Toronto Star

The cabinet minister who honoured a lynch mob

- JEFFREY GETTLEMAN AND HARI KUMAR

Jayant Sinha is a Celtics fan. He graduated from Harvard. He worked for McKinsey.

Born and raised in India but minted in the United States, he found wealth and success in the Boston area. His American friends say his politics were moderate, maybe even progressiv­e. Then he returned to India. He ditched the suits he had worn as a partner at McKinsey & Co., an elite management consulting firm, in favour of traditiona­l Indian kurtas. He joined the governing Hindu rights political party and became a member of parliament and then a minister, leading Hindu parades and showering worshipper­s with flower petals from a helicopter.

This month, he also feted and garlanded eight murderers who were part of a Hindu lynch mob that authoritie­s said beat an unarmed and terrified Muslim man to death. His embrace of the convicted killers has become the political stunt that Indians can’t stop talking about.

Across the country, the images of Sinha draping wreaths of marigolds around the men’s necks have started a conversati­on about whether the state of Indian politics has become so poisoned by sectarian hatred and extremism that even an ostensibly worldly and successful politician can’t resist its pull.

It has become the year of the lynch mob in India. Dozens of people have been beaten to death, often in cold blood, by crowds of bored young men who alternate between booting someone in the head and taking a selfie. Suggestion­s of whom to kill rip so fast through villages via social media, especially WhatsApp, that no one seems able to stop them.

In this atmosphere, some conclude that Sinha might actually win votes for his manoeuvre.

“He’ll get some benefit,” said Rajiv Kumar, a homeopathi­c medicine salesman and one of Sinha’s constituen­ts. “I don’t agree with what he did; it’s only going to encourage more lynching. But Jayant was concerned his party would dump him, and this will help.”

Sinha says he now feels horrible about garlanding the convicts.

“In a highly polarized environmen­t, this became a spark and I regret giving the spark,” he said in an interview. “I wouldn’t do it again.'’

For decades, a centre-leftist political organizati­on, the Indian National Congress, dominated politics.

But four years ago, India’s political landscape was wiped clean. The Bharatiya Janata Party, with its roots in Hindu supremacy, won overwhelmi­ngly, and the party’s top figure, Narendra Modi, became prime minister. Modi promised to stoke India’s go-go economy, and he recruited Sinha, who had built a small fortune in the United States as a consultant and hedge fund manager, to help him.

It didn’t hurt that Sinha’s father was a senior member of the Indian parliament and the Bharatiya Janata Party. With Modi’s backing, Sinha easily won the election to take over his father’s seat. He was made a finance minister and then a minister for civil aviation, a post he still holds.

The territory his life spans is dramatic. Sinha, 55, owns abeautiful home in Chestnut Hill, a posh enclave outside Boston, where his wife still lives. He has degrees from some of the world’s best universiti­es, including the Indian Institute of Technology in New Delhi and Harvard Business School.

But the area he represents, centred in the bushy town of Hazaribagh (which means “a thousand gardens”) is poor, troubled and socially conservati­ve. Lying more than 800 kilometres east of New Delhi in the state of Jharkhand, it is home to coal mines, Maoist rebels and land-grabbing gangs.

Like so much of India today, Hazaribagh is more polarized between majority Hindus and minority Muslims than it has been in a long time.

Many people here support Hindu vigilante groups, especially the so-called cow protectors who hunt down those who break Hinduism’s taboo against killing cows.

It was one such vigilante group that swarmed Alimuddin Ansari, a Muslim trader, in Sinha’s constituen­cy last year. A rumour spread that Ansari was transporti­ng beef, and a mob dragged him out of his van and beat him. Police officers eventually pulled him away, but he died a few hours later from internal injuries, officials said. His family is now broke. “My life is doomed,” said Mariam Khatoon, his widow. She sat in a plastic chair in a ramshackle house, the concrete foundation cracking beneath her feet.

From cellphone footage — the culprits gleefully shot pictures of themselves hitting Ansari — investigat­ors identified 12 culprits and a court sentenced all of them except a juvenile to life in prison.

But another court recently granted an appeal, saying the evidence was flimsy. And where did eight of the men go the moment they were granted bail?

Sinha’s house, where he was waiting with plates of sweets and wreaths of marigolds.

Sinha said he was helping the convicts because there was “no evidence” that they killed Ansari. He has actively supported their legal defence, paying several hundred dollars to one of the defence lawyers and connecting this lawyer to an experience­d attorney friend to craft a persuasive appeal.

He celebrated their release from jail with sweets and flowers, he said, to show how happy he was that they “got a fresh lease on life.”

“In a highly polarized environmen­t, this became a spark and I regret giving the spark. I wouldn’t do it again.” JAYANT SINHA ON PRAISING LYNCH MOB

 ?? SAURABH DAS PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mariam Khatoon, the widow of Alimuddin Ansari, a Muslim trader beaten to death by a mob.
SAURABH DAS PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Mariam Khatoon, the widow of Alimuddin Ansari, a Muslim trader beaten to death by a mob.
 ??  ?? A political poster features an image of Hindu politician Jayant Sinha, who draped garlands on eight men convicted of Ansari’s death.
A political poster features an image of Hindu politician Jayant Sinha, who draped garlands on eight men convicted of Ansari’s death.

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