Wednesday, December 03, 2008

The malaise -I

So, here goes another of those pseudo-intellectuals ranting about the Mumbai blasts and all that is supposedly negative about India- its politicians; its society; its neighbours;its people et al. The Mumbai attacks will go down as a landmark event in awakening the collective conscience of the 'common man'. If the anger is palpable and bursting at the seams, it has probably got less to do with the inevitability of these attacks and helplessness when one does happen but more to do with the fact that this was the first time that the upper echelons (read affluent upper strata) of society was targeted.

In its aftermath, we are already witnessing the customary recriminations. There have been questions raised about insufficient infrastructure; the security and even the media. No other country in the world is faced with such a multitude of difficulties when tackling any issue. Our secular and pluralistic credentials always seem to come in way. The USA had to stand up to a barrage of criticism once the interrogation for 9/11 commenced for the way minorities (read bearded individuals) were isolated and targeted. The American society by and large, however was unaffected. Contrast the situation with India where the killing of every individual in any 'encounter' has political repurcussions. 

I suspect that we have carried too much baggage ever since Independence because of the word 'secular' in the Preamble to the Constitution. For all things that the endearing Mahatma was able to obtain, his methods have ensured that we will forever be burdened by minority appeasement that will always prevent us from taking decisive action as a society. 


The Indo-Pakistan conflict has been allowed to linger on for so long that it would put the Middle East conflict to shame. We have reached such a dead end where a round of talks is said to be successful if a consensus has been arrived at to meet again. Successful resolution of the Kashmir crisis would require a major compromise on the part of one of the sides which cannot be foreseen in the near future. 


The less said about the leadership vacuum at the centre, the better. Manmohan is honest but soft; Advani and Modi are tough but communal; Mayawati and Pawar are shrewd but regionalists; Sonia is probably downright incompetent. Voting has suddenly become an exercise in trying to pick out the lesser of the evils- an elimination as compared to positive support. Is it realistic to expect decisive and fair action from this motley crowd?

Threats of controlled military action constitute mere hollow rhetoric since the reality of the situation is something else. Pakistan is a nuclear state where worryingly the controls are in the hands of rogue elements. India cannot afford to be reckless as a result of the actions of its political forefathers and its best hope lies in a sustained international diplomatic effort backed by concrete pressure tactics.

India probably needs a decisive political mandate in the next parliamentary elections. Right-wing or centrist, the ruling formation should have the mandate to carry out reforms and govern without the pulls of a coalition government.

The country as a whole could benefit if:

1) Regional parties are banned. The political system can simply survive with so many stakeholders who have a parochial outlook. Regional parties should be given space only in the assembly elections and there should be no more than three entities fighting it out at the national level.All states should be guranteed a budget amount commensurate to its size so that the respective State Governments can pursue policies that suit the interests of the state best.

2) Press censorship is imposed along the lines of the Red Kingdom. The media has to play a responsible role as it does in the USA (at least from an American perspective) or has to be forced to play one if it doesn't toe the line. As praiseworthy as the coverage in the print media has been, some of the news broadcasts have been horrendously lopsided. Most of the Hindi news channels are a disgrace especially when a crisis is at hand and the only sane and balanced coverage is not surprisingly on Doordarshan. Leaving the choice of what to watch to the audiences works fine when we talk about an educated society but in a society like ours, the media should bear in mind the fact that it has a responsibility to educate and not just trivialise and sensationalise. The barrage of criticism directed at our politicians by our media has left everybody disillusioned. Does Cuba or Venezuela have better leaders in Fidel Castro or Hugo Chavez? Did America have a better President in Dubyaman? But why are they still endeared? 


3) The dignity of the administrative services is restored in terms of work profile and compensations. We could definitely stretch our subsidy bill to have more motivated policemen, bureaucrats and defence staff. It could also reduce if not wipe out corruption which has been the perennial bane of our society.

4) Indiscriminate entry of foreign nationals into this country is stopped. All consulates should be alerted as the importance of screening individuals thoroughly something the US has been able to achieve post 9/11. The borders should be sealed and if it means army deployment throughout the year, so be the case. The Navy, Coast Guard and Coastal Police should have an integrated command at the top so that a unified policy can be arrived at. India could also follow the Homeland Security model to traffic its skies effectively. These attacks cannot be prevented by having a more sophisticated police force but only through a more co-ordinated intelligence effort.

 


    

6 comments:

Ashish Saini said...

cool.....excellent stuff man........Indeed, a beautiful way of binding your weekend thoughts in the strength of words........Keep up the good work dude....

Anonymous said...

