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Indias election commission demands BJP explain its role
in Lucknow tragedy
By Kranti Kumara
19 April 2004
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Indias Election Commission has issued a show-cause notice
to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the dominant partner in Indias
ruling coalition, demanding it explain its role in an April 12
function at which 22 impoverished women and children were trampled
to death. The deaths occurred during the free distribution of
saris, the traditional garment of Indian women, at an event in
Lucknow, Uttar Pradeshthe electoral constituency of Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee. The events ostensible purpose
was to celebrate the 70th birthday of Lalji Tandon, a senior BJP
leader and Vajpayees prospective campaign manager.
The April 17 Election Commission order gives the BJP central
leadership one week to explain why further action should not be
taken against it for violating the model code of conduct
that is in force during election campaigns. It also directs the
Uttar Pradesh state authorities to charge Tandon with election
bribery and to bring criminal charges against those responsible
for organising the Lucknow event.
The Lucknow tragedy and subsequent EC order have shaken the
pre-election self-confidence of the Hindu supremacist BJP and
forced it on the political defensive. The sari distribution event
was clearly organized with a view towards influencing the votes
of impoverished electors in the general election that is to take
place in five stages between April 20 and May 10.
But the BJP is trying to deny any responsibility. In its defence,
it cites the fact that the events official sponsor was the
Nagrik Sewa Samiti (NSS). This is spurious. The NSS is a BJP-aligned
community service organization, one of many that BJP
and the fascistic Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or RSS use to promote
their noxious brand of politics. Birjendra Murari Yadav, the NSSs
founder and the principal organiser of the Lucknow event, is both
a BJP member and a close friend of Tandon. Moreover, Tandon, who
was warding Vajpayees constituency while the prime minister
toured the country, himself attended the NSS function.
The BJP leadership is further trying to distance itself from
the tragedy by saying it is false to claim that Tandon is Vajpayees
election campaign manager. Technically this is true, but only
because on April 14 Vajpayee had yet to officially file his nomination
papers and legally name Tandon as his election agent.
There is much evidence to show that those who organized the
Lucknow event were criminally negligent. The venue, a park with
a single 12-foot entrance, was packed by the organizers with close
to 15,000 people, although it has a capacity for just 2500, and
the temperature was over 40 degrees Celsius. The stampede was
provoked when the organizers realized that they lacked the requisite
number of saris and started throwing the remaining bundles at
the crowd.
The Election Commission was forced to intervene as a result
of the popular anger sparked by the tragedy and the patent attempt
to win votes by exploiting the desperation of the poor. In fact,
the type of vote-buying that led to the Lucknow tragedy is quite
routine. But generally the EC looks the other way.
Significantly, the commission defended its decision to call
for election bribery charges to be brought against Tandon alone
among BJP leaders by parroting the BJP line that he was not Vajpayees
election agent.
Electoral exploitation of poverty
The gulf separating the manipulating political elite and the
impoverished Indian masses was glaringly illustrated by Tandons
puzzled reaction to press criticism of the event: Do these
incidents not happen? Train tragedies happen, people get killed
by bullets, why are they picking on this?
Instead of condemning the organisers of this tragedy, both
Vajpayee and the Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mulayalam Singh
Yadav of the rival Samajwadi Party (SP) sprang to Tandons
defence. Mulayalam Singh cut short his electoral campaigning and
rushed to meet with Tandon instead of visiting the injured in
their hospital beds. The chief minister subsequently issued a
statement exonerating Tandon. According to Prime Minister Vajpayee,
Tandon has been doing this for a long time. However, this
time the turnout was large and it could not be managed properly.
In what can only be termed a cruel hoax, those attending the
Lucknow event were compelled to pay a 20 rupees registration
fee to receive a Rs. 40 sari and a dinner. Women, who were bussed
from the outlying slums of Lucknow, recounted to a Times of
India reporter that despite the high cost, they nevertheless
agreed to pay, since a bus ride into town with a free dinner and
a sari was a rare treat. In a most revealing comment,
one of the residents added, It is the first time Ive
heard of someone charging money because parties always pay us
to attend rallies and functions.
In one of the localities named Ram Lila Ground, from where
10 victims came, women residents cursed the local leadership of
the BJP-affiliated Mahila Morcha (literally Womens Struggle).
Reflecting the mobster mentality that pervades the BJP, the victims
relatives were reportedly threatened by local party organizers
with dire consequences if they spoke to the press.
