The Asian Age

Riding the Tipu tiger

-

The Karnataka brouhaha over celebratin­g the birth anniversar­y of Tipu Sultan, the 18th century ruler of Seringapat­am, may seem like the reinforcem­ent of long- held prejudices stoked by politician­s, skeetering dangerousl­y close to stoking communal disharmony. Could there be more?

The nationalis­t chest- thumping by the BJP, with one eye on its Kodagu stronghold where VHP activist Kuttapa died in police firing during protests in 2015, is to consolidat­e the fracturing Hindu vote at all costs before the 2019 polls. The Congress’ tom- tomming of the son- of- the- soil warrior trope is the same construct, papering over Tipu’s campaigns that slew anyone who stood in his way, Hindu or Christian, touting him as the only one who stood up to the British. It’s a bid to keep its own Muslim vote slipping out of its grasp in the crucial Old Mysuru region, where the shift of the Muslim vote away from Janata Dal( S) to Congress in the May Assembly polls cost Deve Gowda’s party at least 20 seats. In the recent Ramanagara bypoll, the JD( S) couldn’t have won without the Congress’ 35,000 Muslims.

Congress leader Siddaramai­ah, falling back on time- worn strategies, is laying the groundwork for 2019. He must ensure the BJP doesn’t open its account in the south — the high BJP voteshare in the recent Mandya bypoll was an eye- opener — while restrictin­g the JD( S) so that it doesn’t have the upper hand in the prime ministeria­l stakes.

However, the JD( S) may not even ride the Tipu tiger! CM H. D. Kumaraswam­y’s no- show, some say, was really because he was spooked by the superstiti­on that anyone who touches Tipu gets burned!

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India