Business Standard

Dalit-OBC-Patidar discontent poses a serious challenge for BJP in Gujarat

- NIKITA SUD (THE WIRE.IN)

After 19 years of unbroken rule, Gujarat’s BJP is facing a serious challenge. The challenge comes less from the opposition and more from a discontent­ed populace. The ruling party’s appeals to ‘six crore Gujaratis’ ring somewhat hollow amidst the economic slowdown, sloppy taxation and monetary policies, agrarian distress, rising unemployme­nt, the suffering caused by the recent floods and the collapsed health and transport infrastruc­ture that the monsoon deluge highlighte­d once again.

Amidst this growing, multi-dimensiona­l crisis, the BJP’s longstandi­ng call to Gujarat’s asmita or pride, and the twin poll planks of Hindutva and developmen­t may not cut much ice. The popular, morally lofty slogan of suraj or good governance has also taken a beating amid allegation­s of corruption and favouritis­m levelled at close relatives of senior leaders such as former chief minister Anandiben Patel and party chief Amit Shah. It is in this context that a social media campaign Vikas gando thayo che (developmen­t has gone mad) struck a chord with a cross-section of the population, and went viral on- and off-line.

Various constituen­cies have expressed their unhappines­s with the ruling party by demonstrat­ing on the streets in large numbers. This includes textile and diamond traders in Ahmedabad and Surat and local women health workers (Accredited Social Health Activists, or ASHAs) in various parts of the state. The most enduring opposition has come from three sections of the population — Dalits, OBCs and Patidars, who feel sidelined in the current Gujarat economic and political model. Dalit movement Dalits form around 7% of the population and continue to face discrimina­tion, untouchabi­lity, oppression and violence from employers and socially dominant groups. Long-term government initiative­s of economic redistribu­tion and productive asset generation, say in the form of land reforms, have tended to reach them on paper only.

The plight of the Dalits of Gujarat even made headlines in July 2016. A video of cow vigilantes (gau rakshaks) thrashing four semi-naked Dalit youth in the state’s Una town was widely viewed and discussed all the way to the parliament. The young men and their families had been harassed for allegedly skinning a dead cow.

Dalits across the state refused to collect cow carcasses, even when requested by panchayats and municipali­ties. They organised protest marches, with slogans such as ‘gai ki punch tum rakho, hame hamari zameen do’ (you are welcome to keep the cow’s tail, give up the land that belongs to us.’

The initial inaction of the police in the Una incident, the plight of Dalits forced to take up degrading jobs, and their humiliatio­n in the name of Hindu pride only underlined that the government’s Gujarat model of developmen­t was not for the minorities — including Dalits.

Jignesh Mevani, a young lawyer who has for long used public interest litigation to challenge government inaction on land redistribu­tion to Adivasis and Dalits, has become the face of Dalit resurgence. He has provided leadership to a politics of protest and pride that goes far beyond an individual. Alongside strikes, marches, speeches, land takeovers and social media campaigns, we should also take note of the rising number of Gujarat’s Dalits who are embracing Buddhism. The yearly conversion has tripled from 500 to 1,500 plus since the Una incident.

In public, Mevani’s antigovern­ment politics complement­s that of another youth leader Hardik Patel. Patel shot into the limelight in 2015 as the head of the Patidar Anamat Andolan Samiti (PAAS). PAAS channels discontent among the Patel youth who face pressures on land and an unviable agricultur­al sector, a downturn in private sector jobs and high barriers to public sector employment that they blame on reservatio­n policies aimed at Dalits and other backward classes. Patidars Patidars are traditiona­lly landowners, or holders of pattas (titles). There are vast status difference­s in the Patidars of, say, the agricultur­ally fertile Charotar tract of central Gujarat, versus their slightly lower status brethren in Rajkot or elsewhere in Saurashtra. The highest status Patidars, with the largest amounts of land, have tended to branch off into agro-industry, industry and even politics in postindepe­ndence Gujarat. However, despite internal differenti­ation and notable exceptions, Patidar youth appear to be struggling economical­ly today. This is being manifested in their support for PAAS.

