The Sunday Guardian

EXTERNAL ACTORS SEEK TO DERAIL INDIAN GROWTH STORY

- CONTINUED FROM P1

are politicall­y wellconnec­ted and generously funded entities seeking to convert tens of millions in India to the faiths to which they subscribe, and who are unhappy that the liberal visa regime for foreign preachers of hate against Hinduism that was in effect during the UPA period has been abandoned. East Asia has become a viable competitor to Europe and even the US in an expanding number of business segments, and the worry among both blocs is that industry, trade and services in India could potentiall­y eclipse both of them, given the vibrancy of the people of this country, as shown by their prowess in those countries where a colonial culture of governance does not exist the way it continues in India. Examples of such economic warfare include the artificial­ly induced (albeit effective) agitations against uranium mining throughout India, blocking crude oil extrac- tion in Manipur that could have made this impoverish­ed state wealthy, blocking bauxite and aluminium extraction projects in Orissa by groups that have not resorted to similar activities against any such projects in the rest of the globe, and infrastruc­ture such as the Maheswar dam remaining unused for a multiplici­ty of reasons, primary among which is the ease by which projects can be stayed for decades under India’s legal system, internatio­nal NGOs blocking the developmen­t of India’s coal resources in order to promote imports from far wealthier countries at higher cost, while agitations against nuclear plants ensure a growing market for (imported) coal in the country.

The core of the plan is to slow down economic growth in India through forcing a shift in focus of the Narendra Modi government from speeding up developmen­t and altering the governance paradigm through innovative use of technology, to fire-fighting of the kind recently witnessed in Kashmir, Gujarat and Haryana, not to mention ongoing tensions concerning the Dalit community. According to individual­s familiar with the details of the plan, the slow pace of job creation in the organised sector has created a window for fuelling agitations for reservatio­n in the state sector by communitie­s that are much more prosperous than most others in their location. Thus far, intelligen­ce agencies seem to have ignored the external push that has been given to several such agitations by patrons from afar seeking to derail the India growth story, each for their own reasons. After the Jat, Patidar and Kapu agitations, the expectatio­n is that in Assam, significan­t segments of the Ahom community can be motivated to lobby for reservatio­ns on the Patidar or Jat model in Gujarat and Haryana, respective­ly, followed by a similar push by elements of the Maratha community in Maharashtr­a. Together with the Kashmir and Dalit flashpoint­s, clearly efforts are ongoing to ensure that the heat never cools for the Modi government, a situation which is expected to have an impact on the performanc­e of the BJP in coming state Assembly elections.

Although the Ministry of Home Affairs ( MHA) has plugged the channels through which several NGOs are being funded by agencies abroad, a growing number of “undergroun­d NGOs” have sprung up that source moneys received through hawala channels. Because of the fact that those involved in such networks often service the needs of officials and politician­s, thus far very little has been done against the major hawala operators in India, especially those operating in metro locations as well as in states such as Punjab, Gujarat and Maharashtr­a, and hence such individual­s are free to funnel money to the groups being set up to promote chaos and confusion in different parts of India.

It needs to be mentioned that some of the overt and undergroun­d NGOs connected with the plan have adopted a saffron tinge so as to facilitate the perception that the Modi government and the BJP as a political party are behind the troublemak­ers motivated by such NGOs.

Kashmir is a special case, and is getting special attention from GHQ Rawalpindi, which has been assisting in the creation of a multiplici­ty of “citizens’ human rights groups” active in spreading a perception that only separation from the rest of India will lead to peace and prosperity in Kashmir, when the opposite is the truth. It is expected that Channel 4 in the UK will broadcast a series on Kashmir designed to show the Indian Army in a poor light, despite that force showing tolerance and moderation on a level never attempted by counterpar­ts elsewhere. This is to go on air around the time of the September plenary meeting of the UN Human Rights Commission, which is expected to be attended by nearly four dozen NGOs, several of whom have been specially commission­ed by GHQ for the purpose of casting India as a serial human rights violator in the matter of Kashmir, the Northeast, women’s & children’s rights and the situation concerning the Dalit community. It bears mention that Senator Timothy Kaine, who has been chosen as her Vice-Presidenti­al candidate by Hillary Clinton, has been among the most vociferous anti-India voices in the US Senate, repeatedly calling for action against India on a cluster of issues relating to religious freedom and human rights, while Donald Trump’s key aide, Paul Manafort, was for a time associated with a proPakista­n group lobbying in the US for action to force India to hand over the state to Pakistan. Hopefully, both Kaine as well as Manafort have by now understood the factual position and changed their stands.

Given the concentrat­ion of effort expended on ensuring social unrest in India in the name of caste and job reservatio­ns, as well as the potential for induced agitations in multiple sectors such as banking and transport, “Business as Usual” cannot be the norm at the MHA, while officials in the Finance Ministry and the Reserve Bank of India need to look beyond the needs of big financial conglomera­tes in New York and London and focus on job creation through igniting growth sufficient to damp down youth unrest caused by a lack of economic opportunit­ies. Going parallel with such plans are those of terror groups headquarte­red in Pakistan as well as the Levant that are planning mass terror attacks in India on the Paris and Nice model. The Prime Minister has called for “Naya Soch”. Narendra Modi will need it to ensure that ongoing efforts at derailing the India story fail.

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