#BeyondTheHeadlines: ‘Israel Model’ Explained in 10 Points

Siddharth Varadarajan argues why the ‘Israel Model’ is not at all a model that countries, especially India, should adopt.

Last week, Indian Consul General Sandeep Chakravorty spoke at a gathering of Kashmiri Pandits in New York and said that Indians should follow the “Israeli model” in Kashmir. He suggested that India should learn from the Israeli occupation of Palestine.

In this episode of Beyond The Headlines, Siddharth Varadarajan argues why the ‘Israel Model’ is not at all a model that countries, especially India, should adopt. He lists the flaws of the ‘model’ in ten points, and concludes by saying that anyone thinking of adopting such a model in India is ‘uninformed’.

The Wire releases three episodes of #BeyondTheHeadlines, its show by Siddharth Varadarajan, every week on its YouTube channel. Make sure to subscribe here.

Q2 GDP and Core Sector Data May Push RBI to Cut Rates in December, Say Economists

The GDP growth rate for Q2FY20 was in line with the market expectation at 4.5%, says Deepthi Mary Mathew, economist, Geojit Financial Services.

Economic data release post market hours on Friday hints that the slowdown has manifested deeper into the system. Economic growth slowed further in the second quarter of this fiscal to hit a 26-month low of 4.5% – a far cry from the 7.1% reported in the corresponding period of the last financial year.

Meanwhile, the output of eight core infrastructure industries contracted by 5.8% in October, according to the government data released on Friday. As many as six of the eight core industries saw a contraction in output in October. The eight-core sectors had expanded by 4.8% in October 2018.

Here’s how leading economists and market watchers have interpreted the numbers released today:

Aditi Nayar, principal economist, ICRA

Based on the unfavourable performance of the core sector, the contraction in the IIP appears set to deepen in October 2019, even as other indicators of demand such as petrol and ATF consumption have recorded an improved performance in that month.

Rainfall related bottlenecks to construction activities contributed to the YoY decline in output of cement and steel in October 2019. Focus on expediting infrastructure projects, measures to aid real estate developers and proposals to address the stress in the NBFC sector may support a pickup in construction activities in the coming months. This should support an improvement in the growth of core items such as steel and cement in the remainder of FY20.

Also read: How Low Could India’s Q2 GDP Growth End up Being?

Dr. Joseph Thomas, head of research, Emkay Wealth Management

Q2 GDP at 4.50% indicates a slump in economic activity and it has become quite pronounced after a slip to 5% in Q1. This leads up to an annual growth rate of close to 5%. A stronger fiscal stimulus is required to stem this fall. Failing this would growth could slip lower as we move into the next financial year.

Rajni Thakur, economist, RBL Bank

At 6.1%, nominal GDP growth is the lowest we have seen in the last few years, except for the quarter ending March 2009. It not only confirms the growth fears in the markets but also lowers the outlook for the full year further.

Growth in the second half of the year could remain evasive unless government pumps in more stimulus and continues to heavy-lift growth push through the fiscal year. The grind up is going to be slow and heavily dependent on fiscal support to come out of current growth recession.”

Deepthi Mary Mathew, economist, Geojit Financial Services

The GDP growth rate for Q2FY20 was in line with the market expectation at 4.5%. All indicators ranging from IIP, electricity consumption to core inflation rate were pointing towards the fact that the economy has not entered the revival path. The slowdown in consumption is indeed worrying, as its revival is important for investment to pick up. The Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE) declined to 5% YoY compared to 9.7%. With the growth slipping to 4.5%, it is expected that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will go for the next round of rate cut in December.

Sreejith Balasubramanian, economist – fund management, IDFC AMC

Q2 FY20 real GDP of 4.5% y/y was broadly in line with expectations, but nominal GDP growth was much slower at 6.1% (below 8% in Q1 FY20 and 12% in Q2 FY19). Manufacturing growth contracted, while both private consumption and investment stayed weak.

Also read: The Onion Price Rise is Linked to North Pakistan’s Unusually Warm Weather

With the just-released index of eight core industries falling 5.8% y/y in October, bottoming-out of growth could be further down the road and recovery is unlikely to be V-shaped as consumer demand, credit supply and risk appetite remain lacklustre. This and the falling core-CPI should allow the RBI to focus more on growth, while a major fiscal stimulus is hindered by the lack of available household financial savings.

Amar Ambani, senior president and head of research for institutional equities, YES Securities

The GDP growth figure is as per our estimate for Q2 FY20. The stock market has been trending lower in the last couple of trading sessions, in anticipation of poor numbers. While there may be a mildly negative reaction on Monday, it will not change the medium-term trajectory for equities.

