|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
Indian ruling coalition in disarray over communal campaign
By K. Ratnayake
30 March 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The ongoing campaign by the communalist Vishva Hindu Parshad
(VHP) to build a temple to the Hindu god Ram in Ayodhya has thrown
Indias ruling National Democratic Alliance (NDA) into disarray.
While Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee secured a deal at a
crisis meeting of coalition members on March 22, the future of
his fragile government is by no means certain.
Vajpayees own Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP) is the major
component of the alliance, but he depends on the support of 22
smaller partiesmany of them regionally-basedfor a
majority in parliament. These parties only joined the NDA on the
understanding that key aspects of the BJPs Hindu chauvinist
program would be off the governments agendaincluding
the issue of Ayodhya where a mob of Hindu fanatics destroyed a
Muslim mosque in 1992.
At last weeks meeting several NDA parties, including
the Janatha Dal-U (JD-U), Samata Party and Trinamool Congress,
insisted that the BJP restrain the VHP and other Hindu extremist
allies. The VHP had announced a provocative plan for a procession
carrying the funeral urns of some of its supporters killed in
early March when a mob, allegedly of Muslims, attacked and set
fire to a train in Godhra in the state of Gujarat.
The incident set off a wave of communal violence in Gujarat
in which hundreds of people, mainly Muslims, were killed. The
BJP is directly implicated in the deaths. The BJP-controlled state
government has been accused of failing to act to halt the pogrom
while leading BJP members were reportedly actively involved in
the killings.
The VHPs ongoing campaign threatened to tear the coalition
apart. Several BJP parliamentarians have openly supported the
planned procession. The BJPs partners, however, have expressed
concern that the VHPs actions will provoke another round
of violent clashes, heighten political instability and jeopardise
the governments already shaky voter base.
Vajpayee is desperate to defuse the issue. He appealed to the
VHP to put off plans to start building the Ram temple on March
15. In a last minute deal, the VHP and its sister organisation,
the Ram Janmabhoomi Trust (RJN), were allowed to observe a symbolic
puja or religious ceremony outside, but not on, the site of the
destroyed mosque. But the arrangement provoked criticism from
several NDA alliesthe National Conference of Jammu and Kashmir
(NC), Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and Trinamool Congress (TC)who
warned that they would reconsider their support for the coalition.
These disagreements surfaced again at last weeks NDA
meeting which was a crucial test for Vajpayee. A Samata Party
leader, Raghunath Jha, warned his party would not hesitate to
sever its ties with the government. Janatha Dal (JD-U) leader
Devendra Prasad Yadev attacked the saffron-robed people
(Hindu priests) for causing tension in the country.
The day before meeting, the National Conference of Jammu and
Kashmir (NC) went a step further and voted against the governments
new anti-terrorism legislationthe Prevention of Terrorism
Ordinance (POTO)in the parliamentary upper house. The vote
served two purposes: firstly, to distance the NC from legislation
that is highly unpopular in Jammu and Kashmir, where it will be
used against alleged supporters of Kashmiri separatism, and secondly,
to warn the BJP that it may pull out of the NDA altogether.
At the NDA meeting, Vajpayee was forced to give assurances
to his coalition partners that the government would stick to the
NDAs secular agenda. He had managed to convince
the VHP to call off its planned procession. The prime minister
also directed the BJP-led government in Gujarat not to proceed
with charges under the POTO law, which has been in force since
December as a presidential ordinance. The state government had
exploited the POTO provisions in a blatantly communal fashionarresting
Muslims involved in the initial attack on the train, but not the
Hindu leaders who incited the subsequent anti-Muslim violence.
In return, the NDA partners promised to support POTO legislation
when it was presented to a rare joint sitting of the upper and
lower houses of the Indian parliament on Tuesday. Vajpayee called
the joint sessiononly the third since independence in 1947to
circumvent the opposition of the upper house where the government
does not have a majority. The draconian legislation, which provides
for lengthy detention without trial, was passed by a substantial
majority.
The BJPs allies also agreed to end the rancorous public
criticism of each other and work together for the two years before
the next national elections. None of the underlying issues have
been resolved, however, and the uneasy peace is unlikely to last
for long.
