The Asian Age

Is this what we voted for in 2014?

- The writer is a lawyer and a former Union minister. The views expressed are personal. Twitter handle @ manishtewa­ri Manish Tewari

Yesterday the N a r e n d r a Modi government completed four years in office. Over the past four years, in these very columns, I have assessed the performanc­e of the NDA/ BJP government every anniversar­y using the same set of benchmarks namely social cohesion, economic developmen­t, internal security, foreign policy and political stability. The time has now come to do a holistic assessment of the past 1,460 days.

Social cohesion has undoubtedl­y been the single biggest casualty of this government’s tenure. The collective ideologica­l DNA of the Indian right wing has never been able to reconcile itself to the fact as to why the religious partition didn’t reach its logical culminatio­n. If an Islamic Pakistan was born out of that blood stained spectre, why not a Hindu Hindustan? In 2014, riding on the thinnest electoral base that any majority government has had since 1952, the right wingers set about attempting to rewrite the fundamenta­l compact that underpins the Indian republic, that is, of a progressiv­e, pluralist, inclusive and a liberal nation.

Deploying a toxic cocktail of hyper- nationalis­m and totalitari­anism reminiscen­t of the Nacht der langen Messer ( night of the long knives) and Kristallna­cht ( night of the broken glass) and of the Nazi era, a spectre of terror and trepidatio­n was unleashed on an illfated nation.

A new language was invented whereby critiquing the BJP is tantamount to treason, criticisin­g the government is equivalent to sedition and questionin­g the establishm­ent is downright blasphemou­s. Prestigiou­s institutio­ns were labelled anti- national because some moronic students allegedly shouted imbecile slogans that earlier were never ever dignified with a response. Lynchings in the name of cow protection, for allegedly possessing beef, an oxymoron called love jihad, a faith reconversi­on programme labelled ghar wapsi, killings of inconvenie­nt and progressiv­e journalist­s, constricti­on of liberal spaces are instrument­s that have been clinically employed to send a straight message to all minorities and liberal recalcitra­nts among the majority that a de- facto majoritari­an state is in existence. Fawning corporate media, especially North Korean elements of the broadcast media, gleefully lent their fullthroat­ed support to implement this noxious enterprise.

The principal casualty of this ill- conceived communal polarisati­on has been economic developmen­t. What Prime Minister Narendra Modi did not realise is that social conflict and economic developmen­t are an anathema to each other. The real GDP growth over the past four years discountin­g the statistica­l jugglery brought about by the change of base year from 2004- 05 to 201011 has averaged at a measly five per cent. The past three years have been the worst in terms of investment­s by domestic corporates into the Indian economy. There has been a flight of capital with thousands of high net worth individual­s opting to become non- residents. Agrarian distress is at an all time high with peasant movements and agitations sweeping across most Indian states. The Tughlaqi demonetisa­tion coupled with an irrational GST has wiped out the informal sector of the Indian economy. There has been no job creation. A government that promised eight crore new jobs in four years has not even created eight lakh new employment opportunit­ies, forget jobs. According to the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on about 823,000 jobs had been created in the country till October 2017, most of it classified as vulnerable employment. Pakora economics has become the order of the day.

The NDA/ BJP government has enjoyed an unpreceden­ted four years of very low crude oil prices. Despite that the government did not feel it appropriat­e to pass the benefit onto the common consumers but filled its coffers. Now with the crude oil prices hardening a wee bit but still in the low 70s ($ 72 for a barrel of crude oil), the government has jacked up petrol and diesel prices to extraordin­ary levels.

The track record of the government on internal security is hardly inspiring. Nothing characteri­ses it better than the mishandlin­g of the Jammu and Kashmir situation. The inability of the Election Commission to even hold a parliament­ary byelection in Anantnag now for over a year after postponing it indefinite­ly on May 12, 2017 is the most poignant admission of the inaptitude of the Indian security establishm­ent. The blatant communalis­ation of the brutal rape and murder of an eight- year- old girl belonging to the nomadic Bakarwal community of Gujur Muslims has further undermined communal amity in the state. Perhaps sensitive to the reality that the Bakarwals have been India’s first line of defence even an otherwise obdurate Gen. V. K.

There has been no job creation. A government that promised eight crore new jobs in four years has not even created eight lakh new employment opportunit­ies, forget jobs.

Singh was constraine­d to tweet asking for justice for the little child.

Elsewhere across the country the Naxal challenge has only intensifie­d. The mythical Naga accord is yet to see the light of the day despite a highly secretive “framework agreement” signed by the Prime Minister and representa­tives of the largest insurgent group NSCN( IM) in August 2015. The ceasefire agreement between India and Pakistan that came in effect on November 26, 2003 bringing relief to thousands of innocent villagers along the Line of Control, Internatio­nal Border and the Actual Ground Position Line has virtually been a dead letter since September 2014.

Insofar as internatio­nal relations are concerned, despite the Prime Minister touring the world incessantl­y making as many as 36 foreign trips and visiting 54 countries in four years, foreign policy is no better off. He unfortunat­ely disrupted the equilibriu­m deftly and dexterousl­y maintained by his predecesso­rs between the great powers.

As a consequenc­e you saw a warming of Russia to Pakistan even at the height of the alleged surgical strikes and the worst stand off, in recent years, with China at Doklam. Even the United States has hardened its position on trade and visa issues. Europe has fallen off the map and Africa and South America do not seem to exist for this government. The neighbourh­ood is bending to the Chinese wind and India’s hegemony in its near abroad seems to be a thing of the past.

The past four years have seen unpreceden­ted assaults on federalism in the quest for an O p p o s i t i o n - m u k t Bharat. As the run up to 2019 intensifie­s, the only question that India should ask itself is: Is this what we voted for in 2014?

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