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Barely
a month ago, India seemed wrapped up in friendly stupor, smiling
self-absorbedly at a fantastic growth rate (10.4 per cent in the
last quarter, said to be even higher than China), a historic cricket
series with Pakistan and the best monsoon in years the previous
year. Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, who had sat like a venerable
Buddha on the throne of New Delhi across six years and two elections,
seemed destined to return. Astrological configurations agreed with
more mortal predictions, that the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance
would sweep the polls. It seemed to be all over, bar another swearing-in
ceremony in the name of God.
In
retrospect, it's unclear when the mirror cracked from Kashmir to
Kanyakumari, when caste alliances fell into cement in key states
like Bihar, when Opposition parties allied themselves against the
BJP without much fanfare (in Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu). Perhaps
the voter, at some point, also got somewhat irritated with the BJP's
protestations of an ``India Shining'' ad campaign on television
and in print - said to have been financed at an estimated cost of
50 crore rupees by the government - especially when he still struggled
to get a working hand-pump in his village.
Perhaps
those numbing stories of debt-ridden farmer suicides, especially
in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, finally got morphed into
the computer-savvy image of chief minister Chandrababu Naidu Inc.
Perhaps, the nausea peaked when 22 very poor women who had paid
a 20-rupee ticket to participate in a rally called in celebration
of a friend of the Prime Minister's in Lucknow - in Vajpayee's own
constituency - died in a stampede and no one was willing to take
responsibility for their deaths. The women had been promised ``gifts''
of 40-rupee saris if they came to the rally. Now their bodies lay
around like carcasses, unsung and unmourned. The PM's longtime friend,
Lalji Tandon, in whose honour the birthday rally had been called,
waved his many-ringed fingers and pointed out with some gravity,
that "accidents" took place all the time all over India.
Why should the BJP be singled out, cursed and punished for events
beyond its control?
Perhaps,
none of the above reasons are behind the current coagulating of
the Opposition, that is slowly but surely taking place against the
NDA alliance. At the time of writing, after the second phase of
polling (the last phase will be on May 10), the coalition seems
to be losing its magical touch. According to various exit polls,
it seems to be slipping below the 272 halfway mark (in a Lok Sabha
which has 545 seats), and could end up with 235-255 seats. For an
alliance which won a whopping 291 seats in the 1999 election in
the wake of Kargil, that's already a tremendous loss of face.
Once again, in fact for the 13th time, India's politicians
are discovering that elections are, indeed, a funny thing. (They
also understand why many nations, worldwide and not only in the
region, prefer controlled democracies.) Just when you could begin
boasting about a big heart - attempting peace, for the third time,
with Pakistan, underwriting a cricket series with the filmi phrase,
`dil jeet ke lao', etc - it seems as if an impudent electorate is
showing you the forefinger. Fully etched in the nail-skin cross-section
with a circle of indelible ink, of course.
Clearly, it seems as if the people are no longer grateful
even for the acknowledged successes of the Vajpayee-led NDA, but
have absorbed them as their God-given right. For example, the great
golden quadrilateral highway supposed to connect all four corners
of India with roads so smooth they bring to mind the ageless cheeks
of Aishwarya Rai. But get off the ``quad'' at Fatehpur in Uttar
Pradesh, one of the most politically aware - but abysmally illiterate
- parts of India, and you'll find dismissive village headmen waving
it off as a vision thing in the distance. What happened to the school
in the village, they ask. Or the well that was supposed to be built
for the Dalits?
The thing about this election is that 'development' issues
have become so overwhelmingly important that they're even threatening
to swallow divide-and-rule monsters like 'Hindutva.' That single
word, which forever scalded itself on the consciousness of India
in the wake of a cross-country Toyota chariot ride by BJP leader
L.K. Advani, seems to have been finally absorbed by all the processes
which make up the anarchy of a multi-denominational nation. It was
Hindutva which pulled down the Babri Masjid in 1992. It was Hindutva
which put a torch to the S-6 carriage full of Hindu volunteers in
the Gujarat town of Godhra in February 2002 - leading to the worst
pogrom against Muslims in recent memory.
Perhaps the Supreme Court's refusal to allow the nation to
forget Gujarat - and to reprimand the Gujarat High Court at its
miscarriage of justice right in the middle of this election campaign
- has something to do with it. Perhaps, the courage of some of the
victims, including an 18-year-old girl called Zaheera Sheikh, who
identified the mob that attacked a bakery in Vadodara, barely a
few kilometers away from Irfan Pathan's house, is adding to the
NDA ignominy. "
Perhaps, the elements of an anti-NDA wave includes a weakness
for dynasty. As Rahul Gandhi, son of assassinated prime minister,
Rajiv Gandhi, came out of the family closet to stand from the pocket
borough of Amethi, the sea of faces on television said more than
a thousand words. ``Na aaj payi, na Vajpayee,'' the crush said,
"yug-yug ka rishta hai/Rahul Gandhi farishta hai.'' As Priyanka,
Rahul's sister, with an amazing likeness to her grandmother Indira
Gandhi, campaigned from the top of a four-wheel drive, a roar went
through the crowd. Clearly, the power of the Nehru-Gandhi charisma
still mesmerised parts of North India.
The sights and sounds of India's 13th general election have
been crashing through the landscape this past month. The irony is,
that even as the BJP celebrates its sixth anniversary of the nuclear
tests on May 11-13, an event which forever changed the course of
history, it may be preparing to alter direction again. With no clear
victory forecast for any party in a hung Parliament, an amalgam
of former friends and enemies could make up the next Indian potpourri.
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