[The situation in the early 1990s was far
more serious. In December 1992, a weak Congress party government did nothing as
extremist Hindu mobs led by several B.J.P. leaders, demolished the 16th century
Babri mosque in Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh. After the mosque was destroyed, riots
and arson followed in Mumbai and more than 900 people were killed, most of them
Muslims. In March 1993, Muslim extremists set off a series of bombs in Mumbai,
then Bombay , which killed more than 250.]
By Sambuddha Mitra Mustafi
Niha Masih |
Sectarian violence between Hindus and
Muslims has killed more than 38 and
displaced over 10,000 people in the past week in Muzaffarnagar district of the
northern state of Uttar Pradesh. The state government led by Chief Minister
Akhilesh Yadav of Samajwadi Party failed to respond swiftly to the violence and
restore order. Indian army had to be deployed to control the violence and
impose a curfew.
According to the press and official reports,
riots in Muzaffarnagar started after two Hindus killed a Muslim man for
stalking their female relative. The Muslims retaliated by killing two Hindu
men. Rival state legislators made hate speeches at charged public gatherings of the
two communities, where members of the audience brandished weapons.
A legislator of the Hindu nationalist
Bharatiya Janata Party (B.J.P.) is on the run from the police after circulating
a fake video of a Muslim mob lynching two men. Uttar Pradesh police officials
said that the video had not been shot in India , and have filed charges against leaders of several
political parties for inciting Hindu and Muslim mobs.
According to Sushil Kumar Shinde, India ’s minister of Home Affairs, there have already been 451
cases of sectarian violence in 2013, surpassing 410 such incidents reported in
2012.
Mr. Shinde told the Indian press that
religious violence is likely to intensify ahead of the 2014 national elections.
Uttar Pradesh, which elects 80 lawmakers to the lower house of the Indian
Parliament, will be a key state in the formation of the new government. “The
situation is certainly worrying because there are political players in Uttar
Pradesh, who have an incentive in polarizing votes using religion,” said
Ramachandra Guha, historian and author of “India After Gandhi”, a history of
modern India .
Mr. Guha pointed out that about half of India ’s current population is too young to remember the
gruesome, nation-wide violence of the 1990s and how opportunistic politicians
cracked open religious fissures in the past. India ’s median age is 26.
After the 2002 riots in the western Indian
state of Gujarat , India has seen comparatively lesser sectarian strife in the
past decade. It was also the country’s most prosperous period, which saw
increased economic growth.
There are very superficial similarities
between the political and economic conditions of India in the early nineties and the country today. The economy
is braving a downturn; millions of literate young Indians are struggling to
enter the workforce; the current federal government, led by the Congress party,
is seen as corrupt and ineffective. The middle class resents the government for
its economic redistribution measures aimed at the poor. And religious
accommodation is showing clear signs of strain.
The situation in the early 1990s was far
more serious. In December 1992, a weak Congress party government did nothing as
extremist Hindu mobs led by several B.J.P. leaders, demolished the 16th century
Babri mosque in Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh. After the mosque was destroyed, riots
and arson followed in Mumbai and more than 900 people were killed, most of them
Muslims. In March 1993, Muslim extremists set off a series of bombs in Mumbai,
then Bombay , which killed more than 250.
In a 1993 essay titled “Modern Hate”,
Chicago University Political Science professors Susanne and Lloyd Rudolph,
wrote about the mobs that demolished the Babri mosque. “They are the educated
unemployed, not the poor and illiterate,” they wrote. “Frustrated by the lack
of good jobs and opportunities, they are victims of modernization, seeking to
victimize others – like ‘pampered’ Muslims.”
According to the Rudolphs, the riots in the
1990s had less to do with ancient religious revisionism, and more with
contemporary economic faultlines: the resentment of entrenched upper caste
Hindus against the ruling parties that “pampered” Muslims and lower caste
Hindus, with affirmative action like reservations in government jobs. “The
Hindu backlash to minority protectionism asks, whose country is this anyway?”
The B.J.P. converted that resentment into a
consolidated Hindu vote bank. On the other side, the Samajwadi Party sought to
grab the votes of the state’s Muslims by positioning themselves as the
community’s savior.
About two decades later, there is a slight
sense of dejavu. Mr. Yadav, the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, relies heavily
on Muslim votes. After his failure to stop the violence, Mr. Yadav tried to
stem the potential loss of Muslim votes by showing up at an event with Haj
pilgrims in Lucknow in a skullcap.
Narendra Modi, the controversial chief
minister of Gujarat , who is the B.J.P.’s defacto prime ministerial candidate,
has turned his gaze on Uttar Pradesh. Mr. Modi can become India ’s Prime Minister in 2014, if the B.J.P. performs
exceedingly well in the state.
Mr. Modi has appointed his confidante, Amit
Shah, as his party’s election manager in Uttar Pradesh. Mr. Shah, a former
minister in Mr. Modi’s Gujarat government, is currently out on bail for allegedly
masterminding the extra-judicial killings of suspected Islamic militants.
Critics say that Mr. Shah’s appointment to Uttar Pradesh exposes the B.J.P’s
strategy of dividing the electorate along religious lines. “Modi is a ruthless
and cynical man,” said Mr. Guha. “He is projecting himself as a development
oriented politician in other states, but is using Amit Shah to polarize Uttar
Pradesh.”
Will this calculus of passion improve the
electoral prospects of the B.J.P.?
“People are not drawn toward religion today
like they were in the 1990s,” said Dipankar Gupta, a sociologist and author of
“Mistaken Modernity”. “There will only be limited gains, if any, for the B.J.P.
or regional parties [like the Samajwadi Party],” he said.
Mr. Gupta also pointed out that the economy
today is very different from the 1990s, when it took years of internationally
aided restructuring before an economic turnaround. Unlike the early nineties,
several sectors of the Indian economy are showing signs of recovery.
The past week was a good one for investors
after a long time: a new central bank governor brought some optimism, the bulls
rallied the Mumbai stock exchange, and the currency strengthened against the
dollar.
If the outlook improves over the coming
months, business and middle-class anger against the Congress government may
subside and the B.J.P’s Uttar Pradesh gambit may be seen as a cynical ploy to
divide the country.
But the B.J.P’s planners are extrapolating
from past successes: “Muslims’ rabid opposition to the B.J.P. has indeed proved
to be beneficial to it electorally,” wrote wrote G.V.L. Narasimha Rao, party
strategist, in the ideological mouthpiece, The Organiser.
Religion remains one of the surest ways of
mass political mobilization in India , according to the political psychologist, Ashis Nandy.
“Caste factors attract much smaller numbers of people,” he said. “India ’s neo middle-class is still too naïve to be mobilized
purely around economic issues.”
“The early nineties was only the climax of
tensions that were simmering for decades,” said Mr. Nandy. “The riots we see
today are not merely a throwback to the nineties. This is how Indian politics
has been for much of its history.”
Sambuddha is a Fulbright scholar, media
entrepreneur and freelance journalist. Follow him on Twitter @some_buddha