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New Indian ministry to continue right-wing policies
By Deepal Jayasekera
29 May 2004
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The composition of the Indian council of ministers, sworn into
office last Saturday, provides further confirmation that the Congress
Party-led coalition government will maintain essentially the same
right-wing policies at home and abroad as its predecessor.
To accommodate its various allies, Congress appointed 68 ministers28
with cabinet rank, while the remainder will be ministers of state.
Congress holds only 145 seats of its own in the 545-seat Lok Sabha,
or lower house of parliament, and is heavily dependent on a diverse
group of regional-based coalition partners in the United Progressive
Alliance (UPA). A full list of ministerial assignments was only
announced on Sunday, indicating the intensity of the backroom
haggling.
Most of the top positions, however, including 18 of the 28
cabinet posts, were allocated to Congress, in many cases to previous
ministers who served in the governments of Indira Gandhi and her
son Rajiv Gandhi in the 1970s and 1980s. Rajivs widow, Sonya
Gandhi, who stood aside to allow Manmohan Singh to become prime
minister, holds no ministerial position but she retains considerable
political clout as Congress party leader.
The big four ministriesfinance, external
affairs, defence and homeall went to veteran Congress leaders.
Palaniappan Chidambaram was appointed
to the key finance ministry in a further attempt to reassure
big business and foreign investors. He, like Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, has a long record of implementing the economic restructuring
demands of the IMF and World Bank. As commerce minister in the
Narasimha Rao government of 1991-96, Chidambaram collaborated
closely with Singh in opening up the Indian economy to foreign
investment.
When the Rao government was defeated in 1996 as a result of
the growing opposition to job losses and declining living standards,
Chidambaram became finance minister in the United Front (UF) government
from 1996 to 1998. In 1997, he brought down what is still referred
to by financial pundits as a dream budget for business,
slashing corporate taxes, income tax on the wealthy, the average
tariff rate and a range of other taxes. The Indian stock market
took off and Chidambaram was named Asias best finance
minister by an Australian university.
Chidambarams experience in the UF government has another
significance. Like the UF, the present Congress-led coalition
has a minority in parliament and relies on the support of the
so-called Left Front led by the Stalinist Communist Party of India-Marxist
(CPI-M). Chidambarams ability to enlist the support of the
CPI-M and its allies to push through further economic restructuring
is viewed as another plus by the markets.
D.H. Panandikar, senior economist with the RGP Foundation,
declared: It is very much a signal India is open for business.
It is a very positive driver [for the markets]. I expect him to
be able to keep the left on board because he is a very shrewd
politician.
Chidambaram declared this week that the new government would
continue the program of economic restructuring and was committed
to fiscal responsibility. On Monday, Chidambaram pledged: The
continuity [of economic reforms] is pretty clear because were
going back to the days of the original reformer [Singh].
The stock markets welcomed his appointment, with the Bombay Stock
Exchange rising 162 points or 3.26 percent on Monday.
Natwar Singh, the new external affairs minister,
has already assured the media that there will be no fundamental
break from the foreign policy orientation of the previous Bharatiya
Janatha Party (BJP)-led government. Foreign policy should
be evolutionary and not revolutionary. It is not tied to any doctrine
or dogma. We take decisions keeping in mind our vital national
interests, he told the media this week.
Singh has had a long career as a diplomat, including in China,
Britain and Pakistan, and served as external affairs minister
under Rajiv Gandhi.
The central feature of the BJPs orientation was the strengthening
of close diplomatic, military and economic ties with the USa
marked shift from Indias traditional post-World War II policy
of non-alignment, with which Congress was closely
associated. During the election campaign, Singh stirred up Indian
nationalism by releasing a document entitled Security Agenda:
Issues before the Nation, accusing the BJP of reducing India
to a subordinate role in its relations with the US and failing
to counter Pakistan-sponsored terrorism in Kashmir.
However, on Monday, Singh made clear there would be no sharp
shift away from the Bush administration. We are two great
democracies. It is in our interest, in their interest, in the
interest of the world, that relations between India and the US
should be on a steady course and not episodic, he said.
Singh added: We have differences [with Washington]. We
have differences on Iraq. We are not in favour of troops going
there. There is not going to be any change on that. These
so-called differences are, however, extremely muted.
When the Bush administration called for Indian troops in Iraq,
the only objection raised by the Congress opposition was that
it should be done under UN auspices. Amid growing opposition at
home and a deepening quagmire in Iraq, the previous government
decided not to send troops.
Singh has announced that the dialogue for friendship
and good neighbourliness with Pakistan will continue. Like
the BJP, Congress is calculating that India can rely on its growing
economic strength, rather than simply military might, to establish
its predominance in the region over its traditional rival.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told the International Herald
Tribune: We have to find a way to stop talking of war
with Pakistan... This is stopping us realizing our economic potential.
