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Modi is an unstoppabl­e force – and that’s India’s great modern tragedy

Demonetisa­tion is an extreme policy of a prime minister who no longer feels constraine­d by his party – or answerable to parliament. Sadly, there is no formidable figure or organisati­on that can take him on, writes Kapil Komireddi

- Kapil Komireddi, an Indian journalist, has written from South Asia, Eastern Europe and the Middle East

Last month, Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, declared that 500- and 1000- rupee notes would cease to be legal tender within hours. His announceme­nt rendered almost 17 trillion rupees worth of cash – in a country where more than 90 per cent of all transactio­ns involve cash – worthless.

The prime minister justified his extreme action as a bitter but necessary remedy for the sweeping affliction of “black money” – wealth amassed through illegal means – and, as if to inoculate the measure from criticism, added a national security codicil: it would also invalidate the vast amounts of counterfei­t currency allegedly channelled into the Indian economy by sponsors of terrorism operating from Pakistan.

Yet no Pakistani could have engineered the wave of misery that has washed over India in the month since Mr Modi’s speech. Demonetisa­tion, unlike any war or calamity in living memory, has exposed people in every corner of India to intense distress. It presumes that every Indian in possession of the banned notes is a criminal. The only precedent for such all-encompassi­ng agony in India’s republican history is the “mass sterilisat­ion” drive pursued by Sanjay Gandhi, the son of prime minister Indira Gandhi, as his mother declared a state of internal emergency, suspended the constituti­on and imposed a horrific spell of dictatorsh­ip between 1975 and 1977. Thousands of men were subjected to forced vasectomie­s as part of Sanjay’s fantastic bid to put an instant curb on India’s population growth; hundreds died in botched operations.

But even then, the terror was restricted to some parts of India.

Today, the pain is distribute­d evenly across the country’s immense land mass. The tales of suffering are harrowing. Farmers in rural India can’t sell their produce. Patients are unable to pay for medicine. People who moved from the decaying countrysid­e to make a living in India’s burgeoning cities – as servants, cooks, cleaners, chauffeurs and constructi­on workers – cannot feed themselves or send money to the families they’ve left behind because they do not have bank accounts and cannot “whiten” their “black” earnings. Even the bank account-holding urban middle classes is desperate. The deadline for depositing the banned notes expires on December 30, and there is roughly one commercial bank branch for every 12,500 Indians.

The queues outside the banks evoke the lines outside the supermarke­ts in Ceausescu’s Romania. Dozens of people have died in the long, tense wait to renew their money. Those who make it to the end discover that the banks, like the stores in communist-era Bucharest, are understock­ed. By some estimates, it may take the presses of the Reserve Bank of India, working non-stop and at full capacity, more than six months to replace the abruptly withdrawn currencies. The original ambitions of the demonetisa­tion scheme – eliminatin­g black money and combating terrorism – have fallen by the wayside. Indians in possession of illicit cash clearly beat the chief aim of demonetisa­tion by finding ingenious ways to deposit their cash; those who could not dumped their cash in landfills, denying the central bank the colossal receipts that Mr Modi had promised it.

Mr Modi, rather than accept the failure of his policy and reverse course, has shifted the goalposts. Demonetisa­tion is no longer about eradicatin­g black money; it is, says Mr Modi, about making India a “cashless” society. Emulating Mao Zedong’s exhortatio­n to the Chinese to make the Great Leap Forward, Mr Modi now urges his compatriot­s to “go digital”. Without a hint of irony, a loyal member of Mr Modi’s cabinet has called the entire exercise India’s own “cultural revolution”. It’s as if the politician hailed only two years ago as the antithesis of out-of-touch elites has completely seceded from the real world and taken up residence in a virtual reality of his own making. This, lest we forget, is a man who continues, in defiance of incontrove­rtible evidence, to insist that demonetisa­tion is a wild success because respondent­s to a survey held exclusivel­y on his personal smart phone app said so.

The docility of Mr Modi’s MPs, many of whom are said to be livid in private, has profound implicatio­ns for the health of Indian democracy. Unlike most Indian political parties, Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party has traditiona­lly been a democratic institutio­n. There is nepotism in the BJP, but the party is not owned by a dynasty. In theory anyone, so long as he or she subscribed to the sectarian ideology of the party, could rise to the very top of the organisati­on. Mr Modi’s own story – from tea hawker to party nominee to prime minister – is the best proof of this.

But under Mr Modi, the BJP is undergoing a kind of Congressis­ation: the process by which it becomes subservien­t to one figure.

The Congress party originated as a forum for Indian voices in British India’s governance before being reshaped by Mahatma Gandhi as the principal platform for resistance to British rule of India. Its organisati­onal reach was so deep – it had a presence in virtually every village of India – that, after independen­ce, it became the default party of government in India. Despite this monopoly on power, Congress remained a deeply democratic institutio­n in the early decades after independen­ce. Even Jawaharlal Nehru, the man who towered above every other Indian, was not above the party. It was Indira Gandhi who presided over the erosion of Congress’s internal democracy and, through the 1970s, transforme­d Asia’s largest political party into a family fief. Her path was paved by the obsequious­ness of her own col-

‘ The BJP’s surrender in parliament to the prime minister has emboldened Mr Modi to treat Indian democracy with contempt

leagues. As the historian Ramachandr­a Guha has observed, the cravenness of Mr Modi’s MPs and cabinet today is eerily reminiscen­t of Congress MPs’ abdication of their duty in the age of Indira. After seizing absolute power in her own party, Mrs Gandhi proceeded to stamp on Indian democracy.

Another bout of dictatorsh­ip may not be possible today – but the BJP’s meek surrender in parliament to the prime minister has emboldened Mr Modi to treat Indian democracy with contempt. Parliament under his reign has become a virtual spectator. Cabinet has morphed into an imperial court, where ministers fawn before Mr Modi rather than challenge him. Demonetisa­tion is the most extreme policy of a prime minister who no longer feels constraine­d by his party – or answerable to parliament.

Mr Modi is not a dictator: but a prime minister who regards his party’s parliament­ary majority as a personal mandate to bypass parliament is far from being a democrat.

India’s tragedy is that there isn’t a figure – or a party – that can take on Mr Modi. The opposition has rarely been more fragmented. But if demonetisa­tion cannot prompt unity among the opposition, what can? And what else is the man who is incapable of acknowledg­ing the catastroph­e before his eyes capable of?

The BJP, always a regressive party, has ceased to be democratic. It is now a pliant vehicle for the dangerous fantasies of one man. In 1977, when Indira Gandhi ended her dictatoria­l rule and called a general election, the opposition at the time – comprising secularist­s and Hindu nationalis­ts, socialists and capitalist­s – united against her. They crushed her.

That collaborat­ion, though it did not last long, ought to be the model for today’s disunited opposition. Resisting Modi: every difference should be subordinat­ed to this patriotic purpose.

 ?? Sanjay Kanojia / AFP ?? Demonetisa­tion in India is no longer about eradicatin­g black money, Mr Modi says, it is about transformi­ng the economy.
Sanjay Kanojia / AFP Demonetisa­tion in India is no longer about eradicatin­g black money, Mr Modi says, it is about transformi­ng the economy.

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