For the fiscal year FY20, our real GDP forecast stands at 5.2%, with risks to further downside. After a 135 basis rate cut delivered by the RBI since February 2019, we expect the RBI to cut rates by an additional 25 bps in December, taking the repo rate to 4.90%. Going forward, we believe the fiscal policy will need to play a dominant role in supporting overall growth. The government may choose to mildly deviate from its fiscal deficit target for this year as well as the next fiscal.

The article was originally published on Business StandardYou can read it here

Jharkhand Records 62.8% Voter Turnout in First Phase of Assembly Polls

The rest of the four phases for the 81-member assembly will be held on December 7, 12, 16 and 20.

Ranchi: An estimated 62.87% votes were cast when voting ended at 3 pm on Saturday in the first of the five-phase Jharkhand assembly elections in 13 constituencies, amid sporadic incidents of violence, officials said.

The percentage is likely to increase as voters who entered the polling stations by 3 pm will be allowed to exercise their franchise, they said.

A total of 37,83,055 electorate, including 18,01,356 women and five third-gender voters were eligible to exercise their franchise in the first phase of polling across six districts, which began at 7 am, Election Commission (EC) officials said.

Additional Director General of Police Murari Lal Meena said Naxalites exploded a bomb near a culvert in the forests of Gumla district, but there was no casualty or damage.

“The explosion occurred near the culvert in the forests between Banalat and Biranpur villages under Bishunpur assembly constituency of the district,” Meena said.

He, however, said “peaceful” polling is underway in all the 13 constituencies.

Also read: Polling for First Phase Begins in Jharkhand

Palamau Deputy Commissioner-cum-Returning Officer Shantanu Agrahari said a minor clash broke out between two groups near Kosiyara polling station in Daltonganj assembly constituency.

The agitators broke the window panes of a police vehicle after Congress candidate K N Tripathi allegedly tried to enter the polling booth with arms, he said, adding, the situation was quickly brought under control.

Police has seized a pistol and three cartridges, which were allegedly in Tripathi’s possession, Agrahari said.

The EC officials said women and youth were among the early voters in the first of the five-phase elections to the 81-member Jharkhand assembly.

The fate of 189 candidates, including 15 women nominees, will be decided in the first phase of the polling in Chatra, Gumla, Bishunpur, Lohardaga, Manika, Latehar, Panki, Daltonganj, Bishrampur, Chhatarpur, Hussainabad, Garhwa, and Bhawanathpur.

Jharkhand chief minister Raghubar Das greets his supporters during an election campaign rally for the Jharkhand assembly elections, at Chakradharpur in West Singhbhum district, Friday, November 29, 2019. Photo: PTI

The Bhawanathpur constituency has the maximum of 28 contestants, while Chatra has the lowest with nine.

Jharkhand Chief Electoral Officer Vinay Kumar Choubey said a total of 4,892 polling stations have been set up, out of which 1,262 would have webcasting facilities.

Meena said a total of 1,097 polling stations in Naxal-affected areas were marked as hypersensitive and 461 polling stations as sensitive.

Palamau Divisional Commissioner Manoj Kumar Jha said the timing of voting has been fixed between 7 am and 3 pm as several polling stations are in remote areas, and also due to the shorter days in winter.

Key candidates in the fray are Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) nominee and state Health Minister Ramchandra Chandravanshi from Bishrampur and state Congress president Rameshwar Oraon from the Lohardaga seat.

Oraon is taking on the former state Congress chief Sukhdeo Bhagat after the latter joined the BJP recently.

Former BJP chief whip Radhakrishna Kishore, who was denied ticket from Chhatarpur, is contesting on an All Jharkhand Students Union (AJSU) party ticket from the same seat.

Also read: Elections in Jharkhand May Also See a Battle Between National and Local Issues

The BJP, which is seeking a second straight win under the leadership of Chief Minister Raghubar Das, is contesting in 12 seats in the first phase while it is supporting Independent candidate Vinod Singh from Hussainabad.

The AJSU party is contesting on its own.

Challenging the BJP is the opposition alliance of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), the Congress and the Rashtriya Janata Dal.

While the Congress is contesting in six seats in the first phase, the JMM is fighting in four and the RJD in three constituencies in the first phase.

The other parties contesting the elections are Babulal Marandi’s Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Prajatantrik), Janata Dal (United) and the Left parties.

The rest of the four phases for the 81-member assembly will be held on December 7, 12, 16 and 20.

Counting is scheduled for December 23.

Communalising the Hyderabad Rape-Murder Does Nothing to Ensure Women’s Safety

Police claimed to have arrested the accused within 24 hours of the crime, yet what the communal rhetoric has failed to see are the many safety loopholes in one of India’s most vibrant cities.

