The Sunday Guardian

Kerala turns hotbed of CpM-bJp aniMosity

CPM general secretary Sitaram Yechury has offered his party’s readiness to open a direct dialogue with RSS’ Mohan Bhagwat.

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What happened in Thiruvanan­thapuram last week was in the offing for quite some time now. As is the case with Kannur, the state capital too has become a hotbed of animosity between the two parties. It is a cause for worry that the state administra­tion and the police ignored the vibes sent out by the cadres. It is here that the BJP’s claim of “state sponsorshi­p” of organised violence by CPM gains credence. Hence the party’s finger of accusation goes straight to Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, who is also handling the home portfolio. Setting this aside, there have been undercurre­nts in this fight for territoria­l supremacy after the 2014 general elections, when BJP’s veteran O. Rajagopal came second, pushing the Left Democratic Front to third position. This was followed by Rajagopal’s victory in the Assembly elections from nearby Nemam constituen­cy, enabling the BJP to open its account in the state for the first time after its formation in 1956. In between the party had also come second, contrary to its own expectatio­ns, in the local elections, winning 35 wards in the 100-member municipal corporatio­n. This had considerab­ly curtailed the arbitrary functionin­g of the Left-controlled body. All these hurt the CPM most, which has, by its own admission, taken up cudgels against the “fascist” party. But somewhere down the line, a fight over ideology has blurred into one of sheer muscle power. The end result—unwanted bloodshed, and spewing of hatred. As leaders of both parties hugged and shook hands at so-called peace meets held at regular intervals, cadres drew daggers on the streets, killing each other, for what nobody knew.

On every occasion, as is also the case in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha, both sides reel out statistics without fail and vow in the name of tolerance in a democratic set-up. If it was a Prahlad Joshi on one side, it will be a Karunakara­n on the other. But the ground reality is that the number of “martyrs” and “balidanis” keeps mounting. And the leadership openly collects funds and buckets of sympathy in the name of “orphaned” families. As Sreenivasa­n, a popular Malayalam film actor very candidly put it some time ago: “No dead bodies reach any of the leaders’ houses.” Their children and brothers are very much in the safe zones; none of their women is widowed or they have not lost their children. The responsibi­lity for this mindless violence squarely rests on the doorsteps of the leaders of both the political spectrum. Who will stop them from inciting cadres every now and then to fulfil their political ends? Not long ago the CPM state secretary got away with an open call for violence when he told his partymen to “settle scores then and there”. The challenge was immediatel­y taken up by one of the fiery leaders of the BJP, who said “murder will be met with murder”. No police of Pinarayi Vijayan dared to book them. But each time a murder happens, leaders belonging to both parties vehemently deny any involvemen­t of their cadre in the heinous crime. This is very much the case with the CPM leadership, which later makes it a point to openly greet the accused with red garlands and arranges legal support for them, not to speak of taking care of their families with financial support. A corpus fund has been set up in the party for this alone. Some claim same is the case with BJP.

So what should one read about the offer for talks by Yechury, or, for that matter, Rajagopala­n sitting across the table with Pinarayi Vijayan in Kerala, talking of peace? Isn’t it admission enough that their cadres are indeed involved in the murders? Yes, it is. But sadly as long the CPM leadership visits only the houses of slain CPM workers or the BJP leadership visits the houses of only BJP/RSS workers, the message of peace will fail to cut across.

Somewhere down the line, a fight over ideology has blurred into one of sheer muscle power. As leaders of both parties hugged and shook hands at so-called peace meets held at regular intervals, cadres drew daggers on the streets, killing each other, for what nobody knew.

 ?? IANS ?? RSS joint general secretary, Dattatreya Hosabale addresses a press conference regarding a courtmonit­ored probe into the killing of RSS’ Kerala workers, on Friday,in New Delhi.
IANS RSS joint general secretary, Dattatreya Hosabale addresses a press conference regarding a courtmonit­ored probe into the killing of RSS’ Kerala workers, on Friday,in New Delhi.

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