India:
One year of Modi government: Foreign tours to cover up domestic failures?
-Dr. Abdul Ruff
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Preface
A firm looking PM Modi with aggressive
rhetoric has demolished the innocent looking image of India represented by Dr.
Manmohan Singh for 10 long years.
There is general view that BJP rule is
slightly better than Congress rule.
On issues like Inflation, food prices,
farmer causes, economic promises, development works, job creation, PM Modi has
failed, though he does not promote corruption as Manmohan Singh did for 10 long
years before Modi replaced him.
Disillusion has been p all pervasive.
No Congress era scams
Of course, Manmohan will never the premier
again in his life even if Congress manages to come to power again which looks
impossible. Corrupt and insensitive Congress lost power even it resorted to all dirty
anti-Muslim tricks to
keep the Hindutva voters in good
humors., like the verdict on Babri mosque
that belongs to Islam and Muslims,
hanging of prolonging Kashmiri Afzal Guru , offering Bhratatratna to a
fake sportsperson, letting media fanatics to insult Islam and threaten
Muslims on a permanent basis.
PM Modi has not brought back black money
from abroad (over 1 trillion dollars)
and he has not discussed with leaders abroad in 18 countries he has
visited thus far on the issue but he
only helps Indian corporates get business
there, he has not reigned in on bureaucratic
corruption, Lokpal. No taxation relief, . Even many BJP specialists are
disappointed that inflation has not come down.
Prices of essentials keep skyrocketing.
This is the major issue for common people. If 1 trillion dollars money
is brought back to India, poverty can be erased with that amount from the face
of India once for all.
BJP claims the era of eclipse of India is
over. The “suit-boot’ government is still busy repaying those funded the
elections, as Congress party used to do,
and created positive public images in media..
Prime Minister Narendra Modi believes the
BJP victory in the parliamentary poll was his own personal success as a fast
rising Indian politician who had high ambitions and he knows he must keep his
own image intact.
Instead of getting down to work, the BJP
has been on the perpetual election mode, disallowing Congress to recover.
Generally, however, people of India are not
happy with BJP performance; they seem to have lost trust in it. This has been demonstrated by the results of
polls after the parliamentary poll, like Delhi and Jammu Kashmir. .
During the past one year, PM Modi has been
able to push himself above BJP, above India.
Modi says no corruption in her governance but more than anything else,
he has focuses on demise of the corrupt
Congress party for which common people in the country has no sympathy.
Instead of governing to fulfill the poll
promises, the BJP asks the Delhi’s Kejriwal government to ”perform”.
Progress
report
Narendra Modi’s BJP government is
completing one full year of office now. Modi assumed power on 26th May last
year. PM Modi claims the bad days for Indians are over for Indians and he has
busted power circles in Delhi.
Celebrating one year of rule or misrule is
a latest phenomenon. Politics is no different from 100 day celebrations of film
releases or hundred runs for batboys in cricket, got on mutual consent
between teams.
One year, it is argued, is not enough to
judge a government which is mandated by people for 5 years. However, the first
full year can give the voters an idea about what the government plans for the
people and nation. Indians would now know Modi how sincere the Modi government
is on fulfilling the poll promises he and his BJP gave to the electorates.
Indians are fully aware that both the
Congress and BJP deceived the farmers,
minorities, poor by adopting and pursuing anti-farmer, anti-Muslim and
pro-rich corporatist policies over the years. Modi always complains about the
shortage of funds while spending millions for foreign tours and advertising his
own personal gains and that of the government’s.
PM Modi apparently is a usual hypocrite.
Without facing the real media, he is active on social media channels. The Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) growth and the presence of good economic parameters are
existent due to the coincidence of several factors occurring elsewhere, rather
than administrative reforms from Delhi, such as the receipt of the largest
foreign remittance year after year and the collapse of oil prices, which helped
to build a robust economy by reducing the current account deficit.
Unlike Manmohan Singh who was being
remotely controlled by Sonia Gandhi and corporate lords, Modi assumes much
power and even almost acts like a dictator within the party and enjoys absolute
majority in the lower house. He is not
controlled by any other big BJP leader but then he is fully controlled by
corporate lords and billionaires. Hence
he does nothing for the poor because this gentleman is also being remotely
controlled by influential industrial houses in India. PM takes with himself a
huge team of business people, among others, at state expenses.
