Modi
Replicates His Gujarat Model at the National level
Gujarat was transformed into ‘a laboratory for Hindu
nationalism’, called ‘the Hindutva laboratory’ after the rise to power of Narendra
Modi, who governed the state between 2001 and 2014. The Gujarat identity was
rooted in Hinduism and directed against Muslims. It had been a Hindu
nationalist test site, a new form of Hindutva politics that unfolded at the national
level. Modi, as the Prime Minister of India, has replicated the modus operandi
he had fine-tuned as Chief Minister of Gujarat.
Professor Christophe Jaffrelot in his high scholarly book Gujarat
Under Modi: The blueprint for Today’s India gives a gripping account of
how Modi’s politics transposed to the national scene in 2014. Some selected mainstays
of Modi’s politics in Gujarat, drawn from the book, are discussed here:
The Riots of 2002 and its
politics
Communal polarization was the first pillar of Modi’s politics
in Gujarat. This polarization remained Modi’s trump card in national politics. On 27 February 2002, violence broke out in
Godhra, a district headquarters in eastern Gujarat. Some 59 Hindus were burned
alive aboard the Sabarmati Express. The train was returning from Faizabad Uttar
Pradesh carrying many kar sevaks who travelled to Ayodhya to try to
build Ram temple on the ruins of the Babri Masjid. Of 2,000 passengers, about 1,700 were kar
sevaks from Gujarat. They chanted Hindu nationalist songs and slogans
throughout the journey, all the while harassing Muslim passengers. More abuse occurred at the halt in Godhra, a
town known for its large Muslim population and history of communal riots. On
the evening of February 27, after visiting Godhra, the Chief Minister Narendra
Modi announced that there would be a state bandh the next day. Thereafter, he called a meeting of senior
police officers. According to Sanjiv Bhatt, a senior policeman, who attended
the meeting, the meeting was the point of departure for ‘the official
orchestration of the 2002 riots in Gujarat’: Shri Narendra Modi said that the
Muslims be taught a lesson to ensure that such incidents do not recur ever
again. The Chief Minister expressed the view that the emotions were running
very high among the Hindus and it was imperative that they be allowed to vent
out their anger. On the day of the bandh, there was absolutely no police
bandobast. The state and Ahmedabad city police control rooms were taken over by
ministers. And repeated pleas from people were blatantly turned down. And what
followed was communal carnage on an unprecedented scale.
De-institutionalizing the rule
of law
In the wake of the 2002 riots, the Modi government
pursued a strategy of politicization of the police and the judiciary. The most
professional policemen who had done their duty were sidelined whereas the
others were promoted. Some of them were
also implicated in a new politics of fear targeting so-called jihadi
terrorists, who were victims of extra-judicial killings. The judicial process
itself was affected by the nomination of prosecutors belongs to the Hindu
nationalist movement and the infiltration of the judiciary. In parallel with
the politicization of the police and the judiciary, the Modi government failed
to fight against deep- rooted corrupt practices and criminalization of
politics; whistle blowers were targeted and the state indulged in new forms of
surveillance. The de-institutionalization of the rule of law found expression
in the promotion of Hindu vigilante groups, which resorted to cultural policing
in the streets as well as university campuses. These groups benefited from the
protection of the government and became well entrenched at the grassroots
level. Their penetration of society
resulted in the making of a ‘deeper state’ propagating the Hindu nationalist
ideology at the expense of the rule of law. The de-institutionalizing the rule
of law became a strategy for strengthening Modi’s political control. This
process translated into the saffronisation of the state instituitions.
The Capture of Institutions
In order to polarize Gujarat and to protect himself
from legal challenges, Narendra Modi needed to exert stronger control over the
rule of law for perpetuating the politics of fear. Hence, the need to de-institutionalise state
power. Not only were the policemen who had made the riots possible rewarded,
and others punished, but police officers were used by the government to further
polarize society along religious lines through fake encounters. Between 2002
and 2006 there were series of such encounters, which among others included the
three most infamous ‘encounters’ – the Sadiq Jamal, Ishrat Jehan and
Sohrabuddin cases - that resulted in the killing of several young Muslims who
were portrayed as Islamists. The police played a big role in propagating the
climate of fear.
The involvement of key members of the Modi government
in fake encounters became more obvious in the Sohrabuddin case. Sohrabuddin Sheikh, part of the underworld,
was killed in an alleged fake encounter on 26 November 2005. In March 2007, the
Supreme Court ordered the state CID to probe the case. In May 2007, the State’s
Inspector General Geeta Johri reported that “the collusion of the state government
in the form of Shri Amit Shah, MoS for Home makes a complete mockery of the
rule of law and is an example of the involvement of the state government in a
major crime.” The CBI had arrested Amit Shah, one of Narendra Modi’s most
influential lieutenants, in- charge of ten portfolios in the Gujarat
government, on 25 July 2010. After his arrest, Tushar Mehta virtually gave up
his practice and became ‘the point-man for Amith Shah’ and his ‘eyes and ears’.
He was involved in all the legal procedures that mattered in Gujarat after the
2002 riots. Amit Shah was granted bail
in October, but was ordered not to reside in Gujarat, fearing his interfearence
with the ongoing judicial process. The Supreme Court transferred the
Sohrabuddin case from Gujarat to Mumbai in September 2012, after the CBI
expressed apprehension that witnesses were intimidated and a free and fair
trial was not possible in Gujarat. The fake encounters helped the Modi
government to maintain an atmosphere of fear, attributed to Islamist threat. Gujarat
was a test site for the communalization of the police.
