओं के अपने मंदिर हैं और श्रद्धालु उन्हें पालकी से त्योहारों, मेलों और उत्सवों में ले जाते हैं.
Image caption प्रतीकात्मक तस्वीर
ये देवता अधिकतर हिंदू धर्म के मुख्य देवताओं में से एक हैं या फिर ऋषि हैं, जिन्हें देव रूप में पूजा जाता है.
हिमाचल में बहुत से गांवों में इन देवताओं के अपने प्राचीन मंदिर हैं, जिनके अपने प्रभाव क्षेत्र माने जाते हैं. उन इलाक़ों के लोगों की अपने इन देवताओ को पर गहरी आस्था होती है.
सिरमौर के ज़िला मुख्यालय नाहन में मौजूद वरिष्ठ पत्रकार शैलेंद्र कालरा बताते हैं कि देवताओं की क़सम दिलाकर वोट मांगने का चलन पंचायत स्तर के चुनावों में अधिक देखने को मिलता रहा है.
Image caption वरिष्ठ पत्रकार शैलेंद्र कालरा
वह कहते हैं, "पंचायत और वॉर्ड मेंबर वगैरह के चुनावों में इसका चलन माना जाता है और विधानसभा में भी. इसे लूण लोटा कहा जाता है. कसम दिलाते हुए पानी के लोटे में लूण (नमक) डाल दिया जाता और कहा जाता है कि आपने कसम तोड़ी तो जैसे नमक पानी में घुल गया, वैसे आप भी ख़त्म हो जाएंगे."
शैलेंद्र कहते हैं कि यह प्रथा शहरी इलाक़ों में नहीं है मगर सुदूर इलाक़ों में है. वह बताते हैं, "हिमाचल में अभी भी सिरमौर, चंबा, मंडी, कुल्लू और लाहौल-स्पीति में ऐसे लोग मिल जाएंगे जिन्होंने आज तक शहर नहीं देखा. वहां यह सब होता होगा. सिरमौर में तो कुछ गांव ऐसे हैं जहां के कुछ लोग अपने गांव से बाहर नहीं निकले होंगे. कुछ साल पहले मैंने एक स्टोरी की थी जिसमें संगड़ाह डिवीज़न से बच्चे आए थे जो पहली बार बस में बैठे थे.
हालांकि शैलेंद्र कहते हैं, "यह पक्के तौर पर कहना और साबित करना मुश्किल है कि कहां पर लूण लोटा हो रहा है. अगर हो रहा है तो लोग तो बताएंगे नहीं, ऐसे में कौन साबित करेगा?"
वहां अगर लूण लोटा हो राह है तो कौन प्रूव करेगा, लोग तो बताएंगे नहीं.
कहां से आया यह चलन
जिस तरह की परंपराएं शिमला और सिरमौर में हैं, वैसी ही मंडी और कुल्लू के अंदरूनी इलाक़ों में बताई जाती हैं. वे कमोबेश वैसी ही हैं, मगर उनका स्वरूप थोड़ा अलग है.
ये वे पहाड़ी इलाक़े हैं, जो सदियों से कटे रहे और इनका बाहरी दुनिया से संपर्क बहुत कम रहा. उस दौर में समाज गांव तक ही सीमित थे और गांव के लोगों में अपने ग्राम के देवता और उनके पुजारियों का बड़ा महत्व था.
Image caption प्रतीकात्मक तस्वीर
इनमें से बहुत से इलाक़े सड़कों से जु़ड़ गए हैं, सुविधाएं भी आई हैं मगर परंपराएं अधिक नहीं बदलीं. आज भी लोग कोई भी काम करने से पहले, यात्रा आदि पर जाने से पहले वे गूर (पुजारी) के माध्यम से अपने ग्राम देवता की इजाज़त लेना ज़रूरी समझते हैं.
कुल्लू में रहने वाले यतिन पंडित हिमाचल प्रदेश की कला और संस्कृति पर शोध करते हैं और इन विषयों पर लंबे समय से लिख रहे हैं.
वह कहते हैं, "जैसे-जैसे पुराने दौर में अलग-अलग क़बीलाई क्षेत्रों के लोग इधर से उधर गए, वे अपने साथ अपनी मान्यताएं और परंपराएं भी ले गए. कुल्लू और मंडी के इलाक़े में सिरमौर और निरमंड के इलाक़े से बहुत सी परंपराएं आई हैं."
Image caption यतिन पंडित हिमाचल प्रदेश की कला और संस्कृति के जानकार हैं.
यतिन बताते हैं कि पहले के दौर में क़सम खिलाने का यह सिलसिला पहले विवाद निपटाने का ज़रिया था और बाद में इसे तरह-तरह से इस्तेमाल किया जाने लगा. वह कहते हैं, "जैसे गीता आदि की शपथ दिलाई जाती है, यह वैसा ही मामला है."
सिरमौर और शिमला में लूण लोटा परंपरा है, वैसे मंडी और कुल्लू में देवता के मंदिर के सामने पानी पिलाने या चावल देने की प्रथा है. वहीं लाहौल स्पीती में बौद्ध और हिंदू परंपराओं का समायोजन है, ऐसे में वहां जाप के लिए इस्तेमाल की जाने वाली माला के माध्यम से क़सम दिलाई जाती है.
लेकिन आख़िर इस तरह क़समें खिलाने की ज़रूरत क्यों पड़ी होगी, इस पर यतिन बताते हैं, "लोगों की पुराने समय से देवताओं पर गहरी आस्था रही है. शुरू में दूर के इलाकों में व्यवस्थाएं नहीं थीं. आपसी विवाद और झगड़े मिटाने के लिए पहले लोग थान देवता (स्थान देवता का अपभ्रंश) के पास जाकर क़सम खाते थे कि यह काम मैंने नहीं किया."
यतिन बताते हैं कि कुल्लू में इस मामले में एक ख़ास देवता हैं जिन्हें कश्यप नारायण और स्थानीय बोली में 'कसमी नारायण' यानी क़सम वाला देवता कहा जाता है. वह कहते हैं, "आज भी कश्यप नारायण देवता की झूठी क़सम खाने से यहां पर लोग डरते हैं, उन्हें लगता है कि झूठी क़सम खाई तो देवता का प्रकोप उनपर होगा. कुल्लू घाटी के बड़े देवताओं में गिने जाने वाले जमलू देवता की क़समें भी खिलाई जाती हैं."
