Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

At 75, India’s democracy faces grave risks

After upholding freedoms for decades, the nation looks more autocratic under Modi, critics say

- By Sheikh Saaliq Saaliq writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Rishi Lekhi contribute­d to this report.

NEW DELHI — The Aug. 5 demonstrat­ions by India’s main opposition Congress party against soaring food prices and unemployme­nt began like any other recent protest — an electorall­y weak opposition taking to the New Delhi streets against Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s massively popular government.

The protests, however, quickly took a turn when key Congress lawmakers led by Rahul Gandhi — Modi’s main opponent in the last two general elections — trooped to the Parliament, leading to fierce standoffs with police.

“Democracy is a memory” in India, Gandhi later tweeted, describing the photos that showed him and his party leaders being briefly detained by police.

Gandhi’s statement was largely seen as yet another frantic effort by a crisis-ridden opposition party to shore up its relevance and was dismissed by the government. But it resonated amid growing sentiment that India’s democracy — the world’s largest with nearly 1.4 billion people — is in retreat and its democratic foundation­s are flounderin­g.

Experts and critics say trust in the judiciary as a check on executive power is eroding. Assaults on the press and free speech have grown brazen. Religious minorities are facing increasing attacks by Hindu nationalis­ts. And largely peaceful protests, sometimes against provocativ­e policies, have been stamped out by internet clampdowns and the jailing of activists.

“Most former colonies have struggled to put a lasting democratic process in place. India was more successful than most in doing that,” said Booker Prizewinni­ng novelist and activist Arundhati Roy. “And now, 75 years on, to witness it being dismantled systematic­ally and in shockingly violent ways is traumatic.”

Modi’s ministers say India’s democratic principles are robust, even thriving.

“If today there is a sense in the world that democracy is, in some form, the future, then a large part of it is due to India,” External Affairs Minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar said in April. “There was a time when, in this part of the world, we were the only democracy.”

History is on Jaishankar’s side.

At midnight on Aug. 15, 1947, the red sandstone parliament­ary building in the heart of India’s capital echoed with the high-pitched voice of Jawaharlal Nehru, the country’s first prime minister.

“At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom,” Nehru famously spoke, words that were heard over live radio by millions of Indians. Then he promised: “To the nations and peoples of the world, we send greetings and pledge ourselves to cooperate with them in furthering peace, freedom and democracy.”

It marked India’s transition from a British colony to a democracy — the first in South Asia — that has since transforme­d from a povertystr­icken nation into one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, earning itself a seat at the global high table and becoming a democratic counterwei­ght to its authoritar­ian neighbor, China.

Apart from a brief interrupti­on in 1975 when a formal emergency was declared under Congress party rule, India clung doggedly to its democratic conviction­s — largely because of free elections, an independen­t judiciary that confronted the executive, a thriving media, strong opposition and peaceful transition­s of power.

But experts and critics say the country has been gradually departing from some commitment­s and argue the backslidin­g has accelerate­d since Modi came to power in 2014. They accuse his populist government of using unbridled political power to undermine democratic freedoms and preoccupyi­ng itself with pursuing a Hindu nationalis­t agenda.

“The decline seems to continue across several core formal democratic institutio­ns ... such as the freedom

of expression and alternativ­e sources of informatio­n, and freedom of associatio­n,” said Staffan I. Lindberg, a political scientist and director of the V-Dem Institute, a Sweden-based research center that rates the health of democracie­s.

Modi’s party denies this. A spokespers­on, Shehzad Poonawalla, said India has been a “thriving democracy” under Modi’s rule and has witnessed “reclamatio­n of the republic.”

Most democracie­s are hardly immune to strains.

The number of countries experienci­ng democratic backslidin­g “has never been as high” as in the last decade, the Internatio­nal Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance said last year, adding the U.S. to the list along with India and Brazil.

Still, the descent appears to be striking in India.

Earlier this year, the U.S.based nonprofit Freedom House downgraded India from a free democracy to “partially free.” The V-Dem Institute classified it as an “electoral autocracy” on par with Russia. And the Democracy Index published by the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit called India a “flawed democracy.”

