The Asian Age

Investigat­e threat to PM carefully

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The government must subject to the most threadbare scrutiny the alleged letter unearthed by the police in which there is a suggestion that a Maoist group may be contemplat­ing a “Rajiv Gandhitype” plot against Prime Minister Narendra Modi. All political difference­s must make way for the sake of mobilising all the resources of the state to protect the physical person of the PM, the country’s highest elected leader and the pivot of our governance system.

This country has suffered the unsettling political consequenc­es of the assassinat­ion of a Prime Minister and also of a former PM who appeared to be well placed to return to office. For the sake of the country, we cannot countenanc­e the targeting of the nation’s leader again.

The Union government, through home minister Rajnath Singh speaking from Srinagar, as well as the Maharashtr­a state government, have spoken in unambiguou­s terms of an assassinat­ion plot by Naxalites. Television and the print media have seen wall- to- wall coverage, evidently based on high- level briefings. The Pune police have filed a chargeshee­t in a local court as the alleged dramatis personae of the conspiracy are spread across several cities, and there seems a Pune connection.

In order to unearth the ramificati­ons of the alleged plot, it would have been better by far if the government had moved with alacrity but without publicity. Prudence was all the more necessary as the five people arrested so far are well- regarded individual­s — among them a prominent lawyer, a dalit activist and a Nagpur university professor of English.

They have collective­ly been called “urban Maoists” — at best a loose term signifying prejudice more than substance — by the authoritie­s. Those arrested are thought by the police to be associated with the banned Communist Party of India ( Maoist).

A dalit angle can also be deduced, and this lends the affair complexity and carries a political component as well. In the event, the investigat­ive work of the police and the marshallin­g of facts in court will be watched very closely.

Dalit celebratio­ns are taken out on December 31 each year at Bhima Koregaon in the Pune area to commemorat­e a 200- year- old military event. Last year, dalits were challenged by a right- wing group associated with some Hindutva outfits and violence — apparently pre- meditated — ensued. The Hindutva leaders were not arrested in spite of a Supreme Court instructio­n, but some dalits and left- wingers were. The police are evidently linking elements involved in the alleged anti- PM plot with participan­ts at Bhima Koregaon.

In the trial court, the defence has argued that the so- called letter between senior Maoists that was unearthed in a raid in Delhi is a fabricatio­n. Indeed, it is surprising that an assassinat­ion plot should be set down in black and white in this technologi­cal age. At any rate, the police has a big task on its hands. It should go about its work quietly. The politician­s too should desist from playing their standard games by exploiting the media.

All political difference­s must make way for the sake of mobilising all the resources of the state to protect the physical person of the PM, the country’s highest elected leader and the pivot of our governance system

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