कसम दिलाकर वोट मांगने की बात पर यतिन का कहना है कि बचपन से वह क़सम खिलाने की परंपरा सुनते और देखते आए हैं और आज भी सुनने में आता है कि कुछ लोग चुपके से ऐसा करवाते हैं.
शिक्षित राज्य में ऐसे हालात क्यों?
भारत के चौथे सर्वोच्च नागरिक सम्मान पद्मश्री से सम्मानित चंबा ज़िले के पहाड़ी चित्रकार और कला इतिहासकार विजय शर्मा हिमाचल प्रदेश की कला और संस्कृति की गहरी समझ रखते हैं.
वह अपने बचपन का एक क़िस्सा साझा करते हुए कहते हैं, "मुझे बचपन की एक बात याद है. यहां कोई नेता थे जो हाथ में चांदी का त्रिशूल रखते थे और लोगों से कहते थे कि यह देवी मां का त्रिशूल है, इस पर हाथ रखकर बोलिए कि आप मुझे ही वोट देंगे.यह पुरानी बात है मगर आज भी पढ़ने को मिल जाता है कि फलां गांव में किसी ने देवता के नाम पर या क़सम किलाकर वोट मांगे हैं. लोग झांसे में आ भी जाते हैं, यह लोकतांत्रिक देश के लिए ठीक नहीं है."
Image caption पहाड़ी चित्रकार और कला इतिहासकार विजय शर्मा
विजय शर्मा बताते हैं कि हिमाचल में लोग धर्मभीरू हैं, ईश्वर से डरते हैं. उनका कहना है कि बहुत से भोले-भाले लोग ऐसे हैं जो चालाक नेताओं के झांसे में आ जाते हैं और मजबूरी में वोट दे देते हैं. उनके अनुसार हिमाचल में ऐसी घटनाएं पहले भी होती आई थीं और कुछ इलाक़ों में अब भी होती हैं.
हिमाचल प्रदेश पिछले कुछ सालों में शिक्षा के क्षेत्र में अच्छा काम करने वाले राज्यों में उभरा है. साक्षरता दर तो अच्छी है ही, जगह-जगह और दूर-दूर के गांवों में भी स्कूल अच्छी ख़ासी संख्या में मौजूद हैं.
कनेक्टिविटी भी बढ़ी है और बहुत से दूर-दराज के गांव पिछले कुछ दशकों में सड़कों से जुड़े हैं. फिर भी क्या वजह है कि लोग इस तरह की परंपराओं के आगे विवश नज़र आते हैं?
इस पर विजय शर्मा कहते हैं, "देखिए शिक्षा के क्षेत्र की बात करें तो बहुत से स्कूल-कॉलेज खुल गए मगर हकीकत पर क्या बोलें?
स्कूलों को अपग्रेड करके कॉलेज के फट्टे टांग दिए गए मगर इन्फ्रास्ट्रक्चर का कुछ किया नहीं गया. किसने किया, क्यों किया मैं इस पर नहीं जाता. देखने को यह भी आता है कि कुछ पढ़े-लिखे लोग, गांव के लोग जो ईश्वर पर गहरी आस्था रखते हैं, वे शपथ दिलाए जाने पर मजबूर हो जाते हैं. फिर उन्हें इसके हिसाब से चलना पड़ता है."
क्या कहना है देवता समाज का
हिमाचल के बहुत से गांवों के लोग अपने ग्राम या कुल देवताओं में गहरी आस्था रखते हैं. उनका मानना है कि ये देवता आज भी अपने गूर (पुजारी) के माध्यम से उनकी बातें सुनते हैं और कहते हैं.
बहुत से लोगों के लिए इन देवताओं की अहमियत परिवार के मुखिया की तरह है, जिसकी इजाज़त के बग़ैर वे कोई काम नहीं करते.
Image caption प्रतीकात्मक तस्वीर
मंडी ज़िले में भी बहुत से देवी-देवता हैं, जिनकी लोगों के बीच गहरी मान्यता है. शिवपाल शर्मा सर्व देवता समिति ज़िला मंडी के अध्यक्ष हैं. देवताओं का सहारा लेकर चुनाव के दौरान जनता को प्रभावित करने की कोशिशों को वह देवताओं का अपमान बताते हैं.
उन्होंने कहा, "देवी-देवता राजनीतिक नहीं होते और न राजनीति में जाते हैं. देवताओं का काम समस्याओं को दूर करना, समाज की कुरीतियों को दूर करना है. हर देवता अपने क्षेत्र तक सीमित रहते हैं और वहां सारे काम जनता और देवता के योगदान से होते हैं.
वह कहते हैं कि पहले के समय लोग बहुत से कामों के लिए इन देवताओं पर निर्भर थे और आज भी हैं. वे समाज को जोड़कर रखते हैं. मगर कुछ लोग इसका नाजायज़ फ़ायदा उठाना चाहते हैं.
वह कहते हैं, "राजनेताओं को देवताओं के नाम पर इस तरह के काम नहीं करने चाहिए. राजनीतिज्ञ देवता के पास जाएं, वहां प्रार्थना करें, लोगों से जो बात कहनी है कहें मगर देवता की क़सम दिलाना तो बहुत ही ग़लत है."
बहरहाल, कुल्लू घाटी की देव परंपराओं और इसके इतिहास में दिलचस्पी रखने वाले यतिन पंडित कहते हैं चीज़ें बदल रही हैं. वह उम्मीद जताते हैं कि जल्द ही इस तरह की चीज़ें पहाड़ के समाज से हट जाएंगी.
यतिन कहते हैं, "मेरा मानना है कि अभी भी कुछ लोग हैं, जैसे कि बुज़ुर्ग, वे इस तरह की मान्यताओं का पालन करते हैं. जो युवा हैं, पढ़-लिख गए हैं, जिन्होंने समझना शुरू कर दिया है, वे इन मान्यताओं को महत्व नहीं दे रहे. मान्यताओं में भी जेनरेशन गैप आ गया है. अब ये चीज़ें कम हो रही हैं, 20 साल पहले जैसे हालात थे वैसे अब नहीं."
(बीबीसी हिन्दी के एंड्रॉएड ऐप के लिए आप यहां क्लिक कर सकते हैं. आप हमें फ़ेसबुक, ट्विटर, इंस्टाग्राम और यूट्यूब पर फ़ॉलो भी कर सकते हैं.)

May 10, 2019

India: Modi’s Appeal In the Name of Voters’ Religion A Clear Violation of Representation of People Act

Modi’s Appeal In the Name of Voters’ Religion Makes Wardha Speech a Corrupt Practice

His charge that Rahul Gandhi chose Wayanad because Hindus are in a minority there and urging Hindu voters to punish the Congress for speaking of ‘Hindu terror’ violate the Representation of People Act.

April 11, 2019

India: Vishwa Hindu Parishad plans 700 religious rallies in Bengal, bang in the middle of the elections - Will the election commission allow this?

sabrangindia
Written by Sabrang India | Published on: April 11, 2019
The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) has planned to take out 700 rallies across South Bengal on April 14 to celebrate Ram Navami and twenty lakh people are expected to participate in it. The rallies will be carried out at several places in the state, including Kolkata, Barrackpore, Serampore, Naihati, Bolpur, Suri, Jhargram, Kultali, Howrah, Contai, Tamluk, Ranaghat, Midnapore, Purulia, Bankura, Asansol, Durgapur, Krishnanagar, Kharagpur, Raniganj and Raiganj which has a significant minority population as well. It should be noted that the processions are happening just four days before the second phase of the general elections begin
[ . . . ]

https://sabrangindia.in/article/vhp-hold-700-ram-navmi-rallies-bengal-middle-general-elections

April 09, 2019

India: Shiv Sena founder Bal Thackeray Was Disenfranchised for Far Less Than Modi's Polarising Politics - the election commission is failing us

When Bal Thackeray Was Disenfranchised for Far Less Than Modi's Polarising Politics

In December 1987, while campaigning for Shiv Sena candidate Ramesh Prabhu, Thackeray had made several hate speeches for which he was later benched for six years by the judiciary and the EC.

Mumbai: With all else, including the air strikes against Pakistan, failing, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has decided to communalise the ongoing elections in the country.
On April 1, in Wardha, he slammed Congress president Rahul Gandhi for filing his nomination papers from Wayanad in Kerala, which he described as a Hindu minority constituency.
Elsewhere, he berated the Congress for describing a section of terrorists in India as ‘saffron terrorists’.
So far, the Election Commission’s response has been wanting. This is especially clear to see from how the Shiv Sena, an ally of the BJP in the present election, paid the price for less than this in the 1980s and 1990s when the EC barred Bal Thackeray and his candidate Dr Ramesh Prabhoo from contesting polls for six years. The two were also disenfranchised for the same amount of time.
Campaigning for Prabhoo, who had been his physician since the early 1970s, Thackeray had called Muslims names and appealed to Hindus to vote for a fellow Hindu at a by-election for the Maharashtra assembly in December 1987. 

[ . . . ] 

March 29, 2019

India: If Narendra Modi returns to power, whatever we have seen so far will look like a benign trial run

The Wire, 28 March 2019

The Next Five Years Could Change India Forever

If Narendra Modi returns to power, whatever we have seen so far will look like a benign trial run.
When Indira Gandhi suddenly announced elections in January 1977, indicating the end of the national Emergency that had been imposed in June 1975, the country was surprised. There had been no hint at all that the Emergency was going to be lifted and certainly nothing to suggest that normal democracy would resume.
Opposition leaders were freed from jail and restrictions on the media were lifted. The media rediscovered its spine, the leaders went into a huddle to plan how to fight the Congress and the young were galvanised. A new spirit of freedom was in the air.
The elections were crucial, if for nothing else than to show Mrs Gandhi that India would not accept any threats to its democracy and that all those who subverted fundamental rights would be discarded. Various parties came together under one banner and solemnly swore to put aside their differences and put up a joint front. Atal Bihari Vajpayee, whose Jan Sangh had merged with the Janata Party, said that it would not fall apart because the leaders had to keep the trust of the masses.
We know what happened eventually, but at that crucial moment, everyone understood the importance of those particular elections. A victory for the Congress would have legitimised the Emergency; that would have changed India in fundamental ways.
Also read: Maharashtra’s VBA, an Alliance of the Excluded, is Attempting a Social Transformation
The elections in 2019 too have the potential to change India as we know it forever. The last five years have seen unprecedented hatred, bigotry and assaults on not just individuals or communities, but on the whole super structure of what makes India what it is – a secular liberal democracy, with robust institutions that are supposed to uphold its democratic values. Those institutions have been under relentless attack and if they have held so far, it is because the foundations were strong. The next wave of attacks will be on the foundations and once that is achieved and the institutions subverted, a ‘new India’ will be created, one that will be completely different from what we have now.
It is sometimes difficult to recall what India was just half a decade ago. It was not a golden age, not at all, and there was no dearth of problems small and big, but it was not a time when a citizen could be hauled out of his home and killed for speaking, eating or simply being from the ‘wrong’ religion or caste. No one was an ‘anti-national’ – in effect, a traitor – for expressing a point of view that did not fit in with the ruling party’s views, no journalist was abused as a ‘presstitute’, and certainly no former prime minister was accused of plotting with the Pakistanis to defeat the current incumbent. The sorriest part was that such statements and allegations came from ministers, not from trolls, who should have known better. In fact, it was the complete surrender of any sensibility
A salesman watches Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressing to the nation, on TV screens inside a showroom in Mumbai, March 27, 2019. Credit: Reuters/Francis Mascarenhas
The Indian media was obsessive in its criticism of the UPA government, especially in the last two to three years of UPA-II. It looked like a sustained campaign to discredit the Manmohan Singh government and, correspondingly, prop up candidate Narendra Modi as a fresh alternative. Nothing wrong with criticising the government, but that spirit vanished the moment Modi took power. Now much of the mainstream media not just vocally and shrilly supports Modi, it does everything in its power to undermine the opposition. Those who maintain a pretence of neutral professionalism – balance, objectivity, fairness, both sides and all that – do it in a way that legitimises the worst kind of behaviour.
Every institution, from the various cultural, social, educational organisations directly under the government’s control or dependent on government funding, has been taken over, some by stealth, others quite blatantly, some with threats of holding back the money, others by infiltrating the governing bodies. In almost every case, the government’s appointees are mostly mediocre time servers or apparatchiks, with little or no intellectual ability or heft. That is hardly surprising – the Sanghi, Hindutva obsessed right-wing has grown up on a steady diet of conspiracy theories, bogus mythology instead of history and hatred for a wide assortment of enemies, real and imagined. Formal education – in history, science, economics or indeed the arts – has always been anathema.
This has engendered a single-minded obsession of ‘righting the wrongs of the past’. This past could be as recent as the immediate post-independence period, when the much reviled Jawaharlal Nehru created the secular and modern Indian nation state, to the mythical past, when Bharatvarsh was a Golden Land, untroubled by Muslim invaders, where everyone lived peacefully and in perfect harmony in accordance with their caste and social status.
Also read: BJP is Replicating the Shiv Sena Model in Assam. This Should Worry the AGP
Every effort to suborn an institution or lynch a beef-eating Muslim is one more step towards re-establishing that social equilibrium and bringing back Ram Rajya. Modern democracy is seen as a foreign import grafted on to a reluctant India; it is time to uproot it. When sundry BJP members say that the constitution will be changed, they mean it. Or when a leader, an MP no less, declares that this will be the last elections if Narendra Modi wins, he should be taken seriously. That is what they have been told all along and that is what could well happen.
It is not as if another party winning will change things around rapidly. The poison that has entered the Indian system will not vanish so soon, whatever the results the elections throw up. The other parties have not necessarily shown a robust commitment to protect institutions, nor do they inspire confidence in their total faith in democratic processes. The media is so far sold out that redemption is impossible – it will continue on its self-destructive path and can be disregarded in any serious discussion of Indian democracy unless it can show that it can uphold the professional principles of being a watch dog. And political parties, especially in the opposition but also in the government, are not suddenly going to change their ways of treating parliament with contempt.
But there is a qualitative difference. A repeat of the last five years will accelerate the destruction of Indian democracy and eventually, of India itself. Then whatever we have seen so far will look like a benign trial run; the real thing will be brutal and ruthless. That is what has to be halted at any cost. The Janata Party experiment was a disaster, but it acted as the brakes for any similar adventure for a long time.
The same situation has arisen now. As a people who want nothing more than peace, harmony, security and an economy that benefits everyone in a society that is inclusive, we have to think of not just the next five years but the next five decades and beyond. It is the duty of this generation to save the generations to come. A mistake now could prove costly for a long time.

December 07, 2017

India: 2017 Gujarat Assembly Elections Defy Easy Predictions - Radhika Ramaseshan

he results of the Gujarat assembly elections are definitely not a foregone conclusion, especially for the Bharatiya Janata Party. This article takes a nuanced look at the factors that will affect the final outcome on 18 December even as it carries voices at the ground level in the state in the run-up to the polls on 9 and 14 December. [. . .]

http://www.epw.in/journal/2017/49/web-exclusives/view-ground-gujarat-elections-defy-easy-predictions.html

November 05, 2017

India: Head priest of Swaminarayan Temple at Vadtal in Kheda appeales to the devotees to support the BJP

"Two days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi participated in the silver jubilee celebrations of Akshardham Temple of the Swaminarayan sect in Gandhinagar, the head priest of Swaminarayan Temple at Vadtal in Kheda on Saturday appealed to the devotees to support the BJP in the Gujarat Assembly elections. He said the organisation is “forever indebted” to the incumbent state government.

The Swaminaryan sect has a large following among the Patidar community members. Mukhya kothari (chief administrator) of the temple Maharaj Ghanshyam Prasad Das made the appeal — in the presence of Chief Minister Vijay Rupani and other BJP leaders — while addressing an event to mark the auspicious Kartik Poornima. The event was attended by around 1,700 priests from across Gujarat." [. . .]

Read more at: http://indianexpress.com/elections/gujarat-assembly-elections-2017/gujarat-election-forever-indebted-to-this-govt-have-to-pay-back-this-debt-says-swaminarayan-priest-to-devotees-4923061/

April 02, 2017

India: Radhika Ramaseshan BJP’s 2017 UP Win

Economic and Poliitical Weekly, Vol. 52, Issue No. 11, 18 Mar, 2017 Web Exclusives

The Messages, Mathematics and Silences that Formed the BJP’s UP Win

Radhika Ramaseshan*


* Radhika Ramaseshan (ramaseshan.radhika[at]gmail.com) is with the Business Standard.

The Bharatiya Janata Party consolidated the support of the “leftover” castes such as the Gujjar, Tyagi, Brahmin, Saini and Kashyap who are not counted in the typical matrix fashioned for years on the basis of the “dominant” groupings like the Jats, Muslims and Dalits. Accompanying the mathematics were a slew of ideas about Muslims and Yadavs as oppressors, and a strategic silence so as to not polarise all Muslim votes to benefit the BSP.

The first striking feature of the seven-phased Uttar Pradesh polls was the ambiguity or the silence maintained by the Hindu voters, especially those from the upper castes who have been vocal in articulating their preferences in previous elections.

Whenever we met the Brahmins, Rajputs and Baniassingly or in small groups, we found them curiously reticent, replying in generic terms about the principal parties and contestants in their constituencies. In the past their answers would be contextualised in a broader perspective, embellished with historical nuggets, statistical data (subject to cross-verification) and insightful anecdotes.

The second aspect was the nuanced Muslim responses which ranged from spurts of enthusiasm for the Samajwadi Party(SP) Indian National Congress (henceforth, the Congress) alliance in the first two phases of polling in western UP and Rohilkhand. In the rounds that followed thereafter, the enthusiasm turned into confusion as to whether the SP-Congress formation or the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) was better positioned to defeat the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). It further tuned into indifference in the slog overs of the elections where, if anything, the minorities would be expected to poll more enthusiastically.

By the time polling moved to eastern UP in the sixth and seventh phases, the Hindus were markedly more aggressive about voting for the BJP. These included core BJP voters who stood by the party through its highs and lows as well as an expanded constituency that aligns itself with the BJP whenever it sees the party as a winner. When the long-drawn electioneering peaked in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s road shows and stopovers at vantage political points like a Yadav monastery in his Lok Sabha constituency Varanasi, the Hindu voters came out of their cocoons and the election re-evoked the high-decibel ambience of 2014.

Strategic Silences

This shift has been defined as “strategic silence” by representatives of the BJP and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) who were on the ground or engaged in backroom planning. The phrase is not novel in UP’s political lexicon. In the 1993 state elections held a year after the Babri mosque was demolished, Muslims had adopted the same tactic. They would not reveal who they were voting for, unless one happened to know the community members and their opinion-moulders well enough to be taken into confidence. Conventional electoral wisdom had it that the Muslim votes would be shared by the fledgling SP-BSP alliance and the Janata Dal and therefore the division would work to the BJP’s advantage. But Muslims sensed that the SP-BSP combine had begun to attract the backward castes and Dalits in big numbers and was emerging as the BJP’s most formidable contender.

Barring western UP, where the BJP managed to hold its ground because of the absence of the SP in many places and because of the BSP’s inability to sufficiently challenge the BJP on its own, the SP-BSP beat the BJP in large parts of the central and eastern districts and became the single largest alliance to eventually form a government, albeit ashort-lived one.

Muslim leaders later described the tactic as a “sochi-samjhi ranneeti” (well-thought out strategy), crafted to confound the “other side”. They said that the message was communicated through an efficient bush telegraph but it had escaped the RSS-BJP’s attention. Indeed, in 1993 the Hindus aligned with the BJP were so confident of its victory that on polling days, they took their time to vote. It was by noon that they rushed to the booths when they saw that the Muslim turnout could outnumber that of the Hindus.

Western UP

In 2017, in the first phase of elections in west UP’s “Jatland”—which incidentally also has a high Muslim, Dalit and backward castes’s presence—the pre-poll narrative was moulded by the anger spewed over Modi by the Jats. It was provoked by the BJP’s “faulty” ticket distribution, thecentre’s “failure” to give Jats reservation, demonetisation, the appointment of a non-Jat like Manohar Lal Khattar as the Haryana chief minister and the fury of the small traders and retailers over the damages suffered after notebandi.

In trading hubs such as Saharanpur and Bijnor (which went to polls in phase two), the traders and retailers were upset with the centre for prodding the income tax department to issue notices through text messages on their mobile phones, which sought a time-bound explanation for the amounts that were deposited into their bank accounts after the demonetisation announcement. In these two towns, the traders collectively decided to not vote for the BJP and to opt for NOTA. By contrast, the Muslims, who were full of beans over the SP-Congress tie-up, left none in doubt about their choice.

The results revealed something different: the BJP scored impressively in western UP and Rohilkhand, nearly on a par with its showing in 2014. According to NDTV’s estimates of the phase-wise polling percentages, the BJP obtained 43.72% of the votes in western UP and 39.82% in Rohilkhand. On 16 March, The Wire carried a report by Anoop Sadanandan about “How Dainik Jagran’s exit poll helped the BJP sweep UP,” placing the BJP’s vote share at 45.06% in phase one and 40.04% in phase two, sourced to the Chief Electoral Officer, UttarPradesh website.Influential as the daily Dainik Jagran has been in taking up the BJP since the years of the Ram Janmabhoomi agitation, the party’s consistently upward swing in the seven phases cannot be ascribed to a single “exit poll”.

“Leftover” castes

Bureaucrats in Lucknow, a few of whom hailed from western UP, cited one major reason: the BJP had consolidated the support of the “leftover” castes such as the Gujjar, Tyagi, Brahmin, Saini and Kashyap who are often not counted in the typical matrix which fashioned for years on the basis of the “dominant” groupings like the Jats, Muslims and Dalits (the Yadavs have a small presence in this region). The BJP discovered the untapped numerical potential of the unseen groupings. It not only fielded many candidates from these groups but also co-opted them in other ways. Chandramohan, an RSS “pracharak” (whole-timer) from Bulandshahr, said that when the BJP president Amit Shah constituted committees to oversee each polling booth, he was directed by the RSS to include members of the less visible castes in these 25-member panels “so that they felt wanted”. The sense of belonging did not cease with the inductions. Suggestions were elicited from these caste representatives and at times implemented “to give them a feeling of empowerment”, said Chandramohan.

A bureaucrat explained that an archetypal western UP assembly constituency has three lakh voters, of which Muslims account for a lakh and the Dalits (predominantly the Jatavs, the sub-caste to which the BSP leader Mayawati belongs) and Jats for 50 to 60,000 each. The remaining numbers are made up of the “less visible castes” and add up to nearly a lakh. This was the pile the BJP seriously looked at as its anchor because at that point it was unsure about the Jats who were apparently rooting for Ajit Singh’s RashtriyaLok Dal (RLD).

Thwarting Muslims from the BSP

The second part of the BJP’s game-plan was elaborated upon by a top leader who confessed that phase one was a “doordie” round for him not because of the Jats but the BSP. His estimate was that in 55 of the 73 constituencies, the prospective combine of Muslims and Jatavs that Mayawati had set her sights upon was a sure winner. “Imagine, if the BSP had got 50 of these seats, we could have lost the election because this would have demoralised our workers straightaway,” he said. Fortunately for the BJP and unfortunately for the BSP, the Muslim-Jatav combine did not fall in place.

At this juncture, word spread that the SP-Congress alliance was in fact on the upswing. The RSS and the BJP covertly pushed the word, convinced that this was the only way to thwart the Muslims from going the BSPs way. Clearly, the Muslims, who otherwise astutely figure out the arithmetical heft (or lack of it) of a party or an alliance, did not calculate that barring their votes, the SP-Congress was not assured of another bankable constituency. “It was an emotional response. The image of Akhilesh Yadav is good, he is an inclusive leader. The idea of the Congress is important because nationally it is still the only party that can confront the BJP. Together we inferred that they would come to power,” said Moradabad’s Urdu scholar Murtaza Iqbal. While the combine easily won the seats with strong Muslim electorates—like six of the eight in Iqbal’s MoradabadLok Sabha constituency—wherever the Hindus coalesced into one force, the BJP had the upper hand as in Deoband, the seat of a reputed Islamic seminary.

The Muslim as the Oppressor

If mathematics was one aspect of the BJP’s finessed blueprint, its messaging was the other.

Bhupinder Singh, also an RSS “pracharak” in western UP, said the central theme of the Sangh fraternity’s message to the Hindus was “Man hee man se vote dejiye, sayam rakhiye apne vani par” (vote with your minds, be restrained in using your voice). Parsed, it meant do not advertise your choice. “The votes had to be silent, it had to be a vote against secularism and a vote that placed Hindu values above one’s caste. At the same time, we had to be mindful of not polarising the Muslim votes one way,” said Singh.

Lucknow officialdom’s information was that the RSS’s volunteers, replenished by the “swayamsevaks” from Gujarat, went door-to-door in the west, purveying a slew of ideas,drawn from their pet theories about the Muslims. One of these were that until the BJP was voted to power in Gujarat, the Muslims had the right of way over everything, including the seats on state buses. “They would place their skull caps on the seats and no Hindu would dare to touch them. That practice has since ceased,” an RSS activist claimed. Another theory was that if Muslims were re-elected in big numbers as in 2012, they would “take over” the police and administration and “use their clout” to“harass” Hindu women.

Muslims were held culpable for causing large-scale “palayan”, or the exodus ,of Hindus seeking to “protect the honour” of their womenagainst the “gangs” who were running western UP. When the BJP’s Kairana MP Hukum Singh flagged the issue and released lists of the “migrants” in June 2016, an investigation by the Indian Expressfound that most of them had left to seek better business opportunities. A few said that they left willingly because they found the environment tense after the Muzaffarnagar riots of 2013. Singh’s daughter, Mriganka, contested the assembly polls on the issue of palayan and was defeated by Nahida Hasan of the SP.Another report in the Indian Express by Harish Damodaran (20 June2016) showed that western UP sugarcane growers were more preoccupied with the non-payment of dues by the sugar mills than by palayan.

The BJP’s Saharanpur MP Raghav Lakhanpal also raised the matter before the assembly polls, alleging that the murder of a local trader had forced “several” businessmen out of the town. Neither he nor the BJP’s Saharanpur leaders had their names. Jaswant Batra, the vice-president of the town’s traders’ association and a BJP member, categorically stated that the only migrations that took place were back in 2000 when Uttarakhand was carved out of UP because businessmen saw the new state as an attractive proposition.

The image of the Muslim as an “oppressor” was embodied in three political personas. The best known was SP’s senior minister and Rampur legislator Mohammad Azam Khan, known for courting controversies through his intemperate statements. The other was the Congress leader from Saharanpur, Imran Masood who was booked in 2014 for making a “hate speech” against Modi. The BJP demonised him so excessively that he lost his seat, Nakur. The last was Mukhtar Ansari who despite being in the Lucknow jail for years on charges of murders always wins his seat in Mau, eastern UP. He won this election too from the BSP but the BJP painted him as a criminal.

Another idea propagated was that jobs in the police and administration would be “cornered” either by the Yadavs and Muslims (in that order) or by the Jatavs, if the SP and Mayawati were elected. Therefore, the BJP was the “only party” that can “re-empower” Hindus and bring them back in the “system”.

Overall, the notion of “us” versus “them” worked but largely so in western UP and principally in Rohilkand because Muslims constitute over 30% of the population, outnumbering the Hindus in places like Rampur. The RSS-BJP’s campaign achieved its goal: the number of elected Muslim legislators dropped from 68 in 2012 to 25 in 2017.

Eastern UP

In the lower Doab, Avadh and eastern UP zones, the conception of the Yadav as “bully” and “oppressor” was played up by the BJP to first consolidate the votes of the upper castes and then regroup the non-Yadav backward castes and the disempowered Dalits. But true to the RSS’s diktat, the stratagem to isolate the Yadavs was calibrated skilfully in order to not entirely alienate this caste and importantly, not to lose sight of the Muslim as the main adversary of the Hindu. This was why in central and eastern UP, the propaganda about Hindus being “discriminated against”—which was themed around the “denial” of land to crematoriums and the allocation of spaces to burialgrounds—resonated even in the rural areas, more so after Modi spoke of the pursuit of “double standards” for different faiths by comparing the shamshanghat with the kabristhan.

It was evident that the message had got across as far as a village in Bahraich on the India-Nepal border from what Shiv Kumar Shukla, a farmer in Kunari Bangla, said. “I live amidst a large number of Muslims and Yadavs and both vote for the SP. I cannot risk enmity with either because we are inter-dependent in many ways. At the same time, I want Modi to succeed in this election because a BJP government alone can give me security. The Muslims attack our DurgaPuja procession every year. The Yadavs have confiscated eight bighas of land belonging to my son-in-law. But nobody is ready to file a complaint because everyone at the police station, from top to down, is a Yadav,” alleged Shukla.

On the opposite side of Shukla’s home sat a group of Muslims, oblivious to what he thought. They did not factor the BJP in their assessment. “It’s a fight between the SP and the BSP and we are certain that most Hindus will vote for the SP,” said Aqeel Ahmed, a small businessman.

In eastern UP, the historically disadvantaged castes like the Chouhan(salt makers),Nishad (fisherfolk) and the Musahars(who catch rats, collect honey and stitch leaf plates) rallied around the BJP, helping the party rub off its historical association with the upper castes for the time being at least.

But there was a twist in the tale that became apparent in a village, Samedha, just outside Azamgarh in eastern UP. Here, a Rajput, proud of his fluency in English, refused to disclose his name because the RSS-BJP had asked him to be discreet. His sprawling house located in the middle of wheat and mustard fields unmistakeably reinforced his status as an influential resident although the officially elected pradhan belonged to the numerically large Rajbhar caste. He claimed that the BJP leaders of Azamgarh courted him “knowing well that only a Rajput can swing the votes of the backward castes and the Dalits for them”.

Conclusions

In effect, the upper castes, who voted their hearts out for the BJP, were central to the methodology the party used for its social expansion. At the apex stood the Brahmins, Rajputs and Banias who concluded that neither the SP nor the BSP served their long-term interests. In 2007, the upper castes had rooted for the BSP to unseat an incumbent SP government. In 2012, they returned to the SP to punish Mayawati for allegedly misusing The SC and the ST (Prevention of Atrocities Act) 1989 against them. In both these elections, the BJP did not come across as a serious bidder for power.

With the BJP re-establishing pre-eminence in UP under Modi in 2014 after a hiatus, 2017 marked a gharwapasi (homecoming) for the upper castes. The caste and communal dynamics that played out through the various phases were wrapped in Modi’s version of “development”. At the core lay the RSS and the BJP’s fundamental belief that the minorities can be relegated to the fringes of UP’s polity in an order where the “savarnas” can be expected to call the shots.

However, the vote percentages that the other two parties secured—the SP got 21.8% out of the 298 seats it contested and its ally the Congress got 6.2% from the 105 seats it fought on while the BSP managed 22.2 %—proved that their base support was intact, belying the BJP’s claim that it had weaned chunks away from the SP’s Yadavs and the BSP’s Jatavs. The BJP’s biggest challenge will be keeping the edifice of the upper castes, the most backward castes and the disempowered Dalits structure it has raised in a monolith before the next elections.


- See more at: http://www.epw.in/journal/2017/11/web-exclusives/messages-mathematics-and-silences-formed-bjps-win.html