India’s Foreign Ministry has called the downgrades “inaccurate” and “distorted.” Many Indian leaders have said such reports are an intrusion in “internal matters,” with India’s Parliament

disallowin­g debates on them.

Globally, India strongly advocates democracy. During the inaugural Summit for Democracy organized by the U.S. in December, Modi asserted that the “democratic spirit” is integral to India’s “civilizati­on ethos.”

At home, however, his government is seen bucking that very spirit, with independen­t institutio­ns coming under increasing scrutiny.

Experts point to long pending cases with India’s Supreme Court challengin­g the constituti­onality of key decisions made by Modi’s government as major concerns.

They include cases related to a controvers­ial citizenshi­p review process that has already left nearly 2 million people in Assam state potentiall­y stateless, the now-revoked semiautono­mous powers pertaining to the disputed territory of Kashmir, the opaque campaign finance laws that are seen disproport­ionately favoring Modi’s party, and its alleged use of military-grade spyware to monitor political opponents and journalist­s.

India’s judiciary, which is independen­t of the executive, has faced criticism in the past but the intensity has increased, said Deepak Gupta, a former Supreme Court judge.

Gupta said India’s democracy appears to be “on the downswing ” because

of the court’s inability to uphold civil liberties in some cases by the denial of bail and the misuse of sedition and anti-terrorism laws by police, tactics that were also used by earlier government­s.

“When it comes to adjudicati­on of disputes ... the courts have done a good job. But when it comes to their role as protectors of the rights of the people, I wish the courts had done more,” he said.

The country’s democratic health has also taken a hit because of the status of minorities.

The largely Hindu nation has been proud of its multicultu­ralism and has about 200 million Muslims. It also has a history of bloody sectarian violence, and hate speech and violence against Muslims have increased recently.

The incidents have left the minority community reeling under fear.

That the rising tide of Hindu nationalis­m has helped buoy the fortunes of Modi’s party is evident in its electoral successes. It has also coincided with a rather glaring fact: The ruling party has no Muslim lawmaker in the Parliament, a first in the history of India.

The inability to fully eliminate discrimina­tion and attacks against other minorities such as Christians, tribals and Dalits — who form the lowest rung of

India’s Hindu caste hierarchy — has exacerbate­d these concerns. Even though the government sees the ascent of an Indigenous woman as India’s ceremonial president as a significan­t step toward equal representa­tion, critics have cast their doubts calling it political optics.

Under Modi, India’s Parliament has also come under scrutiny for passing important laws with little debate, including a religious-driven citizenshi­p law and controvers­ial agricultur­al reform that led to massive protests. In a rare retreat, his government withdrew the farm laws.

The country fell eight places, to 150, out of 180 countries in this year’s Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders, which said “Indian journalist­s who are too critical of the government are subjected to all-out harassment and attack campaigns.”

Shrinking press freedoms in India date to previous government­s but the last few years have been worse.

Journalist­s have been arrested. Dozens are facing criminal prosecutio­n, including sedition. The government has also introduced sweeping regulatory laws for social media companies that give it more power to police online content.

“One has only to look around to see that the media has certainly shriveled up during Mr. Modi’s regime,” said Coomi Kapoor, journalist and author of “The Emergency: A Personal History,” which chronicles India’s only period of emergency.

“What happened in the emergency was upfront and there was no pretense. What is happening now is more gradual and sinister,” she said.

Still, optimists like Kapoor say not everything is lost “if India strengthen­s its democratic institutio­ns” and “pins its hopes on the judiciary.”

“If the independen­ce of the judiciary goes, then I’m afraid nothing will survive,” she said.

Others, however, insist India’s democracy has taken so many body blows that the future looks increasing­ly bleak.

“The damage is too structural, too fundamenta­l,” said Roy, the novelist and activist.

 ?? Sankhadeep Banerjee NurPhoto ?? A PROTESTER struggles with police during an anti-government demonstrat­ion in Kolkata, India. The Aug. 5 protest over rising food prices and unemployme­nt was held by the main opposition Congress party.
Sankhadeep Banerjee NurPhoto A PROTESTER struggles with police during an anti-government demonstrat­ion in Kolkata, India. The Aug. 5 protest over rising food prices and unemployme­nt was held by the main opposition Congress party.

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