Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

India’s president: good on toilets and cooking, but not on freedom

- Nicholas Kristof Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.

With approval ratings at home of about 78%, India’s Narendra Modi is far and away the most popular major leader in the world today, according to Morning Consult. With the opposition in disarray, he is expected to win a third term as prime minister in next year’s elections.

All over the Indian capital these days loom posters of Modi, presenting him as the great modernizin­g prime minister pulling India forward. But those posters also hint at the opposite: an emerging personalit­y cult and an authoritar­ian streak that is dragging India backward.

While Modi polls extremely well, many worldly Indians are aghast that he has made India less secular and tolerant, creating what some argue is a Jim Crow Hindu nationalis­m that marginaliz­es religious minorities, particular­ly Muslims. And it’s not just marginaliz­ation: Muslims are periodical­ly accused of slaughteri­ng cows, which are sacred to Hindus, and lynched. In a typical case this month, a mob in Bihar state accused a Muslim of carrying beef and beat him to death.

Modi has presided over a crackdown on news organizati­ons, and Indians have been repeatedly arrested for their tweets. Sweden’s V-Dem Institute, in a new report, listed India not as a democracy but as an “electoral autocracy” ranking 108th among 179 countries in its electoral democracy index.

“It’s very scary what’s happening,” said Bunker Roy, founder of Barefoot College, one of India’s most celebrated rural developmen­t initiative­s. “I think we’re going into authoritar­ianism.”

India used to be a correspond­ent’s dream, echoing with the sound and fury of strongly held opinions. But today people often clam up when I ask about Modi.

Reporters Without Borders now ranks India a dismal 150th in press freedom among 180 countries worldwide. “We work under a cloud of fear,” Anuradha Bhasin, editor of The Kashmir Times, wrote in a brave essay in The New York Times this month.

One lesson of Asia is that religious extremism is more perilous than authoritar­ianism. Economies can thrive under — see the history of South Korea, Taiwan and China — but religious extremism can gain momentum, create fissures and suck oxygen from education and economic management.

Pakistan went through its own drift to religious zealotry and offers a cautionary tale. Pakistan was founded by a not particular­ly observant Muslim, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who drank alcohol and appointed a member of the (now persecuted) Ahmadi religious minority to be the country’s first foreign minister. But then, in 1977, Gen. Mohammad Zia ul-Haq seized power and engineered a wave of conservati­ve Muslim nationalis­m that still tears Pakistan apart.

That would be my nightmare for India, because the fires of religious extremism and grievance are easier to ignite than extinguish. But I honestly don’t think India will tumble that far. I agree with Urmi Basu, a civil society leader from Kolkata, that Indian democracy will get through this, just as it survived a retreat from democracy under Indira Gandhi. India still has a federal system that gives power to the states, and that constrains Modi.

To my eye, Modi’s extraordin­ary popularity rests not just on demagogy, but also on real accomplish­ments (plus, he’s very good at claiming credit for accomplish­ments that are less real).

Let’s talk toilets. Millions of Indians still practice open defecation, which spreads disease and parasites. A national survey in 2020-21 was released this month and found that 21% of rural households still had no access to any toilet — but that’s a significan­t improvemen­t from almost 60% having no access in 2012. Modi has championed an end to open defecation, which may seem undignifie­d for a politician, but it saves lives.

Modi has also promoted the use of gas cylinders for cooking, rather than burning sticks and cow dung, which smoke up kitchens to dangerous levels. This hugely affects impoverish­ed women, for some 600,000 Indians die annually from this indoor air pollution.

Constructi­on of ports and roads has improved, and Modi has pushed a digital identifica­tion and payment system that brings villagers into the banking system. Modi isn’t the primary reason for this technologi­cal marvel, but he presided over its expansion.

“Even his detractors admit he is very good at economic developmen­t and infrastruc­ture projects,” said Alyssa Ayres, an India scholar and dean at George Washington University. Ayres said that during Modi’s first years as prime minister, he was less polarizing and leaned in on developmen­t.

More recently, the authoritar­ian streak has become more prominent.

Modi is now to all of India what he was for many years as the boss of the state of Gujarat. There, he was a pro-business leader who oversaw strong economic growth, but his record was badly damaged by a pogrom against Muslims on his watch in 2002; there is disagreeme­nt about his degree of complicity, but he certainly mismanaged it. He also undermined pillars of civil society like the Self-Employed Women’s Associatio­n.

Looking ahead, what I fear is that the authoritar­ian, Hindu nationalis­t Modi is eclipsing the economy-boosting, toilet-building Modi. To imagine a worst case, just look next door at the sad shambles of today’s Pakistan.

 ?? India’s Press Informatio­n Bureau via AP ?? Narendra Modi
India’s Press Informatio­n Bureau via AP Narendra Modi

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