The Sunday Guardian

Tripura sheds left-inspired staGnation

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Raj Thapar, wife of the top VIP revolution­ary Romesh Thapar of yesteryear­s and sister-in-law of the prominent Left historian Romila Thapar, mentioned an interestin­g anecdote: “Sitting with Mohan [Kumaramang­alam, an important communist leader] once, having a cup of tea, he asked me what I had named my daughter. When I said ‘Malavika,’ he rolled those marble black eyes of his and said, ‘You better be careful, Raj, that’s a reactionar­y name and like this you might slowly find yourself on the other side of the fence.’ I was aghast and controvert­ed with him, passionate­ly explaining how I had kept this name locked securely in my consciousn­ess ever since I read Kalidas’ Malavika Agnimitra in college.” The name “Malavika” was too Hindu—which in the communists’ scheme of things means communal—to be approved by the commissar.

If somebody as aristocrat­ic as Raj Thapar could be chided in a metropolit­an city, one could imagine the plight of lesser mortals in a remote part of the country. “Every possible coercive and peremptory method was applied by the Commies to attain their objectives,” Deb says. He gives an example: if the son of a state government servant was inclined towards the BJP, the father would be threatened transfer, thus forcing the youngster to steer clear of the saffron party.

The Reds perpetuate­d their regime by precluding the emergence of an alternativ­e for very long. But once the electorate saw a viable alternativ­e in the BJP, they voted enthusiast­ically for the saffron party, catapultin­g Deb to the top office.

In charge of seven department­s—Home, Public Works Department, Industries & Commerce ( minus informatio­n technology), Urban Developmen­t, General Administra­tion, Labour, and Informatio­n & Cultural Affairs—his government has taken a slew of decisions in the first month. The decisions are a mix of the praisewort­hy, the pragmatic, and the political.

The state Cabinet has decided to constitute the Tripura Infrastruc­ture & Investment Fund Board as a salutary entity through an Act to mobilise non-Budgetary resources for important infrastruc­ture and other projects. The idea is to galvanise developmen­t with maximum involvemen­t of the private sector—hence the emphasis on “non-Budgetary resources”—so that the young and the talented do not move out of the state. “Over two lakh people have gone out. They tell stories about progress elsewhere; they send pictures of other places. I feel a lot of responsibi­lity to make things better in Tripura,” the new Chief Minister says.

In a bid to augment state capacity, the new Tripura Cabinet has set up a police crime branch with profession­al, specialise­d, and wellequipp­ed officers. In another move, the state government has constitute­d a committee for the implementa­tion of the Seventh Pay Commission; at present, the salaries are governed by the Fourth Pay Commission.

Decisions have also been taken to streamline the recruitmen­t process and formulate a fair, automatic transfer policy. “Within one to one- and- a-half month, the transfer policy will be in place. Experts and stakeholde­rs are being consulted,” Deb says.

Political decisions have also been taken. For instance, the state Cabinet has recommende­d the renaming of the Agartala Airport as the Maharaja Bir Bikram Manikya Kishore Airport to honour “the visionary Maharaja of Tripura till May 1947,” Deb says.

Then there are measures that are both laudable and political, like replacing Leftinspir­ed textbooks with the NCERT ones. “Their books focused on Marx, Mao, and communist history rather than Gandhi and freedom struggle,” Deb says.

It is too early for the endeavours of the new state government to show result on the ground. But the new Chief Minister hopes that change would soon be visible. A lot, however, would depend on what his administra­tion lays greater emphasis on—solid, developmen­t-oriented measures or political, tokenist steps. Disclaimer: The author was part of a media team visiting Tripura. The trip was sponsored by the state government.

 ??  ?? Tripura Chief Minister Biplab Kumar Deb
Tripura Chief Minister Biplab Kumar Deb

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