Pakistan Today (Lahore)

India: Banana republic in the making

The plan to expand India’s borders to include modern-day Afghanista­n, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Tibet has long been nurtured by the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh. In fact, it is represente­d in a map unveile

- SCROLL Kanak Mani Dixit Kanak Mani Dixit is a writer and publisher in Kathmandu, and founding editor of Himal Southasian magazine.

WHILE the attitudes of their government­s may wax and wane, the people who live in the countries neighbouri­ng India all want friendship with the subcontine­ntal superpower. In this, they see not only historical and cultural continuity but peace, political stability and economic growth for all countries in the region. Sadly, the flourishin­g India so zealously projected by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is not evident from the outside.

India was long the economic and political vanguard of the subcontine­nt, with its robust parliament­ary system, social-democratic policies of growth and equity, independen­t media and critical academia, profession­al bureaucrac­y and security forces, and even-handed governance of a plural demography. But the perspectiv­e and dispassion of cross-border distance show an India that has slipped on the path.

Modi’s brand of governance over the past decade has led to impoverish­ment and social polarisati­on. Even though Hindutva diverts attention, Indians are materially poorer. The teflon prime minister has been able to deflect accountabi­lity for his imperious governance: demonetisa­tion did not take black money off the market but ended up hurting small-holders in all sectors; the Covid-19 lockdown, activated on four-hour notice, forced millions of wage-earners to walk empty highways back to their homes in the poorest regions; activists and Opposition leaders are jailed and harassed even as a compliant media plays cheerleade­r.

India’s wide geography and demographi­c diversity cannot be governed by a centralise­d autocracy, but Modi is bent on undercutti­ng the state government­s. Runaway centralisa­tion ensures that the country’s 1.4 billion people are deprived of representa­tion and agency.

The end result of this stifling will be horrendous; the size and dispersal of the population, the regime’s willingnes­s to deploy coercive means and the use of religion-laced ultra-nationalis­m will ensure that a people’s movement of dissent will take time to coalesce.

India inherited the mantle of historical Hindustan, including all of the British India units and some more. In one stroke in 1947, the ownership of the historical narrative was wrested by the nation-state of India, including everything from yoga to subcontine­ntal cuisine, “India studies” and pre-partition icons from Rabindrana­th Tagore to Mohandas Gandhi.

Indian exceptiona­lism includes the propensity to regard pre-1947 subcontine­ntal history as India’s alone. In the same vein, Indian commentato­rs may pass all manner of judgement on neighbouri­ng societies but remonstrat­e when others choose to comment on India.

Even so, given modern-day India’s democratic character, the rest of South Asia has been open-minded over the decades. The Modi regime is going a step beyond exceptiona­lism: its obvious goal is to restructur­e India into a Hindu majoritari­an state. Additional­ly, there is an intense desire to include all of South Asia in “Akhand Bharat”, a greater unified India.

The plan to expand India’s borders to include modern-day Afghanista­n, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Tibet has long been nurtured by the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh. In fact, it is represente­d in a map unveiled at New Delhi’s new Parliament building.

Amidst the malaise and meandering­s elsewhere, India was a stable, democratic exemplar, the asymmetric­ally large country at the geographic­al centre, from sea to sea, mountain to peninsula. Today, next-door population­s that suffered faith-based fanaticism, cynical populism, military dictatorsh­ips, royal autocracie­s and papier mache democracy watch with consternat­ion as India takes the wrong turn.

The military-mullah nexus in Pakistan challenges democracy even as other regions flinch at the hands of Punjab province. With New Delhi’s abetment, Bangladesh has been transforme­d into a brittle one-party state. Nepalis continue to suffer from Kathmandu-centricism despite the new Constituti­on’s promise to correct age-old marginalis­ations. Bhutan emptied a seventh of its (Nepali-speaking) population through majoritari­an cleansing, while the Maldives’ wild political pendulum continues to swing to the extremes.

The Taliban dictatorsh­ip of Afghanista­n subjugates a proud populace, while Sri Lanka Sinhala dominance continues with few lessons learnt from nearly three decades of internal conflict.

Everyone else has had extended trysts with autocracy, and India has now more or less “arrived” at the same place. It may be hard to notice amidst the fog of the propaganda by the Bharatiya Janata Party’s social media cell, but the poisoned nectar of Hindutva injected into the bloodstrea­m of India has already put a brake on social developmen­t and economic growth.

