Skip to main content

How for almost a month bulk of state machinery was glued into only PM’s two-day visit with every other duty taking backseat

By RK Misra*
Like Midas, whose touch turned everything into gold, every event of Prime Minister Narendra Modi turns into an extravaganza. Especially in his home state of Gujarat.
During his recent two day visit which ended June 30, the Vijay Rupani-led BJP government pulled out all stops, going overboard in building the glitz and glamour quotient for the visit.
The chief minister’s hometown, Rajkot, where the Prime Minister had four high profile functions packed into as many hours, went into ‘paroxysms’ of weeklong celebrations .There were concerts, plays, ’lok-dayras’, street lighting, illumination of public buildings, cycle rally, fireworks, beautification of traffic circles, light and sound shows, laser shows. In the build-up, rallies galore to invite people, 5.50 lakh stickers pasted door-to-door, for the Prime Minister’s road show,150 hospitals decorated with fairy lights, 550 hoardings and 40,000 BJP party flags placed across the city. This was apart from the official illumination city-wide.
Schools had a holiday, lawyers abstained much to the inconvenience of litigants and the Rajkot Bar Council appealed to the court authority to give adjournments in cases. The city bus service was virtually shut down.
Then there was a phalanx of security-men on duty. Besides the Special Protection Group (SPG) commandos, there were three Inspector Generals of Police, 26 SSPs, 66 deputy superintendents of police, 50 police inspectors,500 sub-inspectors besides 15 companies of the State Reserve Police (SRP) to back the city’s own 8000 strong police complement. Since the Prime Minister was to hold a 9-km road show from the site of the dam to the city airport, over a hundred stages had been erected en route to enable selected caste group leaders to felicitate him but he chose not to stop.
The Ahmedabad and Gandhinagar engagements of the Prime Minister saw similar marshalling of resources with normal life, already beset by rains, being thrown out of gear. The state capital was awash in BJP flags as was Ahmedabad with a rash of hoardings carrying images of the Prime Minister and the state Chief Minister announcing both achievements and schemes. 
Put up just a day before Modi’s visit,it was not known for whom they were aimed at. The Prime Minister has been the state’s Chief Minister for over a decade and the people of the state are being told about the achievements of the government almost on a daily basis through a variety of media.
Common man whose cause Modi vociferously espouses was the least of concern for these two days, as official instructions went from zealous to bizarre
The fact is that for almost a month, the bulk of the state machinery was glued into only the Prime Minister’s two-day visit with every other administrative and policing function taking a backseat. The common man whose cause Modi vociferously espouses was the least of the administration’s concern, at least for these two days as official instructions went from zealous to bizarre. 
There were 1200 Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation (GSRTC) buses on call to take people to any of the Prime Minister’s engagements for free. These were pulled out from all over the state in callous disregard of public concern with routes cancelled and people left to fend for themselves in the midst of a full-blooded monsoon.
The most bizarre, however, was a letter received by the divisional railway manager, Ahmedabad, from the inspector in-charge of a police station under whose jurisdiction the state guest house falls where the prime minister was to stay: "A railway track passes near the state guest house and hence in view of the security of the Prime Minister, train movement should be halted along the railway track or the trains should be diverted.” Trains to Delhi as well as Saurashtra region use this track. Imagine the mayhem if train traffic on the route had been halted for two days. However better sense prevailed and well in time.
Modi is known to abhor any form of protest at his public engagements right from his chief ministerial days. The case of the then Congress MP, Prabha Taviad who was forcibly prevented by the cops from attending the official Gujarat day function on May 1, 2012 despite being invited as the area MP is one of many such cases during Modi rule in the state. The matter figured in the Lok Sabha and was referred to the Privileges Committee of Parliament.
With the Prime Minister acquiring demi-god status, curbing any sort of protest has now acquired paranoiac proportions under the Vijay Rupani government. Even the hint of a black cloth, even handkerchief or dupatta is not permitted by the police at the Prime Minister’s meetings. Opposition leaders are marked out and put under unofficial detention in their own homes or offices for the period of the function.
While intelligence shadowing is routine, for the first time in the history of the state, the Gujarat police deployed 2500 police personnel as part of ‘detention squads’. Worried that rising discontent among ethnic and business groups may trigger protests, the cops set up these squads. The patidars have been protesting for reservations in jobs, dalits against atrocities, traders are on the warpath against GST and the Congress against the policies of the government .Five hundred cops were deployed at each of the venues in the four cities under the supervision of five SPs.
The Prime Minister who hardly visited Gujarat in the opening years of his stint has broken all records this year with six visits in six months. Quite clearly the ensuing Assembly election -- politically critical -- weighs heavily. 
There is much pent up anger. Anti-incumbency is for real. A public show of strength attended by BJP chief Amit Shah and chief minister Rupani in Surat on September 8 last year had to be wound up within minute, despite the fact that netting had been strung between the audience and the stage to prevent a footwear shower on the VIPs. It took the Prime Minister to retrieve the situation with a 11 km long road show in Surat on April 16 this year. The Rajkot engagements were similarly poll-oriented.
The Rajkot engagements were similarly poll-oriented. BJP is electioneering at state cost spending colossal amounts on extravaganzas
Quite simply put, the BJP is electioneering at state cost spending colossal amounts on extravaganzas. Rajkot town in Saurashtra is water deficient and carrying the Narmada waters to the Aji dam is laudable. But doing so,during a bumper monsoon when the skies have opened up in full, sounds ludicrous. And then organizing a seven day state ‘fair’ and getting the Prime Minister into it, moreso. Sadly, there is more of it to follow at peoples cost, in the days to come.
Watch out for the Narmada yatra to be flagged off by the Prime Minister in August. It will be a massive 45 day campaign to reach out to 159 cities and around 8500 villages of Gujarat with the Chief Minister and the Deputy Chief Minister leading and the entire Gujarat administration pulling out all stops for the show!
---
*Senior journalist  based in Gandhinagar. Source: http://wordsmithsandnewsplumbers.blogspot.in/

