People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 02 January 10, 2003 |
EDITORIAL
Saffron Tentacles At Work
THE
deputy
prime
minister
and
union
home
minister
has
made
a
startling
revelation
that
over
11,500
Pakistani
nationals
and
half
a
crore
or
so
Bangladeshis
are
remaining
in
India
after
the
expiry
of
their
visas.
He
went
on
to
add
that
these
people
pose
a
serious
threat
to
India's
internal
security.
Therefore,
they
should
be
deported.
No
country
can
allow
foreign
nationals
to
continue
to
stay
on
illegally.
Of
course,
they
have
to
be
identified
and
deported.
But
in
the
first
place,
the
home
minister
who
presides
over
the
entire
apparatus
designed
to
protect
internal
security
as
well
as
monitor
immigration,
will
have
to
explain
how
such
a
situation
has
arisen.
The
serious
lapses
and
obvious
inefficiency
must
be
removed.
It
is,
indeed,
ironic,
to
say
the
least,
that
it
is
under
the
governing
dispensation
of
people
who
self-appoint
themselves
as
the
crusaders
against
terrorism
and
protectors
of
internal
security
that
terrorist
attacks
increase
and
such
revelations
come
to
light.
However,
the
bid
to
rid
the
country
of
illegal
occupants
cannot
be
allowed
to
provide
grist
to
the
mill
of
the
communal
hatred
being
currently
spewed
by
various
outfits
of
the
Saffron
Brigade.
Even
The
Times
of
India,
in
a
comment,
has
warned
that
this
effort
should
not
result
"in
a
witch
hunt
by
targetting
particular
countries
and
communities".
Seen
in
conjunction
with
other
developments,
such
a
direction
appears
imminent
to
suit
the
political
and
electoral
fortunes
of
the
BJP.
The
VHP
and
the
Bajrang
Dal
have
already
made
it
known
that
the
movement
for
the
construction
of
the
temple
at
Ayodhya
will
proceed
irrespective
of
the
judicial
verdict.
They
have
threatened
to
go
ahead
with
the
temple
construction
"even
if
a
hundred
governments
fall".
Following
the
elections
in
Gujarat,
the
VHP
has
planned
to
hold
district
wise
congregations
and
raise
youth
battalions
(reminiscent
of
the
Nazi
fascist
black
shirts)
armed
with
trishuls.
Such
brazenly
provocative
and
patently
unlawful
activity
called
`trishul
deeksha
are
being
carried
out
in
the
name
of
Hindutva.
The
central
BJP's
vigorous
reiteration
of
its
commitment
to
Hindutva
was
recently
displayed
by
assertions
such
as
"we
need
not
be
apologetic
about
it".
Notwithstanding
the
prime
minister's
usual
tactic
of
obfuscation
(as
contained
in
his
latest
"musings"),
the
BJP
has
declared
its
intention
to
replicate
the
Gujarat
experiment
elsewhere
--
a
process
we
had
repeatedly
stated
in
these
columns
as
the
Modification
of
India.
What
appears
more
chilling
is
the
fact
that
such
strident
communal
posturing
and
mobilisation
is
being
accompanied
by
a
march
towards
authoritarianism.
The
reaction
of
the
home
ministry
to
the
ongoing
judicial
proceedings
concerning
the
arrest
of
journalist
Iftekar
Gilani
is
a
case
in
point.
The
military
intelligence
has
ruled
that
the
information
the
journalist
possessed,
on
the
basis
of
which
he
was
arrested,
had
"no
security
value".
It
further
went
on
to
state
that
the
said
information
"seems
to
have
been
gathered
from
open
sources".
The
home
ministry,
under
Mr.
Advani,
has
however,
usurped
the
right
to
be
the
sole
judge
on
deciding
the
nature
of
information
a
person
possesses
irrespective
of
its
source.
Therefore,
anybody
who
is
in
possession
of
published
material,
which
the
home
ministry
feels
is
inimical
to
the
interests
of
the
country,
can
be
persecuted
and
prosecuted.
Shades
of
fascistic
authoritarianism?
Clearly,
the
saffron
octopus
is
upping
its
ante
with
an
eye
on
the
next
round
of
elections.
All
its
tentacles
are
actively
moving.
They
seemingly
appear
to
be
independent
of
each
other.
But,
as
we
have
repeatedly
stated
in
these
columns,
it
is
a
single
heart
that
pumps
blood
to
activate
each
of
these
tentacles.
And,
that
heart
is
the
RSS
with
its
vision
of
seeking
to
metamorphose
a
secular
democratic
Indian
republic
into
a
fascist
"Hindu
Rashtra".
Such
an
attempt
was
once
defeated
by
the
Indian
people
at
the
time
of
our
independence.
The
time
has
come
to
do
so
once
again.