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From the Dawn paper
India`s cozy ties between corruption and corporate fascism
Jawed Naqvi
(8 hours ago) Today
Jawed Naqvi
What passes for resurgent religious fascism in India has in fact mutated into a cozy partnership with a new strand of secular fascism, also known as corporate takeover of the levers of state. There are thus two parallel stories running at this point in time in the country and they both complement each other.
The first narrative stems from the arrest of a number of rightwing Hindutva extremists in a number of places for false flag attacks they staged over several years. These people apparently carried out sabotage to blame it on Pakistani and Indian Muslims. They used false beards and moustaches with useful quantities of RDX, which was at least on one occasion evidently procured from army stores. The Samjhauta Express bombing is being investigated along this lead. All this is embarrassing not only for the Hindutva leadership but also for alleged rogue officials in intelligence agencies that are said to have colluded with the so-called nationalist extremists. The murky story of fake encounter killings of Muslim hoodlums and innocent ones too in Gujarat has already been deleted from the medias menu.
Naturally, the Hindutva sponsors needed a quick change in the news headlines, away from their terror links. They found one soon enough when writer Arundhati Roy and Kashmiri separatist Syed Ali Shah Geelani appeared together in Delhi for the first time to repeat what Ms Roy had said two years ago in an essay called Azadi. She reiterated the right to self determination of Kashmiris and also claimed what Jawaharlal Nehru and others had said dozens of times before her that Kashmir came to India through an unusual route without consulting the people of Kashmir.
The somewhat effete call for Azadi thus became a ruse to switch the headlines, from religious fascism to cooked up charges of sedition against Roy and others. And the corporate media be they pro-Congress or pro-BJP (and mostly you cant tell) colluded. A senior columnist Vir Sanghvi counselled indulgently that everyone had a right to dislike Arundhati Roy. As irony would have it he is among the two or three senior journalists whose phone was tapped by the income tax sleuths chasing a major financial cum political scandal.
This phone tapping and what it unearthed forms the hub of the second narrative doing the rounds in New Delhi. According to
this parallel strand of the main media story there has been a huge scam in the telecom ministry something to the tune of 175,000 crore rupees. Going by the taped conversations of politicians and middlemen, at the start of Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs second innings in May last year, there was hectic lobbying for Mr. A.Raja of the DMK party to be given the telecom ministry. He got it and then allegedly began granting favours to his handpicked firms.
Among those whose phones were tapped were NDTVs ace anchor Barkha Dutt and Mr. Sanghvi. I am not going into the details of the conversation as they are available on the web if you look for Open magazine and Outlook magazine. They were both involved in a conversation with Neera Radia, a woman PR representative who works for the main firms of industrialists Mukesh Ambani and Ratan Tata. Ms Radia evidently successfully campaigned to have A. Raja installed as the telecom minister.
The brief point is that following revelations of large-scale corruption by the minister, for whose job all the lobbying was done last year, he was forced to resign.
However, because the controversial minister belonged to a Tamil Nadu party which crucially shores up the Congress-led UPA coalition, there was a scare that the government would fall if an angry DMK withdrew support. The rival AIDMK party said they would step in to prop up Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs minority government if he decided to eject the DMK from the ruling coalition. Somehow the Congress-DMK pact has survived the turbulence. An official secret report doing the rounds indicates that the entire episode is the outcome of a corporate war, between those who lobbied against Raja and those who favoured him, with journalists and others sought to be used as go-betweens.
The essence of the unfolding corruption tragedy is perhaps best captured in one of the tapes in which Indias most influential business tycoon is quoted as claiming that the Congress party was his dukaan, a shop. There is nothing to indicate that the BJP is not similarly regarded by the corporate world. In the secret report the main leftist party, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) too is named as one of the parties whose leaders are being managed by the corporate mafia. The spectrum from the left to the right is thus covered by the corporate worlds reach.