Dalits and sections of Patidar youth — and their leadership — may have a common enemy in the ruling party and government for now. However, Gujarat’s recent history provides many instances of clashes between these sections of the population. In the late 1970s, the Congress under Indira Gandhi brought together a coalition covering approximat­ely 70% of Gujarat’s population. The Kshatriya, Harijan, Adivasi and Muslim (KHAM) combine was the brainchild of the OBC Congressma­n Jinabhai Darji.

KHAM aimed to widen the political space through the democratic electoral process in upper-caste dominated Gujarat. The KHAM strategy worked very well for the Congress in the 1980 assembly elections. The party fielded KHAM candidates in 111 out of 182 available seats; 96 were elected. But KHAM faced an almost immediate backlash, led by upper and middle-caste Hindus, including Patels. They attacked the Congress government’s reservatio­n policies and brought the antireserv­ation agitation to the streets. Dalits and Muslims were the biggest targets of this violence, which was at its worst in 1981, and again in the election year of 1985.

As urban Gujarat witnessed anti-reservatio­n protests, there was also upheaval in rural areas. The KHAM years witnessed village-level agitations for reclaiming land that had been granted to Dalits and other landless groups in the postindepe­ndence period under policies of land reform. Rajputs and Patels continued to control the land in practice. For the first time in 1980-85, those represente­d by the KHAM umbrella spoke of amaari sarkar or our government. There seemed to be hope for the redistribu­tion of resources, along with the realignmen­t of power.

One of the early land-related initiative­s of backward caste chief minister Madhavsinh Solanki’s government was to re-open 25,000 cases against land ceiling avoiders. However, politicall­y powerful individual­s, such as Chimanbhai Patel and Keshubhai Patel stalled the cases. Influentia­l lobbies such as the Gujarat Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Gujarat Chamber of Agricultur­e and the Khedut Samaj backed their writ petitions. Keshubhai was the BJPs first chief minister when it inaugurate­d its innings in power in 1995, and returned on a more stable wicket in 1998.

A broad urban and rural coalition of upper and middlecast­e Hindus materialis­ed during the anti-KHAM, antireserv­ation, anti-land reform stirs. An emerging BJP provided leadership to this coalition. Together, the protesters brought down the KHAMbacked government of chief minister Solanki. Solanki had been re-elected in 1985 with the biggest mandate ever granted to a Gujarat politician. The Congress’ vote share of 55.6% under him is unmatched even today. The Congress held on to power in 1985-90 and was part of unstable coalitions in the early 1990s. However, it was a much weaker party with an unclear agenda. Its initiative­s towards a politics of redistribu­tion were firmly set aside. Congress’s agenda A Congress that has been out of power for over 20 years is today hoping to re-kindle the electoral energy of the KHAM years. In its true nature as an umbrella for varied constituen­cies, the party wants to tap into the popular unrest of Dalits and OBC Thakors, but also upper and middle caste traders, agricultur­ists, Patidars and others.

While wooing the supporters of Mevani, Patel and AlpeshThak­or, the Congress party should be asking itself some hard questions. To what end is the Congress seeking to bring together the politics and grievances of groups that may face a common opponent, but who also challenge each other in the politics of the everyday? What substantiv­e alternativ­e does the Congress offer to the agitating population­s of Gujarat? In what ways will it address the possibly universal demands of Gujarat’s youth, say for jobs and dignity?

Hindutva and muscular, big-business-friendly developmen­t was the big picture vision of one of Gujarat’s political poles. What is the vision of the other pole that is seeking resurrecti­on? And why should groups as diverse as Gujarat’s Dalits, Patels, OBCs, Muslims, traders and others buy it? In retrospect, the short-lived KHAM experiment offered hope but ultimately instrument­alised the socially and historical­ly marginalis­ed in the race for power. How will the political overtures of today be any different?

Various constituen­cies have expressed their unhappines­s with the ruling party by demonstrat­ing on the streets in large numbers. This includes textile and diamond traders in Ahmedabad and Surat

 ?? BS PHOTO ?? Dalits and sections of Patidar youth, led by Hardik Patel ( above), may have a common enemy in the ruling party and government for now
BS PHOTO Dalits and sections of Patidar youth, led by Hardik Patel ( above), may have a common enemy in the ruling party and government for now

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