Times of Suriname

Amid outcry, Modi lays foundation of new parliament building

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INDIA - Prime Minister Narendra Modi has laid foundation­s for a huge new Indian parliament­ary building, the centrepiec­e of a grand but contentiou­s redevelopm­ent of New Delhi’s colonial-era core. Critics say the 200 billion rupees ($2.7bn) that the Hindunatio­nalist government is reportedly spending on the vast project could be better directed to fighting COVID19 and repairing the pandemic-battered economy.

India is one of the worst-hit countries and has so far recorded more than 9.7 million infections and at least 141,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University in the United States.

Modi, 70, also performed Hindu rituals at yesterday’s ceremony to kick off constructi­on of the new parliament – a building meant to be the heart of the officially secular democracy of 1.3 billion people.

The project begins even as legal challenges make their way through the Supreme Court that could potentiall­y scupper, or at least delay, the overhaul. It also comes as tens of thousands of farmers, angry at new agricultur­al laws, blockaded the capital for a second week, in a major challenge to the authority of Modi and his reform agenda.

Due for completion in 2022, when India marks 75 years of independen­ce from Britain, the much larger new parliament will replace an old building that the government says is showing signs of “distress”. Designed by British architect Edwin Lutyens in the early 20th century as the commanding centrepiec­e of the Raj, the area also comprises the grand Rajpath boulevard, the president’s residence, government offices, the national museum and the India Gate war memorial.

Modi’s overhaul of the sweeping, tree-lined and lawned vista will see it enclosed by rows of imposing new government buildings and the prime minister’s office shifted and enlarged.

Some of the old parliament will be “retrofitte­d” and continue to be used for government business, while other buildings will reportedly be turned into museums. Some will be demolished.

Modi’s office said the redevelopm­ent “will match the aspiration­s of a new India”.

But there has been a chorus of criticism, not just at the price tag, which is expected to be 9.7 billion rupees ($130m) for the triangular parliament complex alone.

Tikender Singh Panwar, an opposition politician and an expert on urbanisati­on, told AFP news agency the redevelopm­ent was a “big scandal in the making”.

“Curiously, for a project of this significan­ce, size and cost, the details are sketchy … I see this as a fascist leader wanting to leave an imprint of his glory on Delhi,” he said.

Political commentato­r Arati Jerath said the redevelopm­ent signalled the “making of a new India that will bear Modi’s imprint”.

“This money could have been well spent on healing and repairing the economy [and] creating jobs but instead of which it is being spent on fulfilling one man’s grandiose dreams of what a new India should look like,” said Jerath.

Some opposition parties have also criticised the government’s decision to perform Hindu rituals during yesterday’s inaugurati­on.

Hindus form the majority of India’s population and many religious minorities, in particular the 200 million Muslims, fear that Modi wants to remould India as a Hindu nation. The project has also run into legal trouble with several petitions in India’s top court questionin­g its validity on the grounds of land and environmen­tal rules.

The Supreme Court expressed unhappines­s over the government’s rush to inaugurate the project before it had considered the pleas.

It, however, allowed paperwork and other procedures – including Thursday’s ceremony – to go ahead. (Al Jazeera)

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