Well I have 2 points where I differ:
1.A society like India aspiring to be truly secular in practice is certainly too ambitious given the present scenario but the effort is worth makin and ill still stand for secularism being held sacrosanct in the Indian system. Yes it does place an extraordinary demand of putting constitutional principles before religion, region sect etc on each and every citizen of this country but we must have the audacity to dream that big coz that is the only way to peacefully co-exist and stop the chain reaction of communalism. The belief needs to be held strong by people like us.
2. Compromise can happen only among equals and in case of Kashmir it cannot because Pakistan today clearly is a failed state and Kashmir is incapable of governing itself. Had Pakistan been a country capable of managing itself a compromise could have been thought of.Rather than solving the problem Indian compromise on Kashmir would boost the morale of terrorists with twisted ideologies and make em even more ambitious.

Rest all agreed!

Anonymous said...

Hey man, I appreciate your thoughts on this but there is one thing I do not understand - "what's the point of all this".
Whatever you said might be absolutely right and the solutions might be the best solutions possible, but we all know this more of less. Many have been commenting on this and other issue like poor facilities to the security forces, insufficient number of secirty personals etc, but all of us reading this and similar posts/news, we the 'educated' ones, are the ones who do not go to the poling booths on the voting days. We give all sort of excuses for this but the fact is that we do not choose our leaders and then blame them for all the things that they do. How do we expect them to make efforts to develop the country if we, the people of the country, are not willing to treat the polling days as something more than a holiday. Its our fault and we do not have any right to blame our leaders for our inaction and laziness. And to those who say that the people do not vote because there are not good candidates available, they must realize that the good people will come up when they realize that the 'educated' among us will go and vote for them so that they do not have to revert to dirty politics and cheap ways to get selected.
So, come lets go and vote and start a change. It will take time but remember - if we want then "Yes, We Can" !!

Kapil said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

14th may... jaipur... 56 dead...84 Half killed
26TH July... Ahmedabad... 51 killed 200 half killed..
25th July... Bangalore... 1 killed 6 half killed...
Delhi... 25 dead.. Mumbai blasts... 80 dead... Assam... 68 dead...
and many more...

Do the maths people.. the tally is far greater than the "Massacre in Mumbai"...

They (militants) are growing in confidence... they started with hidden attacks... now they are out in open to kill...

The blog is excellent... the comments are excellent... but then where does the problem lies????
With politicians/security system/intelligence failure/the mindset of terrorists/people not going to vote/and the multitude of problems... which EACH AND EVERY CITIZEN OF INDIA KNOWS???
AND IF EVERYONE KNOWS ABOUT IT... WHY ARE THEY NOT BEING SOLVED???


Another way of looking at things... look at this blog... and the comments... All brilliant people... with amazing thoughts n beliefs.. but everywhere we find uncertainty... suggestions.. phrases like "perhaps","should haves", "if-then-else"...

A few more questions... before i get start sewing it all together...

How many times have you seen or hrd.. an IIT/IIM grad working with the indian intelligence??
How many IITians.. and NITians.. end up working for our defence forces.. and defence enabling establishmnts like DRDO etc??
How many from "The so called creamy layer" end up dirtying their hands in indian politics.. in media forcing the correct usage of media... to direct people accordingly...
How many of the top brass of entrepreneurs.. tried to educate people about voting... worked in these PAIN regions of the nation.. which EACH AND EVERY CITIZEN KNOWS???

sitting back in a sofa.. and typing it all on a laptop.. is way too easy...


The Tailoring :-
The nation as a whole cant do much without good leadership... they need the right people in the right places...
If we have the best brains available.. working in the appropriate places... there are miniscule chances... of any such lapses and ignorances... which have resulted in such a situation...

they are all thinking about these problems... and that is why such brilliant blogs come up... BUT U GOTTA GO TO THE NEXT STEP... WORK TOWARDS GETTING THESE BRILLIANT IDEAS IN PLACE...

Tomorow.. if ashwin works towards secularism... Mayank towards educating people about the pros and cons of voting.. and not voting.. and Varun works towards makeing our political system strong... U make a huge difference to the nation...

If only 2% enabled (read "educated") people in india.. stops thinking about earning and hoarding money.. and start thinking like this.. AND ADDING DEEDS TO YOUR THOUGHTS.. the nation wud be a much better place..

We run the world economy for Gods Sake.. cant we correct our own??
Cant we out-think those brainwashed terrorists... cant we move above the lines that divide the nation... and bring the nation along with us?/
I m addressing only a very small section of the crowd...the enabled class..the so-called creamy layer..
Its time to stand up... and make your presence felt.. i agree with mayank on the last note.. "Yes We Can..."

(i have put the names of people here only to make a point... but if you take them personally.. i wudn mind it.. :))

S J Mayank Srivastav said...

that was cool
i would reiterate the same thing as i once said that somehow we have to learn from USA, France, Spain and Russia..why at all their first terror attacks turned out to be the last ones
Anyways i am happy that atleast u dared to look at root problems, many of my friends still r trying to give a generalized THEORY for terrorism all over