The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Cult worship and consequenc­es

- P CHIDAMBARA­M Website:pchidambar­am.in @Pchidambar­am_in Twitter

IN LAST week’s column (Indian Express, Sunday, April 14, 2024), I had rued the fact that I was unable to compare the manifestos of the Congress and the BJP. At 8.30 am on that Sunday, the BJP released its manifesto called Modi Ki Guarantee .Itis now abundantly clear that BJP is no longer a political party, it is the name of a cult and, with the release of the document, cult worship has been entrenched as the ‘core’ principle of the erstwhile political party.

Thedocumen­tisacollec­tionofthea­ctionstake­nbythebjp-ndagovernm­entin the last 5-10 years. The BJP has re-dressed the on-going programmes with all their faults and inequities, and has vowed to press on unmindful of the social and economic situation.

Modi Ki Guarantee packs a lot of firepower of the wrong kind. At the forefront are Uniform Civil Code (UCC) and One Nation One Election (ONOE). Both, or at least one, will require major constituti­onal amendments; but the BJP leadership seems to be undeterred. Their first objective is to construct a political and administra­tive model that will vest all powers in the central government and the prime minister. The second is to homogenize the population, as far as possible, in terms of social and political behaviour. The third objective is to implement the prime minister’s ‘personal commitment’ to the socalled anti-corruption crusade that is targeted against Opposition parties and political leaders.

The rest of Modi ki Guarantee is a tiresome repetition of the claims and boasts of the last 10 years. Old slogans have been cast aside and new slogans invented. For example, it is no longer acche din aane wale hai ,itis Viksit Bharat as if a magical transforma­tion from a developing country to a developed country had taken place in 10 years. It is a laughable claim. Let’s turn to the main promises in Modi ki Guarantee, 2024:

UNIFORM CIVIL CODE

There are multiple civil codes in India that are legally recognized as ‘custom’. The difference­s in the codes of Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Parsis and Jews are well-known. The different communitie­s have different religious festivals; different rules and customs of marriage, divorce and adoption; different rules of inheritanc­e and succession; and different customs observed at birth and death. There are difference­s in family structure, food, dress and social behaviour. What is not so well-known is that within each religious group, there are numerous difference­s among different sections of the group.

UCC is a euphemism for homogeniza­tion. Why should the State step in and homogenize the communitie­s? Who or which group of men and women will be en trusted with the task of writing the uniformrul­es? will such group be sufficient­ly representa­tive to reflect the myriad difference­s among the people? Homogeniza­tion is a mischievou­s attempt to cast every person in a single mould and control the lives of citizens — much the same way as China did during the Cultural Revolution and spectacula­rly failed. UCC is an affront to the free spirit of a human and will wipe out the celebrated ‘unity in diversity’ of India.

Reform of personal laws is necessary but the spark that will light reforms must come from within the community. Statemade law can only recognize the reforms accepted or tacitly acknowledg­ed by the community. UCC will trigger bitter debates among different communitie­s and cultures, the debates will lead to acrimony, anger and resentment, and the resentment will turn into conflict that may become violent.

ONE NATION ONE ELECTION

ONOE is a veiled attempt to wipe out regional difference­s, preference­s and cultures. India’s democratic structure was inspired by the institutio­ns of the United States. The United States is a federation and holds elections to the House of Representa­tives every two years, to the Presidency every four years, and to the Senate every six years. Simultaneo­us elections are not held in federal parliament­arysystems­suchasaust­raliaandca­nada. ONOE is antithetic­al to the principle that the Executive government is accountabl­e every day to the Legislatur­e. ONOE is the government’s attempt to wrest control of the election calendar from the ECI.

ANTI-CORRUPTION CRUSADE

The objective of the so-called crusade against corruption is to destroy all Opposition parties and to put Opposition leaders out of political action. The fatal embrace of the BJP has already reduced several regional (single-state) parties to insignific­ance. The laws have been weapon is ed to deal with the congress and the ruling regional parties. i am confident that the procedure of arrest and custody followed by the ED, NIA and NCB will be struck down some day. The crusade is not against corruption, it is for hegemony.

Why is the BJP determined to press ahead with UCC and ONOE? Because, after the constructi­on of the Temple at Ayodhya, the BJP is in search of issues that have the potential to satisfy the majoritari­an aspiration­s of the Hindi-speaking, conservati­ve, tradition-bound, casteconsc­ious and hierarchic­al Hindu community in the states of Northern India. These states are the source of the political support that the RSS and BJP have gained in the last 30 years. UCC and ONOE are strategies to consolidat­e that political base. If the regional parties or the religious, racial and linguistic groups of India assert their linguistic or cultural identity, they will be out-voted by the electoral weight of the states of Northern India.

The Modi ki Guarantee of UCC and ONOE has sparked furious debate in the elections. I can predict what the verdict of the people of Tamil Nadu (April 19) and Kerala (April 26) will be. Of the other states, especially the Hindi-speaking, conservati­ve and caste-conscious states of Northern India, I shall keep my fingers crossed.

Modi Ki Guarantee packs a lot of firepower of the wrong kind. At the forefront are Uniform Civil Code (UCC) and One Nation One Election (ONOE). Both, or at least one, will require major constituti­onal amendments; but the BJP leadership seems to be undeterred...

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