By controlling the ministers PM Modi could
claim he contain corruption in the government but the
mafias and lobbies are free to
get their “works” done from the
government.
For all foreign tour expenditures, Modi got
one assurance of 10 billion from Korea. The Export- Import Bank of Korea
expressed their intention to provide USD 10 billion for cooperation in
infrastructure, comprising Economic Development Cooperation Fund of USD one
billion and export credits of USD 9 billion for priority sectors including
smart cities, railways, power generation and transmission and other sectors to
be agreed.
During his tenure as prime minister, Modi
posts fewer political statements and more casual messages, such as greetings,
condolences and updates of his addresses. Modi uses Twitter as a personal
signal than for issues.
BJP claims Indian economy is reviving, but
the fact is business confidence, while still positive, is now more muted than
it was last year. There is also a sense that luck (especially falling oil
prices) helped improve the economy’s performance on growth, inflation, and the
twin deficits (fiscal and current account), but the government has not shown
enough pluck or the gumption needed to harness favourable winds to put the
economy on a much higher trajectory. PM
Modi focuses on foreign tours. Luck without pluck is not a combination that can
sustain growth.
It would be churlish to deny the government
some of its obvious successes. The bill to increase foreign direct investment
in insurance is law; so are the coal and mining and minerals amendments bills.
The spectrum auctions have been a big hit, and the first phase of the coal mine
auctions brought in big revenues for states with this mineral in sackfuls.
Diesel prices have been decontrolled, and cooking gas subsidies are now paid
directly into bank accounts (thanks to the speedy expansion of the Jan-Dhan
inclusive banking scheme and the Aadhaar unique ID rollout). Two minor labour
reform bills—one to exempt establishments with fewer than 40 employees from
furnishing returns and maintaining registers, and the Apprentices Bill, to make
it easier for factories to take on trainees—have also passed their respective
legislative hurdles.
But the big-ticket reforms—the Goods and
Services Tax (GST) and land acquisition bills—are still stuck in the works,
victims of the Modi government’s political failures. The opposition is in no
mood to play ball on these bills—at least not without making the government
beg, plead, compromise and mangle the bills out of shape. Getting things done
has just gotten harder. The crux of the
problem faced by Modi at the end of his first year in office is simple: His
economic agenda is hostage to politics, and it is his government’s political
failures that are slowing down his economic agenda. Modi made the mistake of
taking for granted the indulgence normally shown to new governments by not
pushing the politically difficult bills through in his first six months in
office. He will have to pay a high political price for every concession he wins
from his opponents for important bills.
The corrupt Congress record comes to save
the Modi government with its own failures. At the end of Narendra Modi’s first
year in government, a verdict on his performance would read something like
this: He has done better than UPA-II, but he has under-delivered on the promise
that brought him to power in May 2014 —the promise of bringing a radically
refreshing approach to governance and business.
Effective
media management
Success story of BJP and Hindutva allies
owes a lot to their highly effective media management. The destruction of Babri
Mosque offered them the opportunity to project themselves as the real national
forces that the governments ruled by Congress party also supported: Congress cannot afford to offend
Hinduism/Hindutva or much worse, support Islam or Muslims. While passively supporting Hindutva ideology,
Congress knows too well that the insulted Muslims and other minorities have no
other option than standing behind it. For the first time in recent times,
Congress got disillusioned with its understanding of Muslims.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as part of
BJP media strategy, has successfully used social media to shape his public
image as a tech savvy leader, according to a study. Modi uses social media as a
personal signal than for issues. Modi is
the world's No 2 most popular politician in the Twitter sphere after Obama.
During his campaign, Modi's account was more about his political vision. In the
months leading up to the general elections, he tweeted to a list of some of the
most widely followed celebrities, including film stars, cricketers and
spiritual figures, urging them to get young voters to register.
Modi and his party president, Amit Shah,
spent the first six months trying to win state elections to increase the BJP
tally in Rajya Sabha and their political success brought them the undying
enmity of ally and enemy. However, this does not mean the Modi government cannot
recover much in the remaining four years. The mistakes made over the last year
can be corrected this year, but only if the government learns to talk a
different language with its allies and opposition.
