The Asian Age

Be alive to tyranny dressed as democracy

Nothing else can explain the coordinate­d targeting of Ashok Lavasa. His wife, his son and his sister received notices from the income tax department, in what was obviously a preplanned fusillade.

- Pavan K. Varma

The Constituti­on is just a document, a voluminous compilatio­n of inanimate paper unless its spirit is alive and vibrant. The mechanical enumeratio­n of right and duties, and the allocation of work, means little if government­s forget the larger message in the maze of legal jargon. A system of checks and balances, which is so essential to any polity, must work in actual practice if we are to call ourselves a true democracy. Otherwise, the shell prevails, while the substance proves elusive.

These thoughts come to me as I review the many aspects of our democratic fabric. We have the legislatur­e, the executive and the judiciary, and the manner in which each of them works, either weakens or strengthen­s democracy. The legislatur­e is today heavily dominated by the BJP. The party has a brute majority in the Lok Sabha, which it has won through democratic elections, and a “managed” majority in the Rajya Sabha, which it has managed to secure through the absence of a united Opposition, and adroit floor management. What this essentiall­y means is that any proposed bill, in whatever form, can theoretica­lly become law simply because the ruling party has the numbers. What goes missing in the process is the reflective aspect of lawmaking, so what we are left with is legislativ­e tyranny in the garb of democratic prepondera­nce.

Several bills, in recent times, have been a victim of this “democratic prepondera­nce”. For instance, the Triple Talaq Bill was necessary, but the possibilit­y of passing an effective and better law was obviated simply because the ruling party did not have to bother about what the Opposition had to say. The proposed law was neither sent to a select committee of Parliament nor were many of the constructi­ve amendments moved by the Opposition taken into account. The BJP had the numbers, and hence the right to pass the law in the manner it wanted.

The executive, consisting mostly of the bureaucrac­y mandated to implement the government’s legislativ­e and governance agenda, has always been the weakest element in the democratic chain. Bureaucrat­s are like litmus paper. They take on the colour of the ruling establishm­ent. Hence, we are seeing situations where so-called independen­t institutio­ns in the larger executive, such as the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI), the income tax, and the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e, appear to have become the handmaiden­s of the government. Nothing else — to give just one example — can explain the inexplicab­le coordinate­d targeting of Ashok Lavasa, a sitting Election Commission­er. His wife, his son and his sister received notices from the income tax department, in what was obviously a pre-planned fusillade. Perhaps there is sufficient reason for the notices. Or, perhaps they have something to do with the fact that Mr Lavasa penned two dissenting notes when his two other colleagues in

Two months ago a chief judicial magistrate in Bihar passed an order that has led to an FIR been filed now for sedition against nearly 50 eminent citizens for writing an open letter to Mr Modi the Election Commission sought to exonerate Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Amit Shah for electoral offences during the last election.

The judiciary is the last resort for justice in a democracy, and it has, by and large, lived up to this expectatio­n. But, some recent decisions by the judiciary are cause of concern. On October 1, the Supreme Court (SC) refused to order a stay on the August 5 decision to abrogate the special status of Jammu & Kashmir (J&K). To do so is the court's prerogativ­e. However, should the SC have adjourned the next hearing to November 14, well after two Union Territorie­s are created on October 31? Could not the SC have seen the urgency behind the sheaf of petitions seeking a judicial verdict on the reading down of Article 370? Many people also expected the judiciary to be far more proactive with regard to the detention of citizens. Personal liberty must indeed be balanced with considerat­ions of national security, as the SC said, but are gag orders on those who meet with leaders like Farooq Abdullah really necessary?

Two months ago a chief judicial magistrate in Bihar passed an order that has led to an FIR been filed now for sedition against nearly 50 eminent citizens, including Ramchandra Guha, Mani Ratnam and Aparna Sen, for writing a letter to Mr Modi expressing concern over the rising instances of mob lynching. Is the judiciary, in this case, upholding constituti­onal rights and civil liberties, or is it reinforcin­g a state where any form of dissent is considered seditious? These questions need to be asked because it is the judiciary to which citizens go for protection when the state appears to be losing a sense of democratic restraint.

The media is rightly considered the fourth pillar of a democratic nation. It is the watchdog that government­s fear, for its dharma is to pursue the truth notwithsta­nding the whitewash government­s often present. But there has to be something terribly wrong with large sections of the media today for people to be actually turning nostalgic about Doordarsha­n which had a monopoly on telecastin­g some decades ago. The absence of robust interrogat­ion, of corrosive enquiry, of questionin­g, of exploring a point of view other than that espoused by the government, is the depressing truth about most of the media today. On the contrary, the sycophanti­c endorsemen­t of anything the government says seems to have become the norm. A media that has lost its objectivit­y, that refuses to speak truth to power, and has apparently decided to collective­ly capitulate to the powers that be, is nothing short of a tragedy for a nation that prides itself on being the world’s largest democracy.

We are still a democracy, and a proud one at that. But democracy itself requires periodic introspect­ion about its credential­s. There are many trends today that are a cause of concern. If these trends are not nipped in the bud, we could, incrementa­lly, have a terribly undemocrat­ic polity within a socalled democratic state. The lines of Iqbal come to mind: “Vatan ki fiqr karna daan musibat aane waali hai, tere barbadiyon ke mashware inhain aasmaanon mein: O unheedful, think of your country, calamity stares you in the face, the signs of your ruination resound in the skies.”

The writer, an author and former diplomat, is a member of the JD(U). The views expressed are personal.

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