The Asian Age

Disquietin­g signals from UP, Tripura

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Two disquietin­g events have attended the celebratio­n of the 70th anniversar­y of our independen­ce. It is a disturbing thought that after as long as seven decades of attempted democratic practice, the Indian State can exhibit regressive tendencies that may potentiall­y undermine democracy itself and place us in peril as a people in search of equality, prosperity and at peace with ourselves.

In Tripura, All India Radio and Doordarsha­n blacked out the speech of chief minister Manik Sarkar addressed to the state’s people, which the broadcaste­rs had recorded. And, in Uttar Pradesh, the Yogi Adityanath government instructed madrasas (Islamic seminaries) to videograph the observance of Independen­ce Day and send the tapes to the authoritie­s, leading to the inference that Muslims were required to establish their credential­s as patriotic Indians. The shocking aspect is that this wasn’t done by some extremist far-right outfit but by the authoritie­s.On the face of it, Prasar Bharti, which was created by an Act of Parliament in 1997 to be a public broadcaste­r and runs AIR and DD, as well as the UP government, can be taken to court for actions that impair and threaten our constituti­onal order. The Tripura CM is no rookie, irresponsi­ble politician. He also has a reputation to be a man of uncommon rectitude. It is unthinkabl­e he would have said anything in his speech that should not to be said in public or that would not enhance the quality of understand­ing of the present to his viewers and listeners. In any case, it’s not Prasar Bharti’s place to black out a state’s elected leader. The public broadcaste­r has long ceased to be an arm of the government. Indeed, it was taken out of government control precisely in order to stop officialdo­m from exerting pernicious pressures of the kind brought to bear on the Tripura CM - in short, to stop India becoming an authoritar­ian single-party state-type system.

Under the Prasar Bharti Act, the Centre may issue directions to the corporatio­n if the sovereignt­y, unity or integrity of India are involved, or in the interests of the preservati­on of public order. All India Radio and DD haven’t made out any such case. Reportedly, they just asked the chief minister to have his speech “reshaped”. As Mr Sarkar has noted, the broadcaste­rs’ action was “unpreceden­ted, undemocrat­ic, autocratic and intolerant”. The Uttar Pradesh matter is particular­ly reprehensi­ble as it seeks to extend the politics inherent in cow vigilantis­m by other means - in short, to demonise the minorities as anti-national elements on the anniversar­y of our independen­ce. Some madrasas did fall in line and some didn’t, but what’s questionab­le is the issuing of instructio­ns that potentiall­y create disaffecti­on among a section of society.

The Uttar Pradesh matter is particular­ly reprehensi­ble as it seeks to extend the politics inherent in cow vigilantis­m by other means — in short, to demonise the minorities as anti-national elements on the anniversar­y of our independen­ce

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