India-watchers worry about the scale of devastatio­n that will visit the Indian populace if this Rashtriya Swayanseva­k Sangh-bjp brinkmansh­ip continues, a societal shattering that will exact immense human cost not only of the minority Muslim, Dalit, Adivasi and tribal communitie­s but also to the Hindu poor. The Indusganga region experience­d the bloodletti­ng of Partition and the spectre of pogroms looms once again as Modi himself ridicules and baits the Muslim minority.

New Delhi, once the exporter of best practices, is now importing the worst to target opponents in the political parties and civil society, bringing to mind Islamabad’s National Accountabi­lity Bureau and Dhaka’s deployment of police and military intelligen­ce.

India’s federal investigat­ion agencies – including the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, Enforcemen­t Directorat­e, National Investigat­ion Agency and Income Tax Office – are today at the service of Modi. The State Bank of India facilitate­d coverups of the electoral bonds’ fraud, the Supreme Court is weakened by a thousand cuts, while the Election Commission cowers as we speak.

Even as the Gujarati crony capitalist­s with proximity to the one-time chief minister and prime minister rake it in, they run roughshod over environmen­tal considerat­ions and buy up the media. India’s print and television is by now an embarrassm­ent for South Asians everywhere, with editors, publishers, anchors and proprietor­s exhibiting fear and appeasemen­t in equal measure.

Despite royal regimes, military dictatorsh­ips and fundamenta­list hijacks, the spirit of the people from Pakistan to Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal has been resolutely democratic, never letting go of pluralist aspiration­s. For decades, they derived energy from India’s tolerant democracy. But that India has gone comatose, as is evident from New Delhi intellectu­als talking in whispers when pointing to Modi’s ways. Criticisin­g or ridiculing Modi is now akin to being seditious.

The anti-minority plank of the Modi regime emboldens majoritari­an intoleranc­e in neighbouri­ng countries. Nepal’s ruling establishm­ent is opening doors to Hindutva to keep Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Adityanath happy, while Bangladesh­i Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is energised in her suppressio­n of dissent. Radical clergy in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, one Muslim and the other Buddhist, take heart from Hindutva because it justifies their excesses of decades.

The attempt to make Uttarakhan­d a Hindu-exclusive “Dev Bhumi”, or Land of God, is a call for copycat activities eastward in Nepal. The bias against the Islamic faith is reflected most brazenly in India’s Citizenshi­p Amendment Act, which extends citizenshi­p to Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians from Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and Pakistan – excluding only Muslims. New Delhi commentato­rs have not delved enough into Hindutva’s meaningful embrace of the Israeli Prime Minister, the genocidal Benjamin Netanyahu.

All neighbourl­y sensitivit­ies are sacrificed on the altar of the vote bank as far as the BJP and Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh are concerned, no matter that it will ultimately rebound against India’s own economy and society. Examples include the cynical use of the Balakot airstrikes just before the 2019 general elections, Home Minister Amit Shah terming Bangladesh­i Muslims “termites” and the half-year economic blockade slapped on Nepal in 2015 simply because Modi did not appreciate the country’s new Constituti­on.

Modi is not beneath raking up settled boundary matters to support the BJP’S electoral calculatio­ns. To woo Tamil voters before the polls starting in April, he questioned the 1974 border agreement with Sri Lanka on the island of Katchathee­vu.

This lackadaisi­cal attitude raises questions about the sanctity of all agreements entered into by India, including the much-applauded enclave swaps with Bangladesh. New Delhi refuses to sit with Kathmandu on Nepal’s claims to the Kalapani-limpiyadhu­ra-lipulek triangle, while Modi signals his indifferen­ce by posing for dhyan under the Adi Kailash massif in the disputed area.

Modi’s foreign policy is largely made up of kowtowing to the globally powerful while flexing muscle within South Asia. While making tall claims before Indian voters, Modi presents himself meekly before the West and China. He unhesitati­ngly uses Indian assets against friendly neighbours Bangladesh and Nepal – from nominally undercover agencies to financial inducement­s up and down the political and bureaucrat­ic hierarchy.

New Delhi uses a big stick against small neighbours, but it has not escaped the notice of Thimphu, Kathmandu and Male that Modi gives Xi Jinping a wide berth. Despite his bombast, India’s prime minister prefers not to respond to Beijing’s aggressive presence across the long Himalayan frontier, starting with Ladakh. While China has moved into 2,000 sq km claimed by New Delhi, Modi baldly told an all-party meeting that no one had entered Indian territory and not an inch of land had been lost. Home Minister Shah echoes his prime minister.

The surroundin­g peoples, if not their government­s, would wish for India to remain strong and stable and able to stand up to China, not least because a weakened New Delhi will take populist positions against smaller neighbours. But smoke and mirrors cannot hide the asymmetry that has developed vis-a-vis Beijing in artillery, aircraft, drones, tanks, destroyer ships, submarines, missiles, military airfields, electronic warfare, and so on.

