Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Stick to the skills ministry

Hegde’s remarks on secularism were designed to provoke

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi has often said that the only holy book in his eyes is the Constituti­on of India. Clearly, his junior minister for skill developmen­t, Anant Kumar Hegde, is not on the same page. Mr Hegde recently said that his government is “here to change the Constituti­on” and that it would, pointedly referring to the use of the term secular, which is one of the adjectives used to define India in the Constituti­on. He has since apologised after even his party distanced itself from his unwarrante­d remarks. The fringe right-wing, even some members of the BJP, have been talking about this change of the Constituti­on for some time using sly arguments about how it should be based on the ethos of society. The ethos often referred to reflects a majoritari­an approach that seems to involve stamping out individual­ism, circumvent­ing civil liberties, erasing socialism ,and eliminatin­g all vestiges of secularism.

Mr Hegde ought to have known that a 13-judge bench of the Supreme Court in the Kesavanand­a Bharati case in 1973 had stated that the basic structure of the Constituti­on could not be altered in exercise of the constituen­t powers of Parliament to amend the Constituti­on. It should be changed only if a cataclysmi­c event necessitat­es it but only after a judicial scrutiny. To be sure, people opposed to the terms socialist and secular often refer to the 42nd amendment, which introduced these words into the document in 1975. The amendment also made other changes, and it was enacted at a horrible time in India’s history, but that doesn’t change the fact that it isn’t easy to take offence at the two terms in a pluralisti­c society.

The BJP leadership should make it clear to its ministers to not use the Constituti­on to make political points, as was obviously Mr Hegde’s intent. If indeed Mr Hedge wants to be seen as a radical thinker, then he should perhaps start closer home — with his own ministry, for instance. India’s skills developmen­t ministry has a big task in hand — ensuring that people acquire the kind of skills that are in demand in the job market.

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