Hyderabad: The gang rape and murder of an aspiring 27-year old veterinary doctor brought under sharp focus the safety of women in Hyderabad, capital of the country’s youngest state.

The charred body of the victim, a resident of Shadnagar on the suburbs of the state capital, was found in an underpass adjacent to the Bangalore-Hyderabad national highway-44 and Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in the wee hours of Thursday, leaving many questions about whether the ‘Pearl City’, as Hyderabad is known since the Nizam’s rule, is safe for women any more after its bifurcation from Andhra Pradesh in 2014.

A section of the Twitterati, with pro-Hindutva leanings, was quick to colour the crime with a communal hue, citing the involvement of a Muslim youth. The fact that three of the four accused were of a different faith obviously debunked that communal crusade.


A host at a late night TV debate also accused Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi of the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen of failing to raise the issue of the woman’s rape and murder in parliament for the sake of his alliance with K. Chandrasekhar Rao’s Telangana Rashtra Samiti.

Hyderabad police commissioner V.C. Sajjanar presented four masked youths – Mohammod Ariff (26), Jollu Shiva (20), Jollu Seenu (20) and Chintakunta Chennakesavulu (20) – at a media conference on Friday 24, hours after the offence and held them responsible for the crime.

Mohammod Ariff  (26), the prime accused, used to deliver goods from Hyderabad to Karnataka in his truck. On Wednesday, he had parked the truck near the Tondupally toll gate along with Shiva and the other two accused. Around 6 pm, while they were consuming liquor, they saw the victim parking her scooter near the toll plaza and decided to trap her. After finishing work at her hospital at Kollam she had gone to Tondupally from where she booked a cab to visit a skin specialist at Gachibowli.

Also read: Interview: Why Harsher Criminal Laws Won’t Make Sexual Violence Go Away

“Naveen suggested the idea of a flat tyre and without anyone noticing him, let the air out. When she returned from Gachibowli at 9.18 pm, Arif told her about the flat tyre and offered help, to which she innocently agreed. He sent Shiva to fill air in the tyre,” the commissioner said and added that it was at this time that the victim called her sister and told her about the situation. Shiva returned 10 minutes later, saying the puncture shops were closed, and went away again.

Victim’s charred body found under a culvert

The victim was suspected to have been gang-raped after her kidnapping and was murdered. Her body was later burnt between 2-3 am on Thursday in an apparent bid to destroy evidence. The body was identified by her parents based on the locket of Ganesha and the half-burnt scarf she had worn.


The rape and subsequent murder of the woman triggered widespread public outrage with demands from netizens seeking “instant justice”. Students took out protest rallies with candles across the two Telugu states.

With the manner in which she was brutally raped and murdered, the victim has come to be known as ‘Nirbhaya 2’ at a time when Hyderabad is increasingly being cited as the country’s second capital.

The 23-year-old physiotherapy student who was raped and tortured in a moving bus in South Delhi in 2012 has been remembered as ‘Nirbhaya – which means fearless.

People stage a protest in front of the visiting Telangana Women and Child Welfare Minister Satyavati Rothod at the residence of the veterinary doctor who was brutally murdered yesterday, in Hyderabad, November 29, 2019. Photo: PTI

The Hyderabad police have claimed to have solved the rape case in a span of 24 hours by nabbing a gang of four suspects but their response mechanisms and their inability to prevent crimes have come under the scanner. Police commissioner Sajjanar told media personnel that four suspects were nabbed by tracking the calls made by the victim and the accused from their mobiles through the nearest cell tower.

In comparison with the example of the use of such technology is the victim’s father’s allegation that when he contacted the local police at the airport for help to trace his daughter at around 10:30 pm on Wednesday night, police had said that she must have gone out with her boyfriend.

Also read: No State for Women? Why Crimes Against Women Are Rising in UP

The father also said that the police could have utilised the four hours between her last call to her sister Bhavya at 9:44 pm and her death at around 2:30 am on Thursday to save her.

Citing commissioner Sajjanar’s firm action in the past as the superintendent of Warangal in 2008, where three youths were allegedly shot dead in a police encounter for throwing acid on a couple of girls in Telangana’s Warangal city, social media users demanded a similar form of instant justice in the rape case of the 27-year old veterinarian.

Governor petitioned

A delegation headed by the state BJP president K. Laxman met with Telangana governor Tamilisai Soundararajan and briefed her on the increasing incidence of crimes against women. Incidentally, a degree student from Warangal was allegedly raped and murdered a day before the rape case in Hyderabad. Her body was found in the bushes on the outskirts of the city and the police suspected the hand of her boyfriend.