Several womens organizationsincluding the Muslim
Womens Forum, All India Democratic Womens Association
(AIDWA) and the National Federation of Indian Womenheld
a demonstration in New Delhi condemning the BJP for its role in
the Lucknow tragedy. They also demanded that the election commission
debar Prime Minister Vajpayee from standing for election, accusing
him of violating electoral laws against bribery. The BJP has responded
by denouncing its political opponents for politicising
the sari deaths.
Although the Indian press, in general, has been critical of
the BJP over this incident, one of the countrys major newspapers,
the Hindustan Times, blamed the victims themselves, declaring:
No woman who risks her life for a cheap sari can be feeling
very good.
BJP propaganda and reality
The tragedy has shaken the BJP because of the electoral importance
of Uttar Pradesh, the pivotal role that Vajpayee plays in the
BJPs election and post-election calculations, and because
it has exposed the reality behind the BJPs propaganda about
India Shining.
In addition to being Vajpayees home constituency, Lucknow
is the capital of Uttar Pradesh. The BJP has hopes of increasing
its UP seat tally from the current 29 to 50, but this appear to
be threatened by the backlash over the sari deaths. Should the
BJP fail to at least maintain its current seat-holding in UP,
the NDAs chances of securing a parliamentary majority will
be in serious jeopardy.
The BJP has sought to create a personality cult around Vajpayee,
splashing his picture on party literature and political advertisements.
The 80-year-old Vajpayee, whom BJP propaganda celebrates as a
wise and farsighted statesman, plays a key role in maintaining
the BJPs complex system of alliances with a host of regional
and caste-based political formations. In recent days, Vajpayee
has said publicly that he wanted to retire before the current
election campaign, but was pressed by the party leadership to
remain at the helm for the good of the party and India.
Vajpayee is invariably contrasted with the other principal
BJP leader, Home Minister L.K. Advani, so as to cast the prime
minister, who is a lifelong RSS-member and rank Hindu chauvinist,
as a moderate. Advani is seared in Indian popular
consciousness as the leader of the anti-Muslim Barbi Masjid agitation
which ended in the 1992 razing of the sixteenth century mosque
and the worst round of communal bloodletting since the 1947 communal
partition of the subcontinent.
In the run-up to the elections the Indian government has been
mounting a propaganda campaign termed India Shining.
Advertisements proclaim: Times are exciting; Villages are
progressing; Eyes are twinkling; You have never had a better time
to shine brighter.
The advertising campaign is being financed by the Indian government,
but it dovetails with the BJPs and NDAs election claims
that India is on the march to great power status. To date, the
Indian government has spent Rs. 4 billion (approximately 90 million
US dollars) on its India Shining campaign, an obscene sum considering
the cruel cuts the BJP imposed in the public food distribution
system for the poor.
The chasm between the daily reality facing the Indian masses
and the dream world of this crude propaganda could not be more
glaring. A few statistics illustrate the abysmal conditions that
prevail across much of India. There are at least 400 million people
living in poverty, 75 percent of them poor villagers. Close to
80 percent of the people in India live on less than $2 a day;
95 out of every 1,000 children die before the age of five. At
least 40 percent of the 1 billion people in India are illiterate.
Close to 70 million children out of 200 million school-age children
do not attend schools, either due to poverty or lack of nearby
schools. Anywhere from 35 to 50 percent of people have no access
to electricity. According to United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) statistics, in terms of human development, India ranks
near the bottom, 127th out of the 175 countries ranked.
The India Shining campaign is mainly geared towards an urban
minority that has economically benefited from outsourcing and
globalization. It contemptuously ignores the overwhelming majority
of Indian people who barely eke out a living. During its tenure,
the BJP has mounted repeated assault on the Indian workers by
privatizing even profit-making public enterprises, thus opening
them up to rapacious exploitation by transnational enterprises.
So stark is the contrast between the sari tragedy and the claims
of the BJP/NDA government, a shaken Prime Minister Vajpayee was
briefly forced to shift his rhetoric. The incident,
he said, has jolted us and forced us to see the other side
of India, which is not shining, which has areas of darkness.
As the events of last week so tragically illustrated, no amount
of propaganda and bravado can conceal the fact that the dominant
reality confronting the Indian masses is one of mounting economic
insecurity and physically and intellectually gnawing poverty.
See Also:
Indias Hindu chauvinist-led
coalition government calls early election
[4 March 2004]
Millions of Indian government
employees to go on strike today
[24 February 2004]
India and Pakistan to pursue
composite dialogue
[29 January 2004]
Behind the India-Pakistan
ceasefire
[29 December 2003]
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