Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Indian democracy’s moment of truth

- By Shashi Tharoor (Shashi Tharoor, a former United Nations under-secretary-general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Developmen­t, is an MP for the Indian National Congress. He is the author,

NEW DELHI – With around 968 million people registered to vote, India’s upcoming general election (to be held over several weeks in April and May) will be the largest democratic exercise in human history. Yet hovering over the occasion are questions about the future of Indian democracy itself.

After a decade of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) holding power, the country’s democratic culture and institutio­ns have been substantia­lly eroded. BJP rule has featured frequent threats to dissent and a cultural shift away from pluralism. Civil liberties and press freedoms have visibly come under strain, with the party repressing and intimidati­ng political opponents, student protestors, media organisati­ons, individual journalist­s, and humanright­s organisati­ons.

Among other things, the authoritie­s have targeted and arrested journalist­s and activists on charges of sedition, simply because they covered farmers’ protests or exposed abuses of power. They have pressured socialmedi­a platforms and main-stream newspapers to remove critical content. They have shut down socialmedi­a accounts and internet access in areas where protesters are mobilising. And they have arrested opposition leaders and misused antiterror­ism laws to deny critics’ bail.

Meanwhile, minority rights have been weakened, leading to heightened social and sectarian tensions. By abandoning the commitment to secularism establishe­d by Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first prime minister, and rejecting India’s pluralist legacy in favour of the doctrine of “Hindutva” (which seeks to redefine

India as a Hindu nation), Modi has allowed discrimina­tion against minorities to intensify.

For example, for the first time in India’s history, the 2019 Citizenshi­p Amendment Act introduced religion as a criterion for refugees from neighbouri­ng coun-tries to receive citizenshi­p, explicitly excluding Muslims. This is part of a broader pattern. India’s 200 million Muslims (representi­ng 14% of the population) have consistent­ly been singled out in the ruling party’s targeting of minorities.

Many democratic institutio­ns have also faced significan­t challenges. The government’s efforts to co-opt the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, which investigat­es corruption, have been so successful that the Supreme Court has called the agency a “caged parrot speaking in its master’s voice.” The BJP regularly dangles the threat of a corruption investigat­ion to coerce vulnerable opposition figures to defect to its side. It is no accident that tax audits and investigat­ions by the (appropriat­ely named) Enforcemen­t Directorat­e have almost exclusivel­y targeted opposition leaders and political critics.

Nor has the widely respected Reserve Bank of India been spared. Owing to disputes with the government, two RBI governors have departed prematurel­y, raising concerns about the central bank’s independen­ce. The erosion of federalism is also worrying. Over time, the BJP has increasing­ly centralise­d power and undermined regional ruling parties by commandeer­ing an everlarger share of the country’s tax revenues and installing partisan governors in opposition-ruled states.

Even the Election Commission of India has drawn criticism, with some scholars arguing that it is now an agent of the government. That, of course, raises concerns about the integrity of the electoral process and the ECI’s adherence to the democratic principles of fairness and equity.

Given all these developmen­ts, India no longer stands out as a model democracy. Where once it was admired for its commitment to pluralism, it has since slid down the global democracy rankings. In 2020, it fell from 27th to 53rd in The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit’s Democracy Index, and organisati­ons such as Freedom House and the Varieties of Democracy Institute (V-Dem) have questioned whether it can still be called a democracy at all. V-Dem, for example, describes India as an “electoral autocracy.”

By constantly disparagin­g any disagreeme­nt with the government as “anti-national,” and any criticism of Hindutva as “anti-Hindu,” the BJP has managed to delegitimi­se opposition to its rule. With a large share of the public coming to believe that dissent runs counter to India’s national interest, popular support for repressive measures has grown.

Hence, in the Pew Research Center’s 2023 Global Attitudes Survey, a stunning 85% of Indian respondent­s said that authoritar­ian rule would be good for the country—the highest such response among the 24 countries surveyed. Equally, the share of Indians who believe that it is essential for opposition parties to be able to operate freely was the thirdsmall­est. Modi and the BJP regularly exploit the public’s exasperati­on with democracy to create the image of a decisive and powerful leader who has the nation’s best interests at heart. The implicatio­n is that he should be able to operate freely, without any interferen­ce from a hostile parliament or judiciary.

This democratic backslidin­g is the curtain-raiser to India’s 2024 general election. In their book To Kill a Democracy, Debasish Roy Chowdhury and John Keane describe the BJP’s challenges to the judiciary and increasing constraint­s on press freedom as signs of “Democide.” They offer a comprehens­ive, and very worrying, account of how the country’s democratic governance has steadily been eroded. With its relentless efforts to criminalis­e dissent, undermine free speech, and curb any political opposition, the BJP government represents a grave threat to India’s long-term prospects.

And yet India’s democratic spirit remains resilient. Its citizens are highly engaged in political debates and determined to advocate for their rights. This general election offers a major opportunit­y for nearly a billion Indians to return their country to the path that it proudly followed for nearly threequart­ers of a century.

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