Another female body was found burning on Saturday at Saidulgutta in the same locality where the Hyderabad veterinarian was killed barely a few hours after the Cyberabad police arrested the suspects in that case. KCR, as Telangana’s chief minister is known as, was targeted by the opposition and the women’s rights groups for a spurt in crimes against women during his first stint. He was accused of failing to be sensitive to issues of women’s safety by not having women in his cabinet. In his latest term he inducted two women in his cabinet.


The claims by the top brass over their “pro-active” policing with a slew of initiatives such as community policing, bringing the vast area under the commissionerate CCTV surveillance, introducing apps for monitoring and geo-tagging of patrolling teams such as
TSCOP and Hawk Eye have come under scrutiny in the light of the rape case. It is alleged that the policing was limited to the areas inhabited by VIPs and that the crime-prone outskirts and outer ring road were left out.

Also read: How to Make Our Cities Safer for Women

The city with an area of 650 square kilometres inhabited by 97.41 lakh people has seen exponential growth in the recent past. The capital has 1:653 police-people ratio over 1:474 in the national capital. A senior police officer in the city, on condition of anonymity, said that there is still a greater need for improving policing with an increase in police to people interface.

Gali Nagaraja is a freelance journalist who writes on the two Telugu states.

Kashmiri College Students Fined For Exam Fee Payment Delays, Attendance Shortage

A handful of institutions have held Kashmiri students, who have been unable to get money from home in the absence of internet and due to the prolonged siege in the region, to the same set of rules as other students.

New Delhi: At Best Technical and Professional College (BFIT), Dehradun, a Kashmiri student is worried whether he’d be able to sit for the upcoming external exam starting from December 19. The college has slapped a fine of Rs 5,000 on all the Kashmiri students who couldn’t pay the semester fee due in July.

Other Kashmiris students, from different colleges in Punjab Maya College, Adesh Institute and others – share the same concern and have been requesting the administration to either deduct the fine or give them an extension so that they can arrange for the money. 

However, students largely and justifiably say that it is unfair to charge a fine in the first place given the sanctions in place in Kashmir that have resulted in the delay. Most of their family businesses, they say, have been running at a loss since Article 370 was read down on August 5, resulting in a shutdown of several services, including the internet.

“We never thought that things will turn out like this. My father had asked me to ask for an extension but the authorities didn’t listen. Exams are about to start in a few weeks and I don’t know if they will issue us admit cards if we fail to make the payment,” said the BFIT student.

Also read: Vanishing Coaching Centres, Preparations From Jail: Exams in Jammu and Kashmir

The Wire contacted the respective administrations at BFIT, Maya College and Adesh Institute. While the calls sent to the last two went unanswered, the administration at BFIT said that as per the rule, students who fail to pay the fee on the due date have to pay a late-fee charge.

“We have not asked the students to pay any fine. It’s the late-fee charge which is usually very nominal and it’s applicable to all the students. We have also provided required extension to the Kashmiri students who couldn’t make the payment on time. The students, who are still facing any trouble, can directly speak to the principal,” said a representative of the administration.

Meanwhile, chief minister of Punjab, Captain Amarinder Singh has issued an order directing the vice-chancellors of all private colleges in Punjab to “ensure that no student is harassed for a delay in payment of fees or attendance shortage resulting from the clampdown in the valley.”

A day before, he also tweeted saying: “Will not allow this to happen in my state.”

‘It’s not our fault’

Another student at Maya College, Jalandhar, got to know about the fine yesterday evening when he went to make an examination-related inquiry at the office. The college asked him to pay Rs 7,000, he said.

“I was not aware of the fine until yesterday. This is a huge amount. I was in Kashmir during the lockdown and couldn’t carry any money from home because the banks were closed. How am I going to pay this fine now?” he said. “My friend has been asked to pay Rs 13,000. It’s not our fault.”

He said that he’d request the administration to give him a concession because arranging the amount for the fine would be an uphill task. 

A BFIT student echoed the above student and said that his father’s apple business has been running at a loss for the past few weeks.

“Our family depends on the sale of apples and generally we have to invest a good amount of money in early July to later earn a profit in September when the fruits are ripe for sale. But this year, we haven’t been able to earn a good profit,” he said.

Exam pressure

At other colleges, some Kashmiri students have had to pay the fine because exams were nearing and they needed to collect their roll number slips which they could not as long as payments are due.

“The college authorities agreed to give us a concession from Rs 3,000 to Rs 1,500 but we were told about it just a day before our first exam. We didn’t even get the time to react and had to just make the payment,” said a student at Adesh Institute, Mohali.

Also read: Without Internet, Kashmir’s Doctoral Scholars Are Stumped for a Way Forward

He further said that it is “highly unjustified” to charge them money for something they didn’t have any control over. 

“Some colleges have given extension but look at the situation in Kashmir. How will a student arrange for money even by the extended date?” he added.

The spokesperson of the J&K students association has been communicating with the state government and college authorities, asking them to deduct fine charges. He also mentioned that this isn’t the first time that colleges have “unfairly penalised” Kashmiri students.

“Even during the Pulwama attack, some colleges had asked students to pay a fine for attendance shortage. This is pure harassment and we’d want the state government to blacklist these colleges,” he said.

Maharashtra: Uddhav Govt Passes Floor Test, BJP MLAs Walk Out

Pro-tem Speaker Dilip Walse Patil informed the House that four MLAs had abstained during the vote.

Mumbai: The Uddhav Thackeray-led Maha Vikas Aghadi government of the Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress alliance passed the floor test in the Maharashtra Assembly on Saturday.

The BJP, with 105 MLAs, staged a walkout before the headcount of members began in the 288-member House.

The boycott, it said, was against the “unlawful manner” in which the ministers were sworn in and the House session convened.

Altogether 169 MLAs vote in favour of the motion of confidence, moved by former CM Ashok Chavan and seconded by senior NCP and Sena members.

Pro tem Speaker Dilip Walse Patil informed the House that four MLAs abstained during the vote.

They include two from the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM), one from CPI(M) and a member of the MNS, led by Uddhav’s estranged cousin Raj Thackeray.

Claiming that the business transacted in the Assembly ahead of the floor test was in violation of Constitutional norms, the BJP staged a walkout, adding it will raise the issue before Governor B.S. Koshyari.

BJP legislature unit leader Devendra Fadnavis objected to replacement of party MLA Kalidas Kolambkar as the pro tem speaker with NCP’s Dilip Walse Patil. Such a replacement has happened for the first time in the history of India as the Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress alliance was scared of losing the floor test, he said in the House.

Also read: BJP Played a Do-or-Die Game, the New Maharashtra Coalition Can Now Do the Same

“Business is being transacted in the House in violation of the Constitution. The session itself is not in line with the rules,” Fadnavis told reporters after BJP members staged the walkout.

“Since national anthem was played out after the last session, this means it ended sine die,” Fadnavis said.


A summons was required to be issued through the governor to convene a new session but that was not the case, Fadnavis said.

He also claimed that the oath-taking ceremony of Thackeray and six other ministers were also not in line with the rules.

“Someone took Balasaheb Thackeray’s name, someone took names of (Congress chief) Sonia (Gandhi) Ji and (NCP president Sharad) Pawar Saheb. The oath was not taken as per the given format,” Fadnavis added.

On the floor test being conducted on the pro-tem speaker’s watch, Fadnavis said this was done as the government was scared of losing the trust vote under a regular speaker.

“They were afraid their government will collapse if regular Speaker is there…That’s why we walked out. We are going to write to the governor saying the business was not transacted in line with the Constitution,” he said.

Uddhav Thackeray, wearing a saffron turban, thanked House members and people of Maharashtra after the pro tem speaker declared that his government had won the floor test.

“I thank all the members for trusting me. I also thank the people of the state. It is not possible to work without their blessings,” he said.

“There was some pressure before coming to the House as I did not have the experience of working in the House but only on the ground. I feel fortunate to be here,” he said.

This was 59-year-old Thackeray’s first time in the House. Behind him sat his son Aaditya, along with the other Sena MLA, all wearing saffron turbans.

“You (the BJP) feel stung when we took names of Chhatrapati Shivaji (while taking an oath). I will take the name again and again. Those who don’t take names of their parents have no right to live,” he said.

“It is not Maharashtra’s culture when you think taking the name of Chhatrapati Shivaji and parents is a crime,” he said.

The Spectre Haunting Hindutva: An Assertive Dalit Woman

Bindu Ammini has single-handedly braved the entire might of the Sangh, a neutered public, and an opportunistic state. She will never be forgotten.

The assault on Dalit gender equality activist Bindu Ammini, by a fervent Ayyappa devotee, reveals the fragility of the Hindu nationalist male ego and a deals a chink to the Hindutva armour.

Like other nativist and anti-pluralist projects, Hindutva is premised upon the restoration of a primeval order that involves the dominance of man over woman, father over son, savarna over avarna, avarna over Dalit, fair skin over dark, state over subjects, religion over law, priest over devotee, teacher over student.

These hierarchies are deemed a ‘natural state’ of affairs that pesky, allegedly Hindu-hating progressive social reformers have disrupted using ideas perceived non-“Indic,” such as equality and scientific temper.

Thus, denying women their right of worship at Sabarimala is indubitably a ruse to restore most of these hierarchies in one stroke. Borrowing the words of a BJP leader it is a “golden opportunity”.

Ayyappa’s pepper spray

The video of the attack on Bindu and its aftermath are fascinating reflections of the multi-faceted anxieties of/in majoritarianism.

