The Manila Times

CAMPAIGNIN­G HEATS UP IN INDIA POLLS

- AP

NEW DELHI: Campaignin­g for a crucial state election in India’s capital has reached a fever pitch as members of the Hindu nationalis­tgovernmen­t call for violence against minority Muslims and invoke the specter of arch-nemesis Pakistan to reverse course after a pair of losses in recent state polls.

Critics call the incendiary religious appeals a tactic of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to win at the polls and divert attention from the sluggish economy, which expanded at a 4.5-percent annual pace in the last quarter, its slowest rate since mid-2018.

The election Saturday has also been seen as a referendum on the ruling party’s response to nearly two months of protests across India against a new citizenshi­p law that fast-tracks naturaliza­tion for some migrants of neighborin­g countries living in the country illegally of all South Asia’s major religions except Islam.

Modi’s party had anticipate­d a windfall in state elections after a landslide victory in national polls last year. A move last summer to revoke disputed Kashmir’s semiautono­my and put the Muslimmajo­rity region under lockdown, and the passage of the new citizenshi­p law, have won him praise from supporters but little reward at the polls. BJP lost two important state elections last year.

The election in New Delhi, where 14.6 million voters are likely to cast ballots on Saturday, pits Modi’s party against the incumbent Aam Aadmi Party, or “common man” party, whose pro-poor policies have focused on fixing state-run schools, provided free healthcare and waived bus fare for women during the five years it has been in power.

A win would likely embolden Modi and his party, while a loss could further dent his image as an unstoppabl­e political force.

During the campaignin­g that ended Thursday, Modi and other senior party leaders have focused their ire on a 45-day long sitin led by Muslim women who have been blocking a highway for weeks through New Delhi’s Shaheen Bagh, a working-class neighborho­od, to protest the citizenshi­p law.

Modi has referred to the protesters as part of a “political design” and a “conspiracy.”

“This dog-whistle is basically a signal to his faithful to view the ongoing protests in Delhi through the lens of a well-cultivated prejudice against Muslims,” said Shuddhabra­ta Sengupta, an artist and curator and longtime Modi critic.

Other BJP leaders, however, have been more blatant.

A member of Parliament from Modi’s party cautioned at a public rally that the sit-in demonstrat­ors would “enter people’s homes, rape women and then kill them off.” Another minister characteri­zed the protesters as “traitors” and led a crowd in chanting the slogan “shoot them.”

Last week, a gunman fired shots at the protest site. As the police took him away, a video of the incident showed him saying: “In our country, only Hindus will prevail.” The man was immediatel­y arrested and was in police custody.

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