At the same time, however, he insisted that there would be no
significant concessions to Pakistan over the disputed region of
Kashmir. He ruled out any secession of Kashmir from India or any
redrawing of the present boundaries.
Pranab Mukherjee, a longstanding Gandhi family
loyalist, is the defence minister. He held the finance portfolio
under Indira Gandhi and was number two in her government. In addition,
he held commerce, steel and mines and external affairs ministries
in Congress governments from the 1970s to the mid-1990s. Defence
is crucial in New Delhis efforts to boost its regional power
status and develop military ties, especially with Washington.
Mukherjee told the media this week that he intended to continue
the modernisation of the armed forces as a top priority. Under
the previous BJP-led administration, military spending rose sharply.
The new minister announced his intention of pressing ahead with
major defence deals, including the building of French Scorpion
submarines, at the cost of $US2 billion, and a new multi-function
fighter aircraft.
Under the BJP, India developed close military ties with Israel,
which became the countrys second largest supplier of military
hardware. These included Phalcon Airborne Early Warning systems,
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, ground sensors and combat rifles. Mukherjee
ruled out any change to relations with Israel, declaring that
all parties in the coalition would agree on the issue of security.
Shivraj Patil is the home minister. His choice
was regarded as something of a surprise by the media as he failed
to win his seat in the recent elections. He had to be appointed
to the Indian upper house of parliament or Rajya Sabha. Patil
has a long association with the Gandhi family and has held a number
of posts in previous Congress governments.
According to several commentators, the home ministry, which
oversees internal security and relations with state governments,
had been assigned to Mukherjee. Mukherjee, however, is from West
Bengal, the stronghold of the Left Front, whose leaders may have
objected to a political competitor being given the powerful political
position.
The Congress-led alliance is committed to the repeal of the
countrys draconian POTA anti-terrorist laws,
which provide the police with extensive powers of arrest and detention
without trial. But Patil told the press that other provisions
of the Criminal Procedure Code would be just as effective in dealing
with disruptive activities.
He announced that there would be no easing of the crackdown
on armed Islamic separatists in Kashmir, where the Indian security
forces are notorious for their abuse of democratic rights.
Other significant ministries that remain in Congress hands
include: Human Resource Development (Arjun Singh), Commerce and
Industries (Kamal Nath), Power (P.M. Sayeed), and Water Resources
(Priya Ranjan Das Munshi). Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel
began his term of office by assuring investors that the privatisation
of the New Delhi and Bombay airports would proceed as planned.
The minority governments instability was highlighted
by the jostling for the plum jobs.
Laloo Prasad Yadav, leader of the Rastriya Janatha Party (RJD),
which is based in the state of Bihar, had wanted the position
of home minister. Such a move would have created political embarrassments
given that Yadav is facing serious charges of corruption involving
9.5 billion rupees in state funds. He eventually settled for the
post of railways minister in return for the continued allegiance
of the RJDs 21 MPs. The Indian railway system is a huge
commercial enterprise and warrants a separate parliamentary budget.
Lok Janashakti Party (LJP) head, Ram Vilas Paswan, had been
angling for the railways ministry but in the end accepted the
role of minister for chemicals, fertiliser and steel. He reportedly
agreed to take the oath of office just 20 minutes before the ceremony
after prolonged discussions with former prime minister V.P. Singh
and senior Congress leader Ahmed Patel.
Not all matters were settled over the weekend. Late on Sunday
night, M. Karunanidhi, the leader of the Tamil Nadu-based Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), issued a statement declaring that his
ministers were not happy with the allocation of portfolios and
would not assume office until the mistakes are rectified.
He insisted that the party had not been given what it was promised.
The mini-crisis was defused on Tuesday when Telengana Rastriya
Samiti (TRS) head K. Chandrasekhar gave up his post of shipping
minister to the DMK.
Having come to power unexpectedly by exploiting the popular
hostility to the impact of economic restructuring, the Congress
government has unambiguously signalled to big business that the
previous policies will be continued. As the new ministers proceed
to implement the economic agenda, opposition is certain to grow,
exacerbating already obvious tensions in the administration. This
situation highlights the governments dependence on the Stalinist-led
Left Front to ensure a parliamentary majority and defuse the inevitable
resistance of working people to its policies.
See Also:
India's new prime minister: a representative
of corporate interests par excellence
[25 May 2004]
Sonia Gandhi declines India's prime ministership
A craven capitulation to big business and the Hindu right
[20 May 2004]
As stock markets tumble
Sonia Gandhi prepares to become India's prime minister
[18 May 2004]
Political earthquake in India
Hindu supremacist BJP falls from power
[15 May 2004]
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