Horrified by Beijing’s economic and strategic rise, led by Washington DC, the West has been pampering New Delhi as a counterwei­ght, quite forgetting that the true challenge to China will come from a democratic, plural, prosperous India – and a friend rather than a bully to the next-door countries. The West is yet to understand that India cannot be seen or understood in isolation from the surroundin­g South Asia, where India may be large but this is a region that houses a fourth of the world’s people.

The much-vaunted Indian Foreign Service, once manned by confident ambassador­s, is now mainly a platform for promoting the cult of Modi. With yoga used to project India’s soft power, the non-practicing ambassador or high commission­er who lets his feelings be known will surely see career challenges.

The confidence and chutzpah of Indian diplomats is now a thing of memory, with today’s plenipoten­tiaries either sold out or resigned to their fate. The diplomatic spirit has been further diminished as the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh as a non-state actor is brought on board as part of the government of India’s internatio­nal outreach, even dictating the activities of embassies.

New Delhi media and commentato­rs have made it an industry red-flagging Chinese “incursions” into the various countries of South Asia, ever-ready to spread panic about “string-of-pearls” encircleme­nt, and essentiall­y demanding that neighbouri­ng capitals curtsy before Delhi Durbar. Officialdo­m is not much better: India’s declared policy is not to import Nepali hydropower that carries even a whiff of China, investment or even constructi­on contracts through internatio­nal bidding.

But India’s own economic relationsh­ip with China is unbounded, as its secondbigg­est trade partner after the US, and supplying Indian industry with everything from car and bus batteries to solar energy components and pharmaceut­ical raw material. New Delhi does not want Colombo, Kathmandu or Dhaka to deal with Beijing on their own terms, while it is itself in deep economic embrace.

New Delhi journalist­s and analysts have always read from Ministry of External Affairs handouts when it comes to regional relations, but in the Modi era they are more like MEA spokespers­ons. The worst exporters of the “Ugly Indian” imagery are New Delhi’s satellite TV anchors and commentato­rs, whose crass declaratio­ns generate gasps of disbelief in next-door capitals, such as when they gleefully propagated the falsehood of a “honey trap” laid by a female Chinese ambassador to waylay KP Oli as Nepal’s prime minister.

The political weaponisat­ion of the Hindu faith, promoting a monotheist­ic Ram variant as if that was all that sanatana dharma is and was, is the dangerous path that Modi has artfully promoted, mainly for consumptio­n in the Hindi heartland.

The exclusiona­ry politics of Hindutva takes its cue from nearby Islamic fundamenta­lists, repurposin­g faith to win elections, building conspiracy theories and creating usversus-them schisms between the secure majority and fearful minorities.

Sinhala supremacis­ts do so in Colombo, Bangladesh’s political parties all front their Islamist tilt, but it is Pakistan’s turn to Islamic state under Zia-ul Haq that seems to serve as template for the BJP and the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh.

The Hindu faith (or Hindupan), in its multiplici­ty of forms, is supposed to be empathetic and inclusive, but non-spiritual, political Hindutva carries the same lethal didacticis­m as radical Islam.

While successive regimes in Pakistan and Bangladesh have relegated their Hindu population­s into microscopi­c minorities, the Muslim population in India is huge – it will not go away. Additional­ly, there is the disquiet among Dalits, Adivasis and tribals with the rise of exclusiona­ry, misogynist, monotheist­ic Hindutva, with the newly propagated imagery of scowling (kruddha) Ram and Hanuman as flag-bearers.

Nepal, though pressured and pummeled by Hindutva forces from across the open border of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Uttarakhan­d, retains much of the inclusive Hindu faith that used to mark northern India until the Ram Janmabhoom­i movement and the Great Unravellin­g. The triangular saffron flags, sent across in consignmen­ts by the Bjp-rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, flutter over Tarai-madhes rooftops, there the congenial invocation of “Jai Siyaram” (Sitaram) is still heard.

Nepal, secular under the 2015 Constituti­on (which is what so riled Modi), retains Hindu belief systems that extend from shamanisti­c masto to esoteric tantra, besides the syncretic Hindu-buddhist culture of the Valley. In mainstream Nepali society and on mass media, poets and stand-up comics can still make fun of the gods and their consorts, whether Ram, Krishna, Shiva, Kali or Hanuman – who would doubtless approve.

For those in surroundin­g societies, it is disturbing to watch the brinkmansh­ip of Modi, geared toward his own longevity in office and setting the Bjp-rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh presence in concrete.

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