A shaky coalition
The Indian press commented on the tenuous character of the
compromise reached last week. An editorial in the Hindu
on Monday described the BJPs assurances as no more than
a ritual, if not a farce, enacted every time the latent
discord burst into open. The newspapers political
analyst, K.K. Katyal, noted that the glue of power
had held the NDA together for the time being but predicted that
the BJPs allies would be reconsidering their position in
the future.
The BJP came to power in 1998 by appealing to widespread discontent
with previous Congress governments on the basis of Hindu chauvinism.
But having won office, Vajpayee has continued the program of economic
restructuring begun under Congress, which has, in turn, led to
deepening social polarisation and a growing sense of alienation
among the BJPs base of support.
Behind the latest crisis in the NDA coalition is nervousness
in all the parties about their electoral prospects. The BJP and
its allies lost heavily in the latest round of state elections,
including in Uttar Pradesh, previously regarded as a secure BJP
base.
Congress, the main opposition party, has not pressed for national
elections or tried to woo any of the NDA partners to its sidefor
obvious reasons. The electoral losses suffered by the BJP have
not resulted in any substantial gain in support for Congress.
In Uttar Pradesh, for instance, Congress finished a distance fourth
behind the BJP and two regional parties.
The international media has warned the BJP against trying to
bolster its position by appealing to Hindu extremism. The Economist
declared: A combination of widening political cracks
and increasing religious violence means India is entering another
worrisome period. The Far Eastern Economic Review
expressed its fears about the dangers of political instability
and called on the government to reject the demands of Hindu
extremists.
These comments reflect fears in international ruling circles
that any resort to communal politics will only heighten political
instability on the Indian subcontinent. Another concern is the
lack of any clear alternative if the BJP-led coalition should
collapse. Congress, which is already widely distrusted, is unlikely
to be in a position to rule in its own right. The result could
well be a series of unstable coalition governments that would
have difficulty implementing the market reforms demanded by foreign
investors.
In the short-term, the BJP has already begun seeking out other
alliances. It has been making advances to a regional party in
Tamil Nadu, the AIDMK, which has more MPs in the national parliament
than its current ally, the DMK. For its part, the DMK has announced
that it will not work with the local BJP in Tamil Nadu because
of these overtures.
But all of the BJPs alliances could easily be brought
undone by the actions of Hindu extremists in its own ranks and
associated organisations such as the VHP. The VHP has already
stated that it plans to mobilise support for the Ram Temple building
project.
The Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh (RSS), a fascistic organisation
with close links to the BJP, passed a resolution at its conference
a fortnight ago that will further inflame communal tensions. To
be safe in India, it declared, Muslims must earn the goodwill
of the countrys Hindu majority. Vajpayee and other senior
BJP leaders are longstanding RSS members.
The violence against Muslims is continuing. The president of
the National Human Rights Commission, J.S. Varma, told a recent
press conference that the sense of insecurity continues
to prevail among Muslims in Gujarat even though the Chief Minister
Narendra Modi has asserted that the situation in the state is
under control. Modi is a member of the BJP and an RSS supporter.
A number of towns in Gujarat were still under indefinite curfew
this week, including Baroda, Vadgam, Modasa, Kalpur, Dariapur,
Shahpur, Himmatnagar, Godhra and several places in Panchmahal
district. Last week two people were stabbed to death in the town
Baroda and another six were killed in Ahmedabad.
The communal violence, previously confined to Gujarat, has
also spread to other states. On March 16, several Hindu extremists
chanting pro-Ram Temple slogans ransacked the state assembly building
in Orissa. In Haryana state in northwestern India, Hindu chauvinist
mobs set fire to Muslim homes and a mosque. On March 25, Hindu
communalists blocked a procession of Muslims in Muharram in Rajasthan,
90 km from the state capital of Jaipur. One person died in the
chaoseither trampled to death or as the result of a police
shooting.
See Also:
India's ruling party abetted communal
carnage in Gujarat
[5 March 2002]
Indian state election losses intensify
tensions in ruling coalition
[4 March 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |