Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

India-Gulf states row: Why Modi is in a double bind

After anti-Islam comments by senior officials, the Indian Prime Minister must placate Middle Eastern leaders while quietly continuing to support his party’s vilificati­on of Muslims

- (CJ Werleman is the author of Crucifying America, God Hates You. Hate Him Back, Koran Curious, and is the host of Foreign Object. Follow him on twitter: @ cjwerleman) Courtesy middleeast­eye.net

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) are scrambling to contain a diplomatic firestorm that has erupted throughout the Middle East over derogatory remarks made by two senior officials about the Prophet Muhammad and the Islamic faith.

For those familiar with Indian politics, the past week has been profoundly revelatory, marking the first time India’s ruling party has been caught embarrasse­d by its systematic mistreatme­nt of the Muslim minority since riding into office on the back of a muscular Hindu nationalis­t agenda in 2014.

At the centre of Modi’s internatio­nal diplomatic discomfort are moves by Gulf states to denounce and condemn his party for insulting the Prophet. In addition, Indian envoys in Qatar, Kuwait and Iran were summoned for a private scolding, while supermarke­ts in several Gulf states removed Indian products from their shelves. Social media hashtags calling for an economic boycott against India trended on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

To all this, Indian journalist Rana Ayyub commented: “Iran, Saudi Arabia and Qatar speaking in one voice. When was the last time the world witnessed this? Modi hai to mumkin hai [translated: Modi made this possible].”

The Indian government has responded by suspending the officials who made the derogatory remarks - and for the first time in the country’s 75-year history, it issued a statement to a foreign country (or in this case, a group of Muslim- majority countries under the umbrella of the Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n).

“India was taken aback by the response,” Kabir Taneja, a fellow with the Observer Research Foundation think tank, told CNN. “Communal issues are not new in India and in previous cases, we have not had such a response [from Arab states].”

Turning a blind eye

But it’s hardly surprising the Modi government has been caught off-guard here, given that Arab states have willingly turned a blind eye to any number of India’s persecutor­y actions against Muslims, including an amnesty law offering citizenshi­p rights only to non-Muslim migrants; bans on students wearing the hijab; discrimina­tory laws premised on anti-Muslim conspiraci­es; support for economic boycotts against Muslim- owned businesses; and revocation of Kashmir’s semi-autonomous status.

Arab Gulf government­s have also remained tight- lipped as members of Modi’s party have other-ised Muslims as “termites,” “pests” and “terrorists”, while Hindu nationalis­t groups allied with the BJP have urged their supporters to commit a Muslim genocide -- a plea now heard on a near-daily basis. They have also said nothing as Muslims have been lynched, and their homes, businesses and mosques vandalised, by radicalise­d mobs in broad daylight, and often in the presence of police.

Neverthele­ss, these government­s and Islamic leaders in the Middle East now have Modi’s undivided attention, particular­ly those calling for “all Muslims to rise as one nation” against India -- a plea made by Oman’s chief religious figure, Grand Mufti Sheikh Ahmad bin Hamad Al-Khalili, who also announced a boycott of Indian products.

While the Modi government was able to strike an indignant tone against the United States, accusing it of indulging in “votebank politics” after the Biden administra­tion accused New Delhi of mistreatin­g its religious minorities earlier this month, it knows it must be far more conciliato­ry towards Arab Gulf countries, given that around two- thirds of India’s crude oil imports flow from the Middle East.

But the spigot is not the only potential pinch point. A bigger issue is the millions of Indian expatriate­s who live and work across the Gulf states, putting at risk the tens of billions of dollars India receives in remittance­s from its citizens in these countries.

Massive political crisis

If Arab Gulf countries were even to threaten the deportatio­n of Indian migrants, or a halt on visas for Indian workers, it would create a massive political crisis for the Modi government -- at a time when it can least afford it, given the Indian economy has struggled to grow and a fuel price shock is hitting millions.

According to one Indian observer, India’s trade relationsh­ip with Gulf countries bears two- fold significan­ce: oil dependency and a potentiall­y large export market for India. India’s bilateral trade with all six GCC group countries, including the UAE and Saudi Arabia, has increased significan­tly in 2021- 22 with Indian exports to the GCC increasing by over 58 percent reaching $44bn.

Ultimately, this leaves Modi trapped in a double bind. On the one hand, he knows he must walk back his party’s hostility towards Muslims to appease India’s Arab

Gulf partners. On the other, he’s acutely aware that the BJP’s efforts to scapegoat and vilify Muslims have helped him and his party to evade responsibi­lity for an economy reeling from Covid and inflation.

“To keep winning elections, it needs to keep polarising Hindu voters against Muslims, and spinning ever more outrageous campaigns to demonise Muslims,” said Debasish Roy Chowdhury, coauthor of To Kill A Democracy: India’s Passage to Despotism.

This is why Modi will walk this tightrope by speaking out of both sides of his mouth, telling Middle Eastern leaders what they want to hear, while quietly offering his full support to those within his party who insult the Prophet Muhammad and abuse Muslims.

 ?? (Photo by Karim Sahib / AFP) ?? People pass by of an advertisem­ent featuring Indian actress Kajol at a gold market in Dubai, on June 6. Gulf countries condemned remarks about the Prophet Muhammed made by a top official in India’s ruling party that were described as “Islamophob­ic”. The United Arab Emirates became the latest country to voice its condemnati­on of the remarks, saying they were “contrary to moral and humanitari­an values and principles.”
(Photo by Karim Sahib / AFP) People pass by of an advertisem­ent featuring Indian actress Kajol at a gold market in Dubai, on June 6. Gulf countries condemned remarks about the Prophet Muhammed made by a top official in India’s ruling party that were described as “Islamophob­ic”. The United Arab Emirates became the latest country to voice its condemnati­on of the remarks, saying they were “contrary to moral and humanitari­an values and principles.”

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