Let it be recalled here that Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs tenures first as finance minister and then as prime minister have been littered with huge corruption scandals, the Harshad Mehta affair being just one. In fact, the media has rarely put the spotlight on him even though the economic reforms that he is credited with would not be there had his government, when he was finance minister, not bribed a clutch of MPs to pass a trust vote. In other words, the very basis of Indias so-called reforms flows from an act of massive corruption which would have sent the prime minister of the day in any other country straight to prison. However, only the tribal MPs who accepted the bribe were jailed, not the bribe givers. Is it not corruption that the current prime minister has abused gaping loopholes in the constitution, with the help of the corporate media, whereby he has not faced the electorate to give him legitimacy during his two terms? And is he really a resident of Assam as he has claimed to find a safe seat to the Rajya Sabha from the remote north-eastern state?
Corruption is a relative issue. A majority of the impoverished masses would not be able to even connect with the huge volumes of money transacted between two parties. They are probably more worried about whether they would be able to spend the winters under a plastic sheet on the pavements of Delhi, or if something as menacing as the recent Commonwealth Games would find them being dumped in some godforsaken region on the outskirts of the city and beyond.
Corruption in India is reflected in the very basic fact that you have to be ****** rich and with massive muscle power to fight an election to claim your right as a citizen. Nobody is arguing that this is going to change without a massive political upheaval.
Nobody is arguing that such a move would not be resisted by the state with all the force at its command. That is corruption in its most naked form.
If corruption is so deeply entrenched, is the Supreme Courts recent query asking Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to explain his silence for 16 months over the goings on in the telecom ministry going to change anything? I think the battle in the garb of probity really is being fought for the next corporate agenda. The present government is perceived as ineffective to help the business community win its objectives in the forests of Chhatisgarh, in the minefields of Jharkhand and the proposed ones in Orissa.
There is a strong peoples resistance going on there. Notice has been served through the current corruption-related standoff that the next government will belong to the one who has the stomach to kill enough common people to win the next major objective for those that consider Indian politics to be their dukaan. The media will be used yet again to lobby for that mayhem.
As for Hindutva, it is already part of the corporate agenda. Arundhati Roy had figured out the nexus some time ago. She is in the crosshairs of an increasingly vicious alliance between Hindutva nationalists and their corporate patrons who may dump the Congress for a better deal with the BJP.
Caught in the pincer are a majority of Indians.
jawednaqvi@gmail.com
India`s cozy ties between corruption and corporate fascism
Jawed Naqvi
(8 hours ago) Today
Jawed Naqvi
What passes for resurgent religious fascism in India has in fact mutated into a cozy partnership with a new strand of secular fascism, also known as corporate takeover of the levers of state. There are thus two parallel stories running at this point in time in the country and they both complement each other.
The first narrative stems from the arrest of a number of rightwing Hindutva extremists in a number of places for false flag attacks they staged over several years. These people apparently carried out sabotage to blame it on Pakistani and Indian Muslims. They used false beards and moustaches with useful quantities of RDX, which was at least on one occasion evidently procured from army stores. The Samjhauta Express bombing is being investigated along this lead. All this is embarrassing not only for the Hindutva leadership but also for alleged rogue officials in intelligence agencies that are said to have colluded with the so-called nationalist extremists. The murky story of fake encounter killings of Muslim hoodlums and innocent ones too in Gujarat has already been deleted from the medias menu.
Naturally, the Hindutva sponsors needed a quick change in the news headlines, away from their terror links. They found one soon enough when writer Arundhati Roy and Kashmiri separatist Syed Ali Shah Geelani appeared together in Delhi for the first time to repeat what Ms Roy had said two years ago in an essay called Azadi. She reiterated the right to self determination of Kashmiris and also claimed what Jawaharlal Nehru and others had said dozens of times before her that Kashmir came to India through an unusual route without consulting the people of Kashmir.
The somewhat effete call for Azadi thus became a ruse to switch the headlines, from religious fascism to cooked up charges of sedition against Roy and others. And the corporate media be they pro-Congress or pro-BJP (and mostly you cant tell) colluded. A senior columnist Vir Sanghvi counselled indulgently that everyone had a right to dislike Arundhati Roy. As irony would have it he is among the two or three senior journalists whose phone was tapped by the income tax sleuths chasing a major financial cum political scandal.
This phone tapping and what it unearthed forms the hub of the second narrative doing the rounds in New Delhi. According to
this parallel strand of the main media story there has been a huge scam in the telecom ministry something to the tune of 175,000 crore rupees. Going by the taped conversations of politicians and middlemen, at the start of Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs second innings in May last year, there was hectic lobbying for Mr. A.Raja of the DMK party to be given the telecom ministry. He got it and then allegedly began granting favours to his handpicked firms.
Among those whose phones were tapped were NDTVs ace anchor Barkha Dutt and Mr. Sanghvi. I am not going into the details of the conversation as they are available on the web if you look for Open magazine and Outlook magazine. They were both involved in a conversation with Neera Radia, a woman PR representative who works for the main firms of industrialists Mukesh Ambani and Ratan Tata. Ms Radia evidently successfully campaigned to have A. Raja installed as the telecom minister.
The brief point is that following revelations of large-scale corruption by the minister, for whose job all the lobbying was done last year, he was forced to resign.
However, because the controversial minister belonged to a Tamil Nadu party which crucially shores up the Congress-led UPA coalition, there was a scare that the government would fall if an angry DMK withdrew support. The rival AIDMK party said they would step in to prop up Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs minority government if he decided to eject the DMK from the ruling coalition. Somehow the Congress-DMK pact has survived the turbulence. An official secret report doing the rounds indicates that the entire episode is the outcome of a corporate war, between those who lobbied against Raja and those who favoured him, with journalists and others sought to be used as go-betweens.
The essence of the unfolding corruption tragedy is perhaps best captured in one of the tapes in which Indias most influential business tycoon is quoted as claiming that the Congress party was his dukaan, a shop. There is nothing to indicate that the BJP is not similarly regarded by the corporate world. In the secret report the main leftist party, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) too is named as one of the parties whose leaders are being managed by the corporate mafia. The spectrum from the left to the right is thus covered by the corporate worlds reach.
Let it be recalled here that Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs tenures first as finance minister and then as prime minister have been littered with huge corruption scandals, the Harshad Mehta affair being just one. In fact, the media has rarely put the spotlight on him even though the economic reforms that he is credited with would not be there had his government, when he was finance minister, not bribed a clutch of MPs to pass a trust vote. In other words, the very basis of Indias so-called reforms flows from an act of massive corruption which would have sent the prime minister of the day in any other country straight to prison. However, only the tribal MPs who accepted the bribe were jailed, not the bribe givers. Is it not corruption that the current prime minister has abused gaping loopholes in the constitution, with the help of the corporate media, whereby he has not faced the electorate to give him legitimacy during his two terms? And is he really a resident of Assam as he has claimed to find a safe seat to the Rajya Sabha from the remote north-eastern state?
Corruption is a relative issue. A majority of the impoverished masses would not be able to even connect with the huge volumes of money transacted between two parties. They are probably more worried about whether they would be able to spend the winters under a plastic sheet on the pavements of Delhi, or if something as menacing as the recent Commonwealth Games would find them being dumped in some godforsaken region on the outskirts of the city and beyond.
Corruption in India is reflected in the very basic fact that you have to be ****** rich and with massive muscle power to fight an election to claim your right as a citizen. Nobody is arguing that this is going to change without a massive political upheaval.
Nobody is arguing that such a move would not be resisted by the state with all the force at its command. That is corruption in its most naked form.
If corruption is so deeply entrenched, is the Supreme Courts recent query asking Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to explain his silence for 16 months over the goings on in the telecom ministry going to change anything? I think the battle in the garb of probity really is being fought for the next corporate agenda. The present government is perceived as ineffective to help the business community win its objectives in the forests of Chhatisgarh, in the minefields of Jharkhand and the proposed ones in Orissa.
There is a strong peoples resistance going on there. Notice has been served through the current corruption-related standoff that the next government will belong to the one who has the stomach to kill enough common people to win the next major objective for those that consider Indian politics to be their dukaan. The media will be used yet again to lobby for that mayhem.
As for Hindutva, it is already part of the corporate agenda. Arundhati Roy had figured out the nexus some time ago. She is in the crosshairs of an increasingly vicious alliance between Hindutva nationalists and their corporate patrons who may dump the Congress for a better deal with the BJP.
Caught in the pincer are a majority of Indians.
jawednaqvi@gmail.com