People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 35 August 29, 2004 |
BJP’s
Method In Madness
IS there a method in this madness? One cannot but raise this question seeing the by now routine disruption/obstruction of parliament by the BJP-led NDA opposition. The first budget/monsoon session of parliament under the new United Progressive Alliance government appears to be as good as “washed away” in this opposition made ruckus. No less a “statesman” than former prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee asserted publicly that the opposition would allow only the passing of budget without discussion (small mercy!) but not any other business of parliament. It is a different matter that the same gentleman was lecturing from treasury benches in the not-too-distant past about maintaining parliamentary principles.
Coming
back to the question, let us recount the issues which were picked up by the BJP
as a ruse to obstruct parliamentary proceedings. First,
they raised the issue of tainted ministers in Manmohan Singh’s council of
ministers and took it to absurd heights, surprising those who believed that any
new government would have at least 100 days of honeymoon period. Secondly,
they latched on to the legitimate removal of four RSS governors and prolonged
the ruckus. Thirdly, creating an
incident in Lok Sabha with an unprecedented attack on the Chair, the BJP
recklessly announced boycott of standing committees – a historic first, thus
displaying once again their utter contempt for democratic institutions.
Realising
that this was not going down well with the people, the BJP clutched on to the
face-saver offered by Lok Sabha speaker, Somnath Chatterjee, and retracted its
boycott decision. However, immediately after parliament reconvened, the BJP-led
opposition resorted to same old tactics. This time they picked up Savarkar and
Uma Bharti issues as a ruse and stalled the functioning of both the houses.
Their attempts to defend Savarkar’s inglorious record were, ironically,
punctured by the RSS spokeman Ram Madhav. He had released to the press a letter
written by Sardar Patel to the then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru in which he
makes a plea that RSS might not have been behind Gandhiji’s murder. In the
same letter, two paragraphs later, Sardar Patel emphatically states that
Savarkar was the inspiration for Gandhiji’s murder. CPI(M) leader in Rajya
Sabha, Nilotpal Basu, pointed this out and questioned how can one part of the
letter be acceptable and the other not. About Uma Bharti’s shameless attempts
to portray herself as a martyr in the defence of the national flag, the less
said the better. This sanyasin’s
propensity for histrionics is well known and documented. Her claims of
renunciation sound so hollow when one sees the fact that she submitted her
resignation only after the Karnataka court rejected her petition seeking
dismissal of the case. Indian people are not so foolish as to not see that it is
a clear case of inciting riots and murder which cost Uma Bharti her chair and
that it had nothing to do with the national flag.
SKELETONS TUMBLE OUT
During
the first half of the session, the tactics of the BJP gave distinct impression
that the party is yet to reconcile to the fact that they have been thrown out of
power by the people. Their reaction to every move of the new government appeared
to smack of “how dare you govern” approach. Interestingly, there were
reports in the media that top leaders of BJP were taking seriously the
predictions of a renowned astrologer that the Manmohan Singh government would
fall by September end.
But,
the method in the madness became evident when the second half of the session
began. At this point of time skeletons from the cupboards of three key figures
and ex-union ministers in the BJP-NDA dispensation – George Fernandes, M
Venkaiah Naidu, Arun Shourie – had tumbled out. The shady dealings of
Fernandes as defence minister in the Rs 1,257 crore Barak missile systems
procurement were exposed in a substantive manner in Outlook
magazine (issue dated August 30, 2004).
Rajesh Ramchandran lays bare why the deal went to the Israeli Barak while there
were ten more bidders. (See page 14) It was reported that the new government is
looking into it. Fresh revelations
about BJP president Venkaiah Naidu’s corruption during his tenure as union
rural development minister came into the open when Punjab
Kesri splashed on its front page a story detailing this corruption. (See
page 14) BJP’s poster boy for disinvestment/privatisation, Arun Shourie was
caught pants down on the sale of second Centaur hotel in Juhu. CPI(M) MP
Dipankar Mukherjee had brought out in his article in People’s Democracy, dated August 22, the crony corruption of this
“crusader”.
All
these important matters would have been the subject matter of discussion in both
houses of parliament. Even the government would have been forced to come out
with the exact status of affairs, the time-frame of any investigations etc.
The
BJP, like true fascists, fell back on the classic formula of keeping these
issues away from parliamentary and public gaze. It not only belligerently
obstructed the functioning of parliament but also attempted to raise the
emotional issue of the national flag – when it actually was all about misuse
of national flag for instigating communal violence. The BJP-led NDA hopes these
tactics will prevent the truth of their misrule from registering in the
people’s minds. It will learn to its cost, once again, that the people of
India are capable of seeing through their game. (INN)