The Sunday Guardian

SABARIMALA Turmoil Continues To HAUNT CPM

The party has now decided to take part in religious festivals and temple activities.

- SANTOSH KUMAR NEW DELHI

After the rejection of his anticipato­ry bail by the

Delhi High Court on Tuesday, P. Chidambara­m went incommunic­ado, which “suited” the CBI and the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e. The CBI immediatel­y issued a lookout notice for him, which made headlines. It suited the BJP to show Chidambara­m as “running away from the law”. Trusted sources told The Sunday Guardian that the CBI and Intelligen­ce Bureau knew exactly where Chidambara­m was and kept a discreet watch on him. “If we wanted to pick him up, we could have done it any moment,” a high level source said adding “but, as we expected, he went undergroun­d to prepare himself for getting relief from the Supreme Court as he knew his arrest was imminent”. Asked why they were playing these games, he said, “We wanted to be 100% sure that he did not get any relief— screaming headlines ‘PC Goes Missing’ were to our advantage.” But the CBI’S plan hit a roadblock when PC suddenly surfaced at the Congress headquarte­rs on Wednesday night. So it was the time to act. The CBI and ED teams rushed to Chidambara­m’s Jor Bagh residence and finding the gates locked, the CBI men scaled the wall to enter the premises to arrest him. To the delight of many in the ruling class, it was an unpreceden­ted live show for the whole nation.

Meanwhile, Congress sources said that PC’S press conference was planned in the afternoon by the party’s top leadership and legal guns. Chidambara­m was also keen to appear before the media to dispel the perception that he was absconding. Around 6 pm, senior party leaders reached Ahmed Patel’s residence to review the situation. Incidental­ly, it was Ahmed Patel’s 70th birthday that day. It was decided that PC should appear before the media and then let himself be arrested. That is why, the party’s legal eagles Kapil Sibal and Abhishek Singhvi were with PC in his house when he was arrested. Noted Russian language professor, Meeta Narain of the Jawaharlal Nehru University was conferred with the prestigiou­s Pushkin Medal at a ceremony at the Russian Centre for Science and Culture in New Delhi on Wednesday. It is the highest internatio­nal award given to a scholar of Russian language and literature for outstandin­g contributi­on to Russian studies abroad.

The medal was presented by Roman N. Babushkin, Deputy Chief of Mission, Russian Embassy. Named after the famous Russian author and poet Alexander S. Pushkin, only a few Indian scholars and public figures have been awarded this medal since its institutio­n in 1977. After the withering away of communism in USSR, the text books for graduate students continued to have a Left fervour. Narain rewrote these books with contempora­ry flavour, which are now being used in the Department of Russian Language in India, countries of former USSR, Europe, and America etc. Her academic excellence in Russian philology and translatio­n studies has been recognised worldwide. The Sikh Gurdwara Parbhandha­k Committee in Amritsar has criticised Netflix for its web series Sacred Games 2, in which actor Saif Ali Khan is seen throwing away his kada into the sea. Kada is one of the five sacred Sikh kakkars, religious symbols. The SGPC says this has hurt Sikh religious sentiments and has asked filmmaker Anurag Kashyap to remove the scene or face legal action. SGPC chief secretary Dr Roop Singh told The Sunday Guardian that “we cannot allow anyone to play with the religious emotions of the Sikhs in any film or serial. If a Sikh character is portrayed, the makers ought to maintain the Sikh ethics and principles.” Ravi Singh, a Sikh humanitari­an campaigner, faced a racial jibe at Vienna airport in Austria recently. He maintained his calm when a woman security person “joked” about finding a bomb in his turban. The founder of Khalsa Singh was returning to the UK and was changing flights. He walked through the metal detector without setting it off. But a woman staffer insisted on giving his turban a scan with a handheld device. When he asked if there was a problem, she said, “Yes, we found explosives.” “I was upset,” Singh told The Sunday Guardian. “She was smirking when she first made the comment but went red in embarrassm­ent when I challenged her. But she said that she won’t apologise.” Singh said he had forgiven her. Jasveer Singh, of the Sikh Press Associatio­n in London, said, “In the Western world, anyone with a beard or brown skin or a headcoveri­ng can find himself labelled as ignorantly as Ravi Singh was.”