Media management, however, does not solve
all problems India is facing. The strategic change in approach must begin from
the top, with Modi himself. It cannot be left to assorted lackeys and sidekicks
to negotiate with the opposition. Modi has to stoop to conquer. The
government’s success from here on depends on making course corrections—and
stronger follow-up action. Foremost, it has to distance itself from the
cacophony of discordant sectarian noises coming from his own party’s right-wing
and the larger Sangh Parivar. Modi has to separate government objectives from
party goals as the government’s job is governing. The Shrill and politically
embarrassing rhetoric from RSS and Co is unique to the BJP. Modi has to assert
himself with his own loudmouths and take control of the narratives surrounding
his party’s programmes. To get key bills passed, Modi and his corporate lords
will have to personally reach out to many opposition party leaders, and
especially the Congress and big regional players, to contain the damage done by
past arrogance and triumphalism after May 16, 2014. The Modi government now has to accept the
reality of compromises in law-making. It also means that the BJP has to be
especially nice to its allies. Getting them on board is the key to breaking any
logjam created in the Rajya Sabha by a united opposition, though the primary
strategy should be to divide and diffuse the opposition.
PM Modi has to re-examine his own
predilections on the public sector to serve the common people and poor, not
only for the rich and corporates who accompany him in his foreign tours. Corruption
and inspector raj are not going to go away by bringing in more laws; they need
to be eliminated by making government decisions transparent, keeping
interactions between citizen, business and bureaucracy minimal through the
adoption of IT in all fields, and simplifying rules and regulations so that
compliance is easier.
Modi has to break up his to-do list for the
next four years very carefully. He must do away with Congress era massive dose
of privatization; bring back all types of black/grey money back to India. Bring down regulate all key prices; help poor
with more subsidies; and ease rules for poor and the average citizen
consistently and continuously. His focus must be on building a high-trust
society, where the government is not suspicious of everything a citizen does.
If this means acquiring the tag of being pro-business, so be it. Modi should
not shy away from being called pro-poor. That was partly why he was elected in
the first place.
Modi government should not invest too much
personal capital in schemes like Swachh (clean) Bharat, bullet trains, smart
cities, and such nice-to-have ideas that can
help the corporates to grow their bad wealth only.
Seven months after Swachh Bharat was announced, no city looks any
cleaner. Those who travel by trains van see people, men and women queue up for
open toilet spaces on both sides outside the tracks. Modi should focus on
policies that will make our cities cleaner, by trying to remove the garbage as
a local responsibility. Delhi can’t do it by itself. Modi should be clear that
what he cannot control, he can only incentivize and exhort. He must spend bare
magnum on tour projects abroad and let external affairs and economy ministries
deal with the matter. Let corporates and rich spend on foreign tours for
business.
Modi has been a committed federalist. Some
62 percent of the country’s tax resources go to states. Modi can fully control
the remaining 38 percent. He needs to run a lean, mean, focused and
execution-oriented central government. He was elected to do this job—not
anything else. His next four years must focus on what the Centre can
realistically hope to achieve. And for that, he has to reset the public’s
expectations from his rule. He cannot keeps saying he is better than Manmohan
because he speaks better than himself.
Hindutva
ideology and minorities
Mahatma Gandhi said the importance of a
nation is gauged by the number of billions a nation posses but by the way
minorities are treated by the government. Of course, unlike Congress, BJP is
not a great admirer of Gandhi. BJP governments, more than Congress ruled
states, operate against the constitution by targeting Muslims in all walks of
life, making their lives miserable. Apparently, the Congress party does not
even allow Muslim leaders to approach the courts against Hindutva harassments.
Today, Indian minorities are at crossroads
as never before. They feel more and more insecure, although Washington has
reportedly asked PM Modi to adopt inclusive governance and don’t target
minorities. No confidence has been created among minority communities,
especially Muslims. Every effort has been made by the government that only
Hindus and pro-Hindus would be helped and protected by the state. That is to
say minorities Muslims, Christians, Sikhs have to change their mindsets to
accept Hindutva ideology as their own.
One gets the impression that it is not PM
Modi who rules India now but, like the Sonia-Manmohan regime, by corporates and
RSS ideologues and so their joint target remains minorities and poor.
