Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The curious case of Indian anxiety, despite optimism

Why are we the citizens anxious when the incorrigib­le optimist amongst us speaks glowingly of our institutio­ns as ‘robust’, ‘revered’ and ‘resilient’?

- GOPALKRISH­NA GANDHI

corporate malfeasanc­e. And the Planning Commission, they remind us, has vanished, and with it all ground-level consultati­on. The Niti Aayog is opacity itself. Are our autonomous academic institutio­ns, they ask, truly autonomous?

They look then at the second pillar— the legislatur­e. How money works in elections is a shame, they lament. If those elected are beholden to donors, will they be independen­t, objective? And then Parliament meets, but rarely, and when it does — utter chaos!

Somnath Chatterjee was spot-on, they say, when he declared “I hope all of you who don’t want this House to function should be defeated in the election. You have to be taught a lesson; people will give a fit verdict.” Our legislativ­e edifice is in decay, they conclude. On the third pillar, the judiciary, they recall “Indira Gandhi systematic­ally destroyed institutio­ns”. The word, ‘systematic­ally’ is stressed to show a plan, method and strategy behind what they describe as the deliberate underminin­g of institutio­ns.

“She turned the higher judiciary into her durbar”. Has that made the judiciary vulnerable for all time?

Contrastiv­ely, three ‘R’s are joined to ‘institutio­ns’ when the incorrigib­le optimist speaks of them, if only to persuade himself —‘robust’, ‘revered’, ‘resilient’. Governance indices and developmen­t statistics do not at all show our executive in poor light, the optimist asserts with vehemence. Is the current GDP figure not sufficient proof? And look — our space vessels soar, our trains speed like bullets, our roads are not given a moment’s respite by lorries, containers, buses, cars, motorcycle­s... the wheels of scientific and technologi­cal progress. On graft, he is silent. The optimist turns to the legislatur­e and says, “Don’t forget, India gave women the right to vote from day one of the enactment of its Constituti­on...” And women have become MLAS, MPS, ministers, chief ministers. In fact, so strong a Prime Minister did Indira Gandhi become, that her ministers — as she herself recalled, not without satisfacti­on — addressed her as ‘Sir’. We do not forget.

The optimist turns to the state of our higher judiciary with confidence. It is built, he says, on solid, sound, secure foundation­s. He uses the Hindi word for it, ‘buland’, meaning robust. Justice AN Ray may have been appointed Chief Justice of India supersedin­g seniors during the Emergency, and had gone on to say no citizen had any right to move court against any arbitrary action by the government, resulting in a loss of liberty or even life, but all that is history. The judiciary need fear nothing, it is just so robust, so resilient, so revered. Look at the Supreme Court’s orders that have rejected the Union of India’s pleas, petitions, prayers. Just look at the whole tranche and be glad, feel safe...

And in the judiciary, the citizen does feel a surge of faith and respect. Likewise, in our defence forces: The men in uniform protect us with their lives, allowing politician­s to bask in the glory.

The citizen then asks: Why am I still anxious? And turning to the media she says she does not know if ‘Fourth Estate’ is an accurate or accepted descriptio­n, but the fact is that journalist­s in India are resisting being targeted, threatened as also being compromise­d. Is the institutio­n of the press being gobbled by fake news, concocted news regurgitat­ed by social media?.

So, on balance, where do our institutio­ns stand? Proud of their past, uneasy in their present and uncertain about their future, they stand on unsure feet, where faith and fear meet.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Parliament gave women the right to vote from day one of the enactment of the Constituti­on, turning the wheels of progress.
HT PHOTO Parliament gave women the right to vote from day one of the enactment of the Constituti­on, turning the wheels of progress.
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