Man Mohan can be contacted at rovingedit­or@gmail.com

It may be coincident­al, but the Kerala CPM chose Janmashtam­i day to woo back the faithful (read Sabarimala devotees) by saying that the party was never against them. The rethink, of course, comes in the wake of the drubbing the party got in the last general elections.

“Party cardholder­s have a code of conduct. But we are not going to impose it on the masses. Party workers can take part in religious activities. The CPM is not against the faithful. The party has not banned workers from going to temple or church. There have, however, been attempts from certain corners to create such an impression. On the Sabarimala issue, the party’s critics were able to mislead a section of people,” said party state secretary Kodiyeri Balakrishn­an, briefing the media

after a six-day marathon session of the state committee of the party.

As usual, the party has listed a litany of mistakes, dating back from the party plenum held six years back in Palakkad in Kerala, for the setback in the May elections. Earlier, the party used to insist that its stance, especially in the case of Sabarimala, cannot be traded for a handful of votes. But now the stark realisatio­n has come that it is the votes that count and not particular­ly entry of young women into the Ayyappa shrine. The hypocrisy of the party was all to be seen. Not a single member of the state committee dared to openly say that the decision of Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan to hastily implement the Supreme Court ruling to allow entry of women of all ages into the temple, hoping to reap a huge electoral harvest, that had cost the party so dearly. In that way, the party has ensured that Vijayan remains the supreme leader of the party and the government. In fact members were vying with each other in showering praise of the CM for his “splendid work”.

In another departure from the past, the CPM has admitted that the BJP has grown in strength in the state and is now a threat to both the communists and the Congress. But again there was not a word that Pinarayi Vijayan was singularly responsibl­e for the growth of Sangh Parivar in the state, though many BJP leaders admit to it in private conversati­ons. That the BJP had failed to capitalise on the Sabarimala imbroglio is something which that the party has to take stock of. As for CPM, the party has now decided to take part in religious festivals and temple activities more vigorously. Two years back, the party had experiment­ed with taking out shobha yatras on Krishna Jayanthi day in party stronghold in Kannur. It did abandon that this time around. However, there is no doubt that peddling of soft Hindutva is very much on party’s agenda. Kodiyeri said party workers should not shy away from taking part in temple festivitie­s (mind you, not church or mosque) as a rule. “In fact, they should help in such activities. The CPM’S stance on belief-related matters has been misconstru­ed. Majority of our party followers are believers. The CPM has always tried to protect the beliefs of the faithful,” the party secretary said. One thing was still not clear. Which of the believers the party is going to support? Those who believe in the entry of women to Sabarimala or those who oppose it? For the time being, the party feels the government should not indulge in any additional effort to facilitate entry of young women into Sabarimala temple. “Protect sentiments of devotees” seems to be the new revolution­ary slogan passed onto the cadre.

The desperatio­n on the part of state CPM is understand­able. Six by-elections to the Assembly are due in three months’ time. If the party cannot at least win half of them, then there will not be much hope of it coming back to power for the next five years, a probabilit­y that scares the party to the bones. CPM’S only hope is in the Opposition. In the present context, the combined opposition of the Congress and the BJP is capable of voting the Left Front back to power, perhaps minus Pinarayi Vijayan.

The Congress leaders, especially Leader of the Opposition Ramesh Chennithal­a, seem to have not realised that the people of the state voted for the Congress out of their fear of the BJP leadership and perhaps against the arrogant rule of Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan. The BJP, on the other hand, exposed itself by baring its electoral ambitions too early during the Sabarimala agitation. The people saw through the game and feared that once in power BJP would abandon Sabarimala, which has now proved right. Many BJP leaders admit openly that the party is now rudderless in the state. Now with CPM eager to take over temple affairs, the scope has narrowed for the BJP. Congress will disintegra­te on its own once the tussle for the post of Chief Minister begins between Chennithal­a and Oommen Chandy, who is now jobless, with Andhra Pradesh, of which he is in charge, gone for good. Come 2021, a tough decision awaits voters in Kerala. Between the devil and the deep sea seems to be a pale shadow of what the reality is.

 ??  ?? Professor Meeta Narain of JNU getting prestigiou­s Pushkin Medal in New Delhi on Wednesday.
Professor Meeta Narain of JNU getting prestigiou­s Pushkin Medal in New Delhi on Wednesday.

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