Modi
projected himself as the protector of the Hindu majority. The orchestration of
fake encounters with jihadis who allegedly intended to kill him helped Modi to
consolidate the image of savior of the majority community. The de-institutionalization
of the judiciary occurred due to the infiltration of the judicial machinery and
a well thought strategy of appointing reliable men to key posts. This policy prepared the ground for what Modi
and Amith Shah were about to do at the Centre.
Exerting systematic control over the police and the judiciary became a
priority. The techniques used to that effect were drawn directly from the test
site that Gujarat had become under Modi and Shah.
(a) They tried to appoint to key positions police officers who had been part of their entourage in Gujarat. In 2015, Y.C. Modi – who had been part of the SIT that probed Modi’s role in the Gujarat riots and investigated the murder of Haren Pandya - became additional CBI director. In 2016, another IPS Gujarat cadre, Rakesh Asthana – also part of the SIT- was appointed additional director of the CBI and became its ‘special director’ in spite of opposition from the CBI director Alok Verma, who was forced to quit. He was appointed Police Commissioner of Delhi, directly reporting to the Home Minister Amit Shah.
(b) Modi and Shah focused their attention on the judicial process. They brought to Delhi the people who had helped them in Gujarat. Tushar Mehta, who had defended Amit Shah in the Sohrabuddin Sheikh case, was appointed additional solicitor general in 2014 and solicitor general of India in 2018. S.V. Raju, who had been practicing at the Gujarat High Court and had been Amit Shah’s lawyer in different cases, was appointed as additional solicitor general in 2020. Earlier in 2014, the Modi government refused to appoint Gopal Subramanium as a Judge of the Supreme Court because he was the Supreme Court’s amicus curiae in the Sohrabuddin case, in which Amit Shah was the main accused. In 2020, a special SIT court in Ahmedabad acquitted all 67 accused, including BJP MLA Maya Kodnani and Bajrang Dal leader Babu Bajrangi, in the 2002 Naroda Gam massacre case. In many cases investigated by the CBI, the agency abstained from filing any appeal against the judicial decisions, including the case relating to the death in 2014 of Judge B.H.Loya, who was hearing the Soharabuddin fake encounter case.
The Making of Moditva
The RSS was conceived of an Organisation in which
individuals had to sacrifice their identity: The Sangh was above the man. This
is why Swayamsevaks all have to wear the same uniform, from foot
soldiers to the supreme leader – the sarsanghchalak. The guru of the Organisation is saffron
flag, not an individual. The secondary role of its leader vis-à-vis the
Organisation explains the collegiality of the RSS decision making process. Nor
are sarsanghchalaks high profile public figures. Narendra Modi, though
trained in this tradition as a pracharak, has abjured such a collegial style
of functioning. No Hindu nationalist
leader had gone so far in this direction before. The rise to power of Narendra Modi reflects a
different trajectory and strategy.
Never before had the BJP seen such a concentration and
personalization of power. Instead of investing in the bureaucracy at large, Modi
selected a handful of civil servants who became part of his personal entourage.
P.K. Mishra who was Modi’s personal secretary in Gujrat; the most formidable
advisor to Modi managing IAS babus became all power Principal Secretary in the
PMO. Not only did key bureaucrats become part of Modi’s inner circle, but they
also solidified the nexus between his government and the corporate sector. This
triangular relationship is exemplified by the role of former bureaucrats in the
Adani Group. In addition to IAS and IPS officers,
lawyers were also part of this nexus. According to the lawyer Anand Yagnik,
over twenty lawyers who had fought cases against the Adanis were retained by
the Adani Group.
Once he became Prime Minister, Modi replicated the
strategies that he had experimented with in the testing ground of his home
state. He relied on bureaucrats to
govern India. Some of those who had been part of his close guard in Gujarat
followed him to Delhi. Modi sidelined the old guard in the same way he had
marginalised Keshubhai Patel, Suresh Mehta, Kashiram Rana and Gordhan Zadaphia
in Gujrat. His mentor L.K. Advani, Murali Manohar Joshi and other veterans were
marginalised. Modi, as the prime minister, prevailed over the RSS national
leaders in the same way he had prevailed over the RSS state leaders in
Gujarat.
The continuity between Modi’s political style before
and after 2014 is fascinating. Only
minor adjustments were needed for shifting from state level to national level politics.
His body language was the same and the general overtone too. His commitment to crony capitalism, that is
capital intensive, and not labor intensive, remained the same ensuring so
called growth minus job creation. The targets were the same, be they Pakistan
and the Muslims or, on the domestic scene, the Congress and the Nehru-Gandhi
family. That Modi could centralize as well as personalize power at a pan-Indian
level, as he had done at the state level, is amazing. The victims of social exclusion
and ghettoization, Muslims were turned into de facto second-class citizens. Personalization
of power is total. The manner in which he announced the demonetisation in 2016
and took the decision to impose the most draconian nation-wide lockdown in 2020,
without consulting any one, amply demonstrate that what we see today at the Centre
is unbridled absolute political power exercised by one man, with all constitutional
checks and balances failing.
In conclusions, Professor Christophe Jaffrelot says, “under
the aegis of the Modi government, Hindu nationalism penetrated Gujarat society
so deeply that they came to form a state deeper than the official one, and a
control system that was well entrenched at the societal level. This modus
operandi has been replicated at the national level since 2014. It would make
any return to the status quo ante difficult, even if the BJP loses elections.
Only a mass movement could probably counter such a majoritarian osmosis with
society.”
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