The Sunday Guardian

The burial of linguistic states

The UPA government made Telangana the last item on its five-year agenda because it wanted electoral benefits without taking any responsibi­lity for the consequenc­es.

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There will be a 30th state in the Union of India. The 29th, Telangana, is not the last post in the reorganisa­tion of India’s internal map, set in motion, ironically, in 1952 by a fast-unto-death undertaken by a Gandhian called Potti Sreeramulu for the creation of Andhra Pradesh, a merger of Telugu-speaking districts of Madras province with Hyderabad, the state ruled by the Nizam. The concept of states carved along the dotted lines of language, as opposed to existing “admin- istrative convenienc­e”, was formally confirmed in 1955 by the States Reorganisa­tion Commission headed by Sayyid Fazl Ali. The emotional strength of regional identity prevailed over the requiremen­ts of governance.

Heaven forbid that the next state should be seeded in the poisons that have dripped across Andhra during the labour pangs of Telangana. As a tired and morally bankrupt Parliament announced the birth, it seemed that we were not separating a state into two units but partitioni­ng a part of India.

The promises made by the UPA government, and endorsed by BJP, are of little worth. Chandigarh was promised to Punjab as its capital during the bifurcatio­n; nearly five decades later, it is still shared space with Haryana. But at least Punjab and Haryana merge into Chandigarh; Hyderabad, the notional common capital, is distant from Seemandhra. Only a very brave seer will predict the possible malevolent consequenc­es.

The creation of Telangana effectivel­y ends linguistic states as a template. Governance, and economic disparity, will be the new and only rationale. Telangana and Seemandhra speak the same tongue. This has happened before. Uttarakhan­d spoke the same language as Uttar Pradesh, dialect variations apart, and used the same script. But this was an exception. Jharkhand and Chhattisga­rh were created around ethnicity.

Future separation will revolve around economic incompatib­ility, spurred by the charge of bias in developmen­t. When the hurly- burly’s done, when the battle’s lost and won, we need to answer the most basic of questions: is a smaller state any guarantee of good governance?

There is never a single reason for imbalance. Telangana represents the geography of the old Nizamate. Its small, princely elite was far wealthier than competing groups when it joined India in 1948 or became

Future separation will revolve around economic incompatib­ility, spurred by the charge of bias in developmen­t.

Andhra Pradesh in 1956. But this elite displayed a strange, and even arrogant, indolence when offered the opportunit­y to enter a modern economy, with the asset base of inherited wealth. It frittered away advantage instead of using its capital as a means of prosperity for itself as well as for its state. You cannot blame anyone else for such incompeten­ce.

But the problem is not decadence of private capital, but skewered public policy. The primary role of government is to ensure economic growth with justice. Six and a half decades is too long a time to spend in the waiting room of history. The classic democratic model was de- fined by Abraham Lincoln: government of the people, by the people, for the people. When the third pillar wobbles, the edifice collapses.

So will the creation of Telangana ensure economic developmen­t in the new state? The evidence is mixed. Haryana and Punjab both prospered better when apart. More recently, Chhattisga­rh and Madhya Pradesh have flowered from separate beds. Jharkhand, however, has seen wretched, unstable, venal governance ever since it left Bihar. The only expertise of Jharkhand politician­s has been horse- trading, and legislator­s have been all too willing to become horses if the price is right. A Cabinet minister in Jharkhand has just been sacked because he described his own government as the most corrupt ever. Jharkhand is particular­ly relevant, since the rationale for its divorce from Bihar was that its great natural resources would turn it into a wealthy state. That has not happened.

Whenever there is a divorce, or when a brother splits from a joint family, bitterness is almost inevitable. Some good can come of this, if it leads to economic competitiv­eness. The urge to do well most often helps opponents to become better. One is a little apprehensi­ve about Telangana and Seemandhra, however, for the means by which the end was achieved has generated levels of passion and hatred never witnessed before in our country.

The reasons for potential conflict are not merely emotional, and therefore transitory. Water is a life-anddeath matter for agricultur­e, and claims are rarely shaped by reason. A second, immediate side-effect is going to be on Hyderabad and the huge investment­s around its periphery. If amity ebbs, population­s begin to drift, and bitterness escalates. Violence hovers in the air. We do not want another septic wound upon the body of India. The UPA government made Telangana the last item on its five-year agenda because it wanted electoral benefits without taking any responsibi­lity for the consequenc­es. Otherwise the new state could have been created, without all the dangerous drama, two or three years ago. The price will be paid, not just by political parties, but by the nation.

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