While BJP depends for its survival on
Hindutva slogans and threats to Muslims,
Congress government is bent upon
misusing Muslims for political and poll ends. One example o is how Congress played dirty
politics by targeting Muslim pundit turned
politician from Kerala Abdul
Nassar Madani to win poll in Karnataka
state assembly where it defeated
the ruling BJP by booking wrongly Madani with the help of communist
government of Achuthanandan. Without any valid sound proof Karnataka government
still wants to keep Madani in jail who is not let live on bail.
Hindutva governments at the centre and in
states pursue the discriminatory anti-Muslim projects as a favorite hobby.
Congress, other so-called secular parties including communist outfits seem to
enjoy the national development. Muslims are denied seats in educational
institutions, in job markets, both in government and private sectors.
Like in educational and job sectors,
Muslims are discriminated for rented houses/flats even in so-called highly
educated, civilized cities like Mumbai, Gandhi Nagar, and Delhi, being Muslims.
Muslim women are driven out of rented homes for being Muslims wearing
Burkas. The finding rent houses is more
difficult with BJP came to rule Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan, etc. The
so-called secular Congress party supports the trend and never raised the issue
in parliament or state assemblies.
Congress leaders want BJP to harass Muslims more and more so that they
get the Muslims votes to win polls as before. .
Both BJP and Congress must know denial of
homes to Muslims for religious reasons is against Indian constitution and a
serious punishable crime.
Last
word
If anyone asks about the PM Modi’s
development agenda, the answer is zero, except that he did not stop the usual
development process in India that every globalized country witnesses.
The people of India had great expectations
from Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Modi government pursues a continuation
of the Manmohan Singh-led Congress government, with several U-turns in
policies. The people of India gave Modi a massive mandate because of two main
attractions. First was the anti-incumbency factor of the ruling Congress
government and other was the pro-Modi wave towards the so called Gujarat Model
development. But, every hope was shattered within a year.
BJP government could not keep its electoral
promises and the party began losing elections in states. PM Modi’s foreign
trips – perhaps the fastest tourist PM, are indeed meant to make up for the
demotic failures. He never speaks about foreign money Indians have carried
abroad so as to not to offend the Indian financial offenders - indeed the
international criminals.
India promised 10 billion dollars to
Mongolia. But South Korea announced to provide 10 billion US dollars to India
for infrastructure, development of smart cities, railways, power generation and
other diversified areas as the two countries agreed to upgrade their bilateral
relationship to a "Special Strategic Partnership" today.
As if he is in a hurry, PM Modi toured many
parts of the globe accompanied by hoards
of top business people, media lords,
among other virtual state guests at the state expense. It looked PM Modi has a
point to prove that the victory by BJP in the general election last year under
his leadership is valid.
The Modi government also feels insecure as
it could not deliver on its promises.
His decision to compensate for his domestic failures by touring as many countries as possible along with a hundreds of businessmen and
media lords burdening Indian state, looks rather impressive, though bold figured
Modi , like an innocent looking
Manmohan Singh, refused to bring
back the foreign money home as he
promised to Indian electorates .
That is because those involved in the money
laundering crime belong to BJP as well as those corporate lords who also fund
BJP, rather liberally.
BJP, true to its
media policy tactics, would not concede that it failed on many fronts,
employment, black money, economy,
inflation, corruption, price rises, communal tensions, Hindutva
threats to minorities, to mosques.
All said and done, one thing is certain: PM
Modi remains the tallest leader of India today and he faces no challenge from a
weak Congress, a disunited third front, an aimless leftist front. His only
nightmare continues to be Arvind Kejriwal, the Delhi CM and AAP supremo who now
eyes on Modi’s high seat.
Congress betrays Muslims. If Muslims
continue to ignore the Congress signals, stop voting for Congress they would
get due place and respect in India. The plight of Muslims cannot go still
worse. Congress leaders, even President Pranab, a senior Congress man, who
hanged Kashmiri Afzal Guru so that Congress could somehow win parliamentary
poll on anti-Muslim platform, could also ask judiciary to deliver a judgment
against Babri mosque. One, however, has to wait and see how the Hon Supreme
Court deals with the issue being manhandled by RSS, BJP and Congress jointly.
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