We first see Bindu in all-black, exiting the office of the Kochi police commissioner (what better location to reassert the pre-eminence of the mob over law, but more on that later). A bearded devotee wearing the traditional saffron mundu (both beard and mundu are symbolic of Ayyappa devotees during the mandatory ritual purification for the divine trek) walks up to Bindu casually and suddenly pepper sprays her.

He actually used a pepper spray! I give you a few moments to absorb that.

The same pepper spray designed for single women like Bindu to defend themselves when venturing into desolate spaces. But here, that weapon of defiance against male aggression and entitlement, was deployed by a group of religious men against a single woman in broad daylight, right under the noses of journalists and policemen.

Also read: Sabarimala, in the Fading Light of Constitutional Values

How did Bindu react? If the expectation was fear, then prepare to be disappointed. Obviously rattled, she starts looking for her assailant in the crowd. The media personnel and the police gather around asking her what had happened; they have not yet seen the video of the attack.

By now, an angry crowd of devotees gathers around the equally angry Bindu who keeps repeating how her face became smeared with pepper.

“Drama! Drama!” the devotees scream in a frenzy, presumably expecting the crowd to believe that Bindu had applied harmless material on herself to garner attention. In response, Bindu takes some of the red gooey stuff from her face and applies it gently onto a skeptical devotee’s cheek.

Then she spots her attacker lurking in the area, runs towards him and whacks him on the back. Bewildered by this turn of events, this thick-set man, clearly bigger than her, moves quickly into the safety of the mob of devotees.

Bindu pursues her target and demands that the still unresponsive police arrest him. Her feisty and steady response enrage the mob even further. One of them with his arms around the shaken attacker (who is still holding the pepper spray canister!) shrieks “who are you to demand an arrest?”, using the derogatory “nee” in Malayalam.

The middle-aged devotee with a cheek smeared with pepper can then be seen complaining to the mob and the same hapless police officer that Bindu had slapped him. The devotees now rally to his defence and, bizarrely, accuse Bindu of assault.

“How dare you raise your hands against men? Don’t you dare get into the habit of slapping men!”

It is a funny and exhausting sequence of events. 

Disturbingly, throughout this episode, chants of “Swamiye Ayyappo” by men and women can be heard in the background. What used to be an inspiring rhythmic prayer to help overcome the physical struggle of the tough climb up Sabarimala has now been appropriated and converted into a sinister background score for mob violence.


The non-puranic woman.

The drama inevitably moved to the evening talk shows that even in erudite Kerala often deteriorates into unseemly trading of insults. Bindu was invited to speak along with two members of the Sangh Parivar.

The social theorist Pierre Bourdieu has explained how elites use subtle inflexions of language to identify and ferret out upstart interlopers from within their cultural space. This prompts those who aspire to this elite-ness to try hard to emulate these cultural markers.

Not Bindu, however.

While representatives of the Sangh and their opponents who belong to the same milieu were seen using the chaste Sankritised Malayalam (that is the default now even in Malayalam films), Bindu responded in her raw earthy dialect (often used in films to caricature oppressed classes).

The Sangh has by now perfected the art of implausible deniability. Of course, the Sangh Parivar are against attacks on women, they insisted, and attributed the attack to unrelated fringe groups.

This despite the fact that the BJP candidate for the recently concluded by-polls can be seen right in the middle of the mob that harassed Bindu. The gradations taken for granted within the Hindutva echo chambers was made vivid when one of them said – “There are, after all, many women in our puranas”. 

 

As irreverential as ever, Bindu responded with aplomb, “Go to hell” (poyi pani nokke).

She further said, “I don’t need your sympathy”.

Now the Sangh’s minions exulted that Bindu had showed her “level” to the viewers through her crude language. Implying perhaps that Bindu, who clearly does not fit into the puranic mold, is not the type of woman that is worthy of respect.

Why “clearly”? Bindu is a Dalit who has dared to transgress the limits set by the Brahmanical patriarchy. What disturbs her male detractors is that she remains undeterred from asserting herself, in spite of their judgement. She had the sharpness and wit to respond on air to the allegations of crudity in language with “it isn’t the quality of language you use, but your conduct that matters”.

Silent complicity

One would be forgiven for wondering whether Kerala was a Hindutva-ruled state.

Can a woman who is a symbol of progressive thought and an irritant for religious bigots be brazenly attacked under the noses of policemen under any other ideology? There is a difference between the attack on Bindu and the chilling images of lynching in presence of the police, but only in degree and not in content.

What is the threshold of violence a mob must cross for the police and the public to spring into action? The thought is not comforting.

The tepid public response to this brazen mob violence is just another in the series of events that have been regularly piercing the veneer of a progressive society that Malayalis claim to inhabit.

Significant sections, even when opposed to majoritarianism, clearly still hold regressive and prejudicial attitudes against an assertive, Dalit, woman. As many shocked observers noted after last year’s violence at Sabarimala, social reform in Kerala was incomplete and for the past decades, a convenient fiction.

Obscurantism and medieval feudalism that were claimed to have been uprooted were nurtured in the private sphere, clandestinely and resentfully. The growth of religious nationalism started boiling the bottled-up bigotry that had since burst and shattered even the need for pretence. Masquerading as tradition, medieval practices and attitudes (that had taken social reformers a hundred years of painful struggle to partially dismantle in the window offered by the independence struggle) appear to have now become respectable. 

The most egregious dereliction is without doubt, by the government and the Left-front that chose to prioritise “peace in Sabarimala” — a euphemism for placating religious voters, particularly from the elite among the backward caste Ezhavas that form a significant section of their core voters (and that the BJP is eyeing).

Also read: Sabarimala Issue Underscores How the Alt-Right Uses Limits of Liberty to Its Advantage

It is paradoxical that fewer than a hundred years ago, Ezhavas who are now at the forefront of the “defence of tradition” argument were treated just like or worse than Bindu, using the same argument that traditions are sacrosanct. The Devaswom minister while condemning the attack on Bindu seemed more interested in locating a conspiracy to disrupt Sabarimala.

The law minister, himself a Dalit, vociferously denied any association with Bindu’s plan to visit Sabarimala. Upholding lofty ideals like gender equality and rule of law seem to no longer be electorally sensible.

Maybe the criticism is unfair as the government is playing a crafty game to avoid another bout of violence similar to last year by sparking the powder keg that Kerala has become.

The party and the state may be steering the state through waters made unpredictable by the rise of Hindutva and Islamism, and intractable violence between Christian factions. But it is reasonable to ask whether citizens in Kerala can expect protection from a mob if it means hurting religious sentiments.

Rosa Parks of our time

Bindu has risked her life and limb to remind us of some basic truths. Women without obvious insecurities make men uncomfortable. Hegemony requires the consent of the oppressed.

She has shown us the tenacity of patriarchy and has exposed the casteism lurking behind the facade of tradition.

For single-handedly braving the entire might of the Sangh, a neutered public, and an opportunistic state, Bindu Ammini’s name will be etched in the history of progressive struggles against oppression.

Prabhir Vishnu Poruthiyil is faculty at the Centre for Policy Studies, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay.

Watch | Story of the ‘World’s Biggest Election Loser’

Dr. K Padmarajan has filed 201 nominations but never won an election.

Dr. K Padmarajan aka ‘Election King’ has contested as an Independent candidate from many seats in various elections since 1988 but has never won an election.

To be precise, he has filed a total of 201 nominations until now. In the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, K. Padmarajan even contested against Rahul Gandhi from Wayanad and in 1991 he contested against P.V. Narasimha Rao. Not so surprisingly, the Guinness Book of world record listed him as the world’s “most unsuccessful candidate”. Watch his unique life story here.

Brought to you by OZY and The Wire.

This video originally appeared on OZY. Check out more from OZY: https://youtube.com/ozy

UP Govt to Hack Almost 64,000 Trees for Defence Exhibition in Lucknow

The Lucknow Development Authority has said that new trees will be planted after the Defence Expo is over and that efforts could also be made to relocate the trees that would be removed.

New Delhi: The Uttar Pradesh state government is preparing to fell 63,799 trees in Lucknow along the Gomti river for the Defence Expo, to be held in February next year, according to a report in IANS.

In a letter, the Lucknow Development Authority (LDA) has asked the Lucknow Nagar Nigam to cut trees from Hanuman Setu to the Nishatganj bridge as several events for the Defence Expo, in which guests from several countries will be invited to witness the country’s defence power, will be held there.

The LDA wants the area to be completely cleared by January 15, 2020, so that the cleared land can then be handed over to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) which is hosting the event.

The LDA has said that new trees will be planted after the Defence Expo is over and that efforts could also be made to relocate the trees that would be removed.

The LDA also sought Rs 59 lakhs from the Nagar Nigam for the plantation of new trees. The LDA secretary has said that the body spent Rs 59.06 lakhs on planting trees along the Gomti River.

Also read: The Story of India’s Private Forests

However, forest officials have said that the relocation of trees and plants was not possible in this season. “If relocated, the trees will die. The plants and the landscaping along the river will also have to be redone later,” a senior forest official said.

LDA secretary MP Singh told reporters that, “Due to upcoming winter season it is difficult to displace the trees and plant them somewhere else. This will ultimately result in destruction of trees and saplings and hence money will be needed for plantation of saplings at the same spot. That is why a letter has been written to Municipal Commissioner in this regard.”

