‘Now, We Have a Democratically Elected Totalitarian
Government’
In Pakistan, apprehensions are rife about Narendra Modi’s flamboyant success.
But fervent Modi supporters in the Indian middle classes prefer to place him in
the economic governance arena. Dawn recently talked to renowned Indian writer,
Arundhati Roy, in Delhi to explore what Modi’s rise means for India.
By Arundhati Roy
May 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Dawn"
- “The massive, steeply climbing GDP of India dropped rather
suddenly and millions of middle-class people sitting in the aircraft, waiting
for it to take off, suddenly found it freezing in mid-air,” says Ms Roy. “Their
exhilaration turned to panic and then into anger. Modi and his party have mopped
up this anger.”
India was known for its quasi-socialist economy before it
unfettered its private sector in 1991. India soon became global capital’s
favourite hangout, sending its economy on a high. The neo-liberal roller coaster
ride, however, hit snags. The Indian economy, after touching a peak of over 10pc
growth in 2010, tapered down to below 5pc in the last three years. The Indian
corporate class blames this lapse solely on the ruling Congress party’s ‘policy
paralysis’. Its ‘meek’ prime minister, Manmohan Singh, was now identified as a
hurdle. The aggressive Modi thus provided the ultimate contrast.
“What he [Modi] will be called upon to do is not to attack
Muslims, it will be to sort out what is going on in the forests, to sweep out
the resistance and hand over land to the mining and infrastructure
corporations,” explains Ms Roy. “The contracts are all signed and the companies
have been waiting for years. He has been chosen as the man who does not blink in
the face of bloodshed, not just Muslim bloodshed but any bloodshed.” India’s
largest mining and energy projects are in areas that are inhabited by its
poorest tribal population who are resisting the forcible takeover of their
livelihood resources. Maoist militants champion the cause of these adivasis and
have established virtual rule in many pockets.
“Bloodshed is inherent to this model of development. There are
already thousands of people in jails,” she says. “But that is not enough any
longer. The resistance has to be crushed and eradicated. Big money now needs the
man who can walk the last mile. That is why big industry poured millions into
Modi’s election campaign.”
Ms Roy believes that India’s chosen development model has a
genocidal core to it. “How have the other ‘developed’ countries progressed?
Through wars and by colonising and usurping the resources of other countries and
societies,” she says. “India has no option but to colonise itself.”
India’s demographic dynamics are such that even mundane
projects, such as constructing a road, displace thousands of people, never mind
large dams and massive mining projects. The country has a thriving civil
society, labour unions and polity that channel this resistance. The resistance
frustrates corporate ambitions. “They now want to militarise it and quell it
through military means,” she says. Ms Roy thinks that the quelling “does not
necessarily mean one has to massacre people, it can also be achieved by putting
them under siege, starving them out, killing and putting those who are seen to
be ‘leaders’ or’ ‘instigators’ into prison.” Also, the hyper Hindu-nationalist
discourse which has been given popular affirmation will allow those resisting
‘development’ to be called anti-nationals. She narrates the example of destitute
small farmers who had to abandon their old ways of subsistence and plug in to
the market economy.
In 2012 alone, around 14,000 hapless farmers committed suicide
in India. “These villages are completely resourceless, barren and dry as dust.
The people are mostly Dalits. There is no politics there. They are pushed into
the polling booths by power brokers who have promised their overlords some
votes,” she adds, citing her recent visit to villages in Maharashtra that has
the highest rate of farmer suicides in India.
So is there no democracy in India then? “It would be too
sweeping to say that,” she retorts. “There is some amount of democracy. But you
also can’t deny that India has the largest population of the poor in the world.
Then, there hasn’t been a single day since independence when the state has not
deployed the armed forces to quash insurgencies within its boundaries. The
number of people who had been killed and tortured is incredible. It is a state
that is continuously at war with its people. If you look at what is happening in
places like Chhattisgarh or Odisha, it will be an insult to call it a
democracy.”
Ms Roy believes that elections have become a massive corporate
project and the media is owned and operated by the same corporations too. She
opines that “some amount of democracy” in India is reserved for its middle
classes alone and through that they are co-opted by the state and become loyal
consumers of the state narrative of people’s resistances.
“The 2014 elections have thrown up some strange conundrums,”
she muses. “For eg, the BSP, Mayawati’s party, which got the third largest vote
share in the country, has won no seats. The mathematics of elections are such
that even if every Dalit in India voted for her, she could have still not won a
single seat.”
“Now, we have a democratically elected totalitarian
government,” she continues. “Technically and legally, there is no party with
enough seats to constitute an opposition. But many of us have maintained for
several years that there never was a real opposition. The two main parties
agreed on most policies, and each had the skeleton of a mass pogrom against a
minority community in its cupboard. So now, it’s all out in the open. The system
lies exposed.”
India’s voters have given their verdict. But the blunt
question that Ms Roy raises remains unanswered: where will India’s poor go?
Published in Dawn, May 23rd, 2014