Comments

TRENDING

The curious case of multiple entries of a female voter of Maharashtra: What ECI's online voter records reveal

By Venkatesh Nayak*  Cyberspace is agog with data, names and documents which question the reliability of the electoral rolls prepared by the electoral bureaucracy in Maharashtra prior to the General Elections conducted in 2024. One such example of deep dive probing has brought to the surface, the name of one female voter in the 132-Nalasopara (Gen) Vidhan Sabha Constituency in Maharashtra. Nalasopara is part of the Palghar (ST) Lok Sabha constituency. This media report claims that this individual's name figures multiple times in the voter list of the same constituency.

Spirit of leadership vs bondage: Of empowered chairman of 100-acre social forestry coop

By Gagan Sethi*  This is about Khoda Sava, a young Dalit belonging to the Vankar sub-caste, who worked as a bonded labourer in a village near Vadgam in Banskantha district of North Gujarat. The year was 1982. Khoda had taken a loan of Rs 7,000 from the village sarpanch, a powerful landlord doing money-lending as his side business. Khoda, who had taken the loan for marriage, was landless. Normally, villagers would mortgage their land if they took loan from the sarpanch. But Khoda had no land. He had no option but to enter into a bondage agreement with the sarpanch in order to repay the loan. Working in bondage on the sarpanch’s field meant that he would be paid Rs 1,200 per annum, from which his loan amount with interest would be deducted. He was also obliged not to leave the sarpanch’s field and work as daily wager somewhere else. At the same time, Khoda was offered meal once a day, and his wife job as agricultural worker on a “priority basis”. That year, I was working as secretary...

1857 War of Independence... when Hindu-Muslim separatism, hatred wasn't an issue

"The Sepoy Revolt at Meerut", Illustrated London News, 1857  By Shamsul Islam* Large sections of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs unitedly challenged the greatest imperialist power, Britain, during India’s First War of Independence which began on May 10, 1857; the day being Sunday. This extraordinary unity, naturally, unnerved the firangees and made them realize that if their rule was to continue in India, it could happen only when Hindus and Muslims, the largest two religious communities were divided on communal lines.