The Defence Expo, which is being held in Lucknow for the first time around the theme ‘India: The Emerging Defence Manufacturing Hub’, is scheduled to take place from February 5 to February 8 and will showcase the defence forces’ latest arms and weaponry.

In Protests Against Firoze Khan, the Undoing of India’s Glorious Tradition

To understand the concerns of the protesting students, one needs to look deeper into their allegations and the brand of Hindutva they represent.

Who is Firoz Khan? What is his identity in Indian society? How did he develop an interest in learning the Sanskrit language? Is it because of something beyond the narrow peripheries of religion but a reason which is deeply rooted in the culture of India?

Firoz Khan, the newly appointed assistant professor in the Banaras Hindu University belongs to the Dhadhi, Hindu-Islamic community of Rajasthan. Dhadhis are traditional bards, musicians and genealogists living in northern parts of India like Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Gujarat. Agricultural Hindus and tribes like Jasts, Rayaka-Rabari, Bishnoi,  Khatri and Chhippas are their traditional patrons.

According to the Marwar Census Report of Rajasthan in 1891, Dadhis are followers of both Islam and Hinduism who trace their origin to Rajput families from the time of Ram. The Report records a popular couplet or doha which is still evoked by the community, 

Dasrath ke ghar ram janamiya has dadhan mukh boli,
Athara kiror le chawk meliya kaam karan ko chhori

‘Ram was born in the house of Dashrath, said a dhadhi woman
Leaving all work aside, she started singing songs of his birth.’

From the popular origin story of yore to the present times where a singular religious identity dominates, Dadhis have preserved the century-long tradition of a composite, syncretic culture of India. Their identity is testament to an order where Hinduism and Islam are not antagonistic to each other.

When it comes to Firoz Khan’s appointment as Sanskrit professor, it is imperative to answer questions posed by the protesting students of the University and supporters of the protests at large.

Why should a Muslim be allowed to teach Sanskrit at an institute with Hindu religious precedence?  

Dr. Firoz Khan was appointed faculty of the Sanskrit Vidya Dharma Vijnan. Protesters said that in the same way that a Hindu cannot attain the education to become a maulavi, or imam or even a Christian priest, a Muslim or ‘non-Hindu’ can have no right to become a professor of Sanskrit, especially at a place where Sanskrit is taught to produce future shastris and perform rituals.

This question, however, lacks in basic reasoning.

Also read: Firoze Khan, Sanskrit and the Case For Broadening the Mind

Unlike priests or imams of other religious orders, a professor of Sanskrit at BHU would play a role in the preservation and development of ancient and traditional knowledge by keeping pace with modern patterns of learning. His role would not be limited to producing mere machines of rituals which are considered to come under the paradigm of Hinduism.

Besides, Firoz Khan was appointed to the department of literature which has no direct hold over ritual practices.

What about the Hindu calendar published by BHU? 

The second major concern raised by the protesters is that the Faculty of Vidya Dharma Vijnan publishes the Vishwa Hindu Pnachangam which is the Hindu calendar, based on Vedic astrology.

Its authenticity would be affected, protesters argue.

The major point of ire raised here is that it would set precedence for the appointment of more non-Hindu faculty members in the department of Sanskrit.

The ‘fear’ expressed here is that many more Muslims would find a way to the Sanskrit department and would gather strength to raise qualms on of authority of the Hindu calendar, which allegedly affects the larger Hindu population across the world. 

The right wing politics of ‘sentiments’ develops upon the field of ‘fear’ of losing the integrity of ‘faith’ with the inclusion of non-Hindus in the teaching-learning practices of Sanskrit.

Sanskrit, however, is not the religion but one of the mediums of languages in which Hindu religious scriptures are written.

Teaching Sanskrit literature and making the Hindu calendar are separate functions. More importantly, the Hindu calendar is not made by the divine insight of Brahmins, but instead is designed on the basis of the lunar month and weather of India.

Thus the ‘politics of sentiment’ and the ‘politics of hurt’ is a right wing narrative imposed on BHU to polarise students of the campus on communal lines, establish political advantage of the ‘Hindu’ faith over any other religion living in India, and distract the protests of students over a fee hike.  

A cultural attack?

Can it be believed that the future of Hindu ancient religious practices depends upon the appointment of teachers in the modern university space for one of the oldest languages of the world? And can Brahmanism be considered the saviour of this alleged cultural attack by Muslims on the BHU Sanskrit department?   

Periyar once said that between a snake and Brahmanism, Brahmanism is more poisonous. It is not a ‘cultural attack’ in the way it is being propagated, but it is a Brahmanical attack on peaceful