Gulf News

Hardliner a poor choice for India’s most populous state

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Adityanath must be held accountabl­e for any attempts at divisive politics

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The selection of firebrand Hindu priest Yogi Adityanath as the chief minister of India’s most populous state of Uttar Pradesh is a distressin­g sign of majoritari­an politics in the world’s largest democracy and runs completely contrary to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s self-professed goal of developmen­t and growth for all sections of society. With a track record of fanning flames over religious conversion­s, incendiary comments on inter-religious marriages, and criminal charges of rioting, as well as attempted murder and trespassin­g on burial sites, Adityanath is no inclusive leader. Instead, the so-called mascot of Hindutva (or Hinduness) seems to have been carefully installed following the nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party’s landslide win in the assembly elections, with an eye on the future.

Home to 220 million people and contributi­ng a staggering 80 seats to India’s 545-member lower house of parliament, Uttar Pradesh will vote in 2019 along with the rest of India to decide whether Modi deserves a second term. An agenda that puts priority on banning slaughterh­ouses and reviving the controvers­ial Ram temple issue will be damaging enough for the social fabric of the state. The full scrutiny of the world will therefore be on Adityanath and his party — whether they carry out an inclusive agenda focused on grassroots developmen­t or push the state into the cauldron of religious politics.

As the chief minister, it will be Adityanath’s responsibi­lity to ensure that all communitie­s are able to lead a safe and secure life, and his government must be held accountabl­e for any attempts to steer the state in a dangerous direction. Otherwise, India is looking at a turbulent period of polarising politics and that will take it back by decades.

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