N-power plant at Mithi Virdi: CRZ nod is arbitrary, without jurisdiction

By Krishnakant* A case-appeal has been filed against the order of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) and others granting CRZ clearance for establishment of intake and outfall facility for proposed 6000 MWe Nuclear Power Plant at Mithi Virdi, District Bhavnagar, Gujarat by Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) vide order in F 11-23 /2014-IA- III dated March 3, 2015. The case-appeal in the National Green Tribunal at Western Bench at Pune is filed by Shaktisinh Gohil, Sarpanch of Jasapara; Hajabhai Dihora of Mithi Virdi; Jagrutiben Gohil of Jasapara; Krishnakant and Rohit Prajapati activist of the Paryavaran Suraksha Samiti. The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has issued a notice to the MoEF&CC, Gujarat Pollution Control Board, Gujarat Coastal Zone Management Authority, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board and Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) and case is kept for hearing on August 20, 2015. Appeal No. 23 of 2015 (WZ) is filed, a...

Ground reality: Israel would a remain Jewish state, attempt to overthrow it will be futile

By NS Venkataraman*  Now that truce has been arrived at between Israel and Hamas for a period of four days and with release of a few hostages from both sides, there is hope that truce would be further extended and the intensity of war would become significantly less. This likely “truce period” gives an opportunity for the sworn supporters and bitter opponents of Hamas as well as Israel and the observers around the world to introspect on the happenings and whether this war could have been avoided. There is prolonged debate for the last several decades as to whom the present region that has been provided to Jews after the World War II belong. View of some people is that Jews have been occupants earlier and therefore, the region should belong to Jews only. However, Christians and those belonging to Islam have also lived in this regions for long period. While Christians make no claim, the dispute is between Jews and those who claim themselves to be Palestinians. In any case...

Two more "aadhaar-linked" Jharkhand deaths: 17 die of starvation since Sept 2017

Kaleshwar's sons Santosh and Mantosh Counterview Desk A fact-finding team of the Right to Feed Campaign, pointing towards the death of two more persons due to starvation in Jharkhand, has said that this has happened because of the absence of aadhaar, leading to “persistent lack of food at home and unavailability of any means of earning.” It has disputed the state government claims that these deaths are due to reasons other than starvation, adding, the authorities have “done nothing” to reduce the alarming state of food insecurity in the state.

Govt of India "tarnishing" NGO reputation, dossier leaked selectively: Amnesty

Counterview Desk Amnesty International India has said that a deliberate attempt is being made to tarnish its reputation by leaking a dossier, supposedly made by investigating agencies, to media without giving it access to any such information. The high profile NGO’s claim follows a Times Now report about proceedings launched by investigative agencies, including Enforcement Directorate (ED) against the rights body for “violations” of rules pertaining to overseas donations.

How AMU student politics prioritises Islamist ideologies rather than addressing campus-specific concerns

By Yanis Iqbal*  In his recent piece titled "Unmasking the Power Struggles of Soqme Teachers Behind the AMU Students’ Agitation," Mohammad Sajjad, professor of modern and contemporary Indian history at the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), has  has approached the recent  protests against fee increases at AMU with a skeptical eye. He portrays them not as a pure, student-led reaction to financial burdens, but as possibly intertwined with deeper institutional rivalries. While recognizing that the university administration faces ongoing demands from the government and the University Grants Commission (UGC) to boost self-generated revenue via fee adjustments, he highlights a key shortfall: neither the administration nor the protesters have shared clear, comparative data on fee structures or their rationale.

Proposed Modi yatra from Jharkhand an 'insult' of Adivasi hero Birsa Munda: JMM

Counterview Desk  The civil rights network, Jharkhand Janadhikar Mahasabha (JMM), which claims to have 30 grassroots groups under its wings, has decided to launch Save Democracy campaign to oppose Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Vikasit Bharat Sankalp Yatra to be launched on November 15 from the village of legendary 19th century tribal independence leader Birsa Munda from Ulihatu (Khunti district).