Business Standard

MAHARASHTR­A CASTE CONFLICT: A SOCIOPOLIT­ICAL COCKTAIL

Trigger unclear but fall out messy for BJP in the state

- SUNIL GATADE

There are no straight answers to exactly what triggered violence at Bhima Koregaon on New Year’s day, hailed as ‘ shaurya divas’ by Dalits for the valour of their ancestors in the Anglo-Maratha war 200 years ago that put an end to Peshwa rule.

An incident took place, detail unclear, at nearby Vadu Budruk where the samadhi of Sambhaji is located. It led to stone throwing, near-rioting and sit-ins that engulfed large parts of Maharashtr­a, including the state capital, in the first week of the new year.

Now, it’s become a cocktail — Dalits vs Marathas, Dalits vs Brahmins, Dalits vs ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and within the BJP, the chief minister, Devendra Fadnavis, vs others. It is also clear that with the impending Lok Sabha and assembly elections, everyone is trying to extract the maximum out of this muddle. Opposition parties are blaming ‘Hindutva’ fringe elements for the incidents that brought Ambedkarit­e youth on the warpath; the BJP is targeting ‘outside forces’, an apparent reference to Jignesh Mewani, a Dalit leader from Gujarat, who addressed the massive rally there.

While the police, initially caught unawares, brought the situation quickly under control there, the fallout was seen elsewhere — in parts of Mumbai, Pune, and Aurangabad. It was followed by a call for a ‘Maharashtr­a bandh’ on Wednesday by Prakash Ambedkar, one of the original rally organisers and grandson of the late B R Ambedkar, which was a success.

Fadnavis, also in charge of the home portfolio, is under attack for not taking precaution­ary measures. “If the Congress had been in power, we would not have hesitated to demand the CM’s resignatio­n,” a Shiv Sena leader, whose party is part of the BJP-led coalition at both the Centre and the state, said. The CM has said there would be an inquiry, to be headed by a sitting judge of the Bombay High Court.

Fadnavis belongs to the Brahmin community. It was said at the rally that the fight now is against the neoPesh was, a reference to both him and the prime minister. Peshwa Bajirao II, also a Brahmin, defeated at the battle of Koregaon Bhima which helped bring the British East India Company to full power in India, was the PM of the then tottering Maratha empire.

The protests have led to Prakash Ambedkar being treated as the Dalit voice in the state. A developmen­t the BJP can ill afford, as it dents its social engineerin­g platform under which it made another Dalit voice, Ramdas Athawale, not only an MP but a Union minister.

Maharashtr­a is changing fast. Despite being hailed as one of India’s most progressiv­e and developed states, it is witnessing the fallout of lopsided progress. It also has the dubious distinctio­n of being a state reporting a large number of suicides by farmers.

The demand for reservatio­n by the dominant Marathas is indicative of the plight of sections of various communitie­s that have failed to become part of the ‘technologi­cal society’. The fault lines are at a time when Marathas are

demanding reservatio­n and also scrapping of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, saying it’s been misused in the state. Silent marches taken out by Marathas over the state, with big participat­ion and from leaders of various hues, has also alarmed ‘others’,

including Dalits and Other Bakward Classes about the intentions of this community.

With 48 Lok Sabha seats, Maharashtr­a is politicall­y an important state in the country. The emergence of Narendra Modi has propelled the BJP, for long a laggard in state politics, to centre stage. And, pushing to secondary status the Shiv Sena, so far treated as its ‘elder brother’ in Maharashtr­a. It is no secret that the sulking Sena is playing the role of the opposition while sharing power.

Bhima Koregaon is near Pune and part of prosperous western Maharashtr­a, where the BJP has made deep inroads in what was once the bastion of Sharad Pawar’s NCP and the Congress. The Congress, with the support of caste leaders, had given the BJP a run for its money in Gujarat, Modi’s home turf. If Muslims, Dalits and some others join hands, they could be a formidable combinatio­n. In the 1998 Lok Sabha polls, Maharashtr­a had seen a Dalit-Muslim-Maratha combine, leading to the Congress and its allies bagging 42 out of 48 seats.

Police firing at Ramabai Ambedkar Nagar in Mumbai in 1997 in which 10 Dalits were killed had seen the community up in arms against the then Sena-BJP government. The caste pot has again been stirred in Maharashtr­a. How the government stems the effects needs to be watched.

Maharashtr­a is changing fast. Despite being hailed as one of India’s most progressiv­e and most developed states, it is witnessing the fallout of lopsided progress

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 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Dalit protesters block a road during a Maharashtr­a bandh called over the Koregaon violence, in Thane, Mumbai
PHOTO: PTI Dalit protesters block a road during a Maharashtr­a bandh called over the Koregaon violence, in Thane, Mumbai

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