A Duplicitous Godman and a double dealing Government
Srinivasan Ramani, Newsclick, June 7, 2011
Just as one thought that “silly season” was never ending in India's capital, the Indian central government engaged in some acrobatics, shifting suddenly from being supine and stumbling to ballistic and bellicose within a few days. Nothing else could describe the way the Indian government handled the “baba” Ramdev threat of agitating over the “black money” issue.
Indeed the issue of repatriating “black money” stashed in offshore banks is an important one and something that has added to the government's already burgeoning embarrassment of corruption charges. Yet the agitation threatened by the televangelist yoga practitioner – one among many “parvenu godmen” as Prabhat Patnaik calls them – was never more than a half-serious attempt at re-enacting the Anna Hazare moment against corruption. Instead, the government, alarmed and conditioned by the response to the Anna Hazare led civil society movement thought it necessary to engage with Ramdev in the most flattering manner possible. No less than four cabinet ministers were dispatched to pay obeisance and persuade the “baba” to give up his call for a fast to force the government into repatriating the “black money”.
That a government which paid little heed or bother to a large rally of working class protesters – cutting across political boundaries and over a lakh– who had assembled some months ago in the capital to protest inflation and the lack of government response to it, took to literally prostrating in front of a “godman” showed up its muddle headed priorities. Perhaps understanding the ridicule that it was being subject to, the government decided to swing to the other extreme after it found that Ramdev was being recalcitrant and unwilling to honor a secret pact that could have brought an end to the proposed agitation. It decided to let loose its law and order machinery, attacking gathered protesters at the wee hours of the night and in the process, invited a suo moto scrutiny call by the Supreme Court.
If the UPA had already played up the televangelist's nuisance value by paying obeisance in the first place, it had suddenly transformed him into a crusader-martyr by taking violent recourse to clearing up his rally. Incompetence is now writ large on the UPA adding fuel to the fire of resentment against it caused by the plethora of scandals pervading its existence in government.
And the embers of anger that is now raging against the government is being fanned by all kinds of recidivist forces – the RSS is actively playing a “behind-the-scenes” role in guiding Ramdev's “movement”; even the vastly discredited Khap panchayats' representatives are trying to make hay while this fire burns. “Black money” is now merely a staging point for dark forces to pitch in their own agendas in the garb of opposing the “corrupt” government. And who else but the government is to be blamed for all this?
The shoddy defense of the 2G licensing scam offered by the government's spokespersons, the belated actions in the Commonwealth Games organisation scam, the continued nexus with big business pervading its governance, and the ongoing inaction on issues confronting the people – inflation in particular have all resulted in where the UPA finds itself – between a rock and a hard place.
What of the “civil society” that sees in the idea of an all powerful Lok Pal, a panacea of all ills that constitute corruption? Leave alone the fact that this institution targets only malfeasance and does not even tread into addressing the roots of the phenomena of “corruption”, there remain severe lacunae in the proposals emanating from the civil society representatives. The institution envisaged is suggested to have extra-constitutional powers, going against the “separation of powers” logic inherent in the representative democracy that is the republic of India. Surely a lot of perspective is required – both in the ideation of the “Lok Pal” and also, in the understanding of how much the battle against corruption is linked to the larger war against neoliberalism and crony-capitalism.
That war and the battles to be fought in the interim cannot be won if it relies upon weapons of irrationality as embodied by the likes of the “parvenu” godmen like the Ramdevs or the “Sri Sri”s whose projects go against the larger grains of civic organisation and secularism. Irrational demands and pronouncements -such as those among others made by Ramdev in the course of his agitation– trivialise the issue of corruption and the matter of hoarding unpaid taxes in offshore accounts. They also paper over the very manner and means that sustain the lives of these “godmen” who wish to perpetuate their already dubiously earned “messiah” statuses by partaking into issues of politics that is constitutionally supposed to be the arena of the secular. It is indeed farcical to therefore see a yoga guru who has built an empire out of a televangelist business that claims that “cancer can be cured via yoga”, runs a quackish ayurveda “pharmacy” that produces medicines of dubious value and content, is accused of anti-labour acts, is someone who owns an entire island overseas, leading the moral ground(swell) against “corruption”.
The government though, by its high-handed actions going against the letter of the law, has ceded whatever moral ground it had vis-a-vis the dubious “babas”, in effect, making heroes out of them. Indeed, as a double dealing government tries to outdo a duplicitous (and cross-dressing) “godman”, the real issue of corruption has been given the go-by.





Comments
Hi - Did you know that
Hi - Did you know that communism is dead and communists are irrelevant?
Srinivasan Ramani, you sound
Srinivasan Ramani, you sound like the 'out-of-touch with people,' so-called Indian left and secular parties when you accuse the people behind the current movement as ones propped up by the right. Calling them 'dark forces' and even taking cheap potshots [ "duplicitous (and cross-dressing) “godman”] you certainly don't add any value to the discourse, while you lament that "the real issue of corruption has been given the go-by."
It appears the only winner out of this sort of attitude by the opposition will only be the Congress Party and its allies in big business, which took advantage of the Left's reluctance to ally with 'communal forces' when opposing the Indo-US Nuclear Deal.
"Out of touch"?
I didn't mean to take "cheap potshots" by calling the baba - duplicitous and by the other appellation. I only meant to highlight what he has turned out to be in reality. The reasons are linked in the article itself.
As for fighting corruption, just to reiterate what I said in the article, it cannot be done by taking the help of the irrational and the bizarre which seem to characterise the opposition led by the elements of the loony Right - the Ramdevs and the assorted sadhvis and sants propped up by the Sangh Parivar.
As for the Indo-US Nuclear Deal, during the vote of confidence against the UPA government that was the final arbiter in the passing of the deal, the entire Left and assorted parties which included the BJP voted against the UPA. Yet defections from the BJP and other parties - engineered by the UPA through the infamous "Cash for vote" scuttled the opposition. So, the UPA actually took advantage of the fallibility of sections among the Right to actually go ahead with the deal. In essence your statement is therefore factually incorrect.
On the issue of corruption and malfeasance, it is ironical that the Right sounds so ballistic about it despite being a big beneficiary of the very structure that spawns corruption. Check out the brazenness with which the BJP chief minister of Karnataka, B.Yeddyurappa continues to remain in power. And the allegations against A.Raja and co. reflects similar ones made against the likes of the late Pramod Mahajan as well - favouring select telecom players by changing rules or playing around them.
And the appellation - "Dark forces" is used with justification against organisations such as the RSS. There is a plethora of material to justify using that term. As of now, lets satisfy ourselves with two words - Swami Aseemananda.
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