News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 4 years ago
Home  » News » 2020: Tough year ahead for India

2020: Tough year ahead for India

By AAKAR PATEL
January 14, 2020 15:57 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

It is going to be a rough and brutal 2020 for India as its government pushes on with its ideological agenda, and the citizens do whatever they can to protect themselves, notes Aakar Patel.
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com

 

The Citizenship Amendment Act has been notified and has become effective.

The protests against it around the country have made no difference to the strong posture of the government in favour of it.

The fact that it may be seen as a law that internationally indefensible and that India's foreign minister ran away from a meeting with a US Congresswoman who would grill him on it also has made no difference to the government.

Yes, the law has been challenged in the Supreme Court, but unfortunately the experience of the Emergency, the Ayodhya judgment and the Kashmir issue shows us that it is easy for our judges to be aligned with the government.

In the matter of Jawaharlal Nehru University, what the nation saw was visuals of an assault on young women, particularly the leader of the students association.

Justice was being demanded for them.

What has happened instead is that the police has named her as the culprit while more or less giving a clean chit to the assailants.

The police is theoretically independent of the administration, but this is not true even in theory any longer.

The police will do what the government tells them to do and since Delhi police is controlled not by the local government of Arvind Kejriwal, but the Union government of Modi, it is Home Minister Amit Anilchandra Shah who has approved this reversal of justice.

When Jammu and Kashmir was dismembered and there was (as there remains) an even greater presence of India's security forces on the city streets, I had asked a local journalist what the strategy from Delhi was.

He said that there did not appear to be anything new, but the instruction for the administration from National Security Advisory Doval was to 'be strict, be very strict' with locals.

This is indeed what has come to be.

The state's leadership is in jail without charge or without a crime, the citizens are pretty much in jail to, with restricted movement, no right to peaceful assembly, no access to communications and, as has been the case for many decades in that state, armed forces outside their door constantly.

All this has not been accompanied by any words or actions that provide reassurance that the future will look any different for Kashmiris.

What we can understand from the above is that there is a pattern to the way in which the issues of greatest concern to Indians and the world watching India are being managed by Narendra Damodardas Modi and Amit Anilchandra Shah.

And that pattern is that they will not back down from pushing ahead with their ideology.

If we notice what has been said by Modi and Shah on the issue of citizenship it is quite revealing.

When it became clear that the protests were not going to away, Modi tried to put a pause on them by saying that a nation-wide NRC had not been discussed.

He chose not to say that it would not happen.

This did not bring comfort to those who were worried of a nation-wide action similar to that of Assam.

However, the prime minister is not going to let it go because it is coming from an ideological belief and not any sense of political strategy or specific policy.

He appears willing to absorb some damage in India's international reputation (I am quite sure that Foreign Minister Jaishankar would not have run away from that meeting without the prime minister's specific approval) in order to further the ideology.

This puts us in dangerous territory for the rest of the year.

From the first of April, the Modi government will send officials to all homes seeking details under the National Population Register, the first step of the National Register of Citizens.

When the threat of being robbed of their citizenship and freedom comes to the doors of millions of already persecuted individuals, the reaction will be even stronger than the one we are currently seeing on the streets.

And as their trauma becomes clear and is made visible, which it will, the world will not stand aside.

It is possible and perhaps likely that Donald J Trump will not win re-election and it will be a Democrat who will win America's presidency later this year.

If you look at the list of their candidates, it is hard to find even one who will be friendly to Modi or an India that is brutalising its own minorities.

What happens then? At the moment the government thinks it has control of what is going on.

In UP, the police have murdered over a dozen Muslim protestors while the Supreme Court is concerned about damage to public property; From JNU to Kashmir and elsewhere, Modi is insisting on the rights of his government over the rights of Indian citizens.

And he is doing so out of a sense of anger and vengeance which is not only not in keeping with leadership, particularly of a large democracy, but also dangerous.

The good thing is that he has absolutely no opposition inside his government to be concerned about.

All 300 plus Lok Sabha MPs line up and applaud anything he says and does.

The Supreme Court, as we have seen, need not be worried about.

It is going to be a rough and brutal 2020 for India as its government pushes on with its ideological agenda, and the citizens do whatever they can to protect themselves.

Aakar Patel is a writer and columnist.
You can read Aakar's columns here
.

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
AAKAR PATEL
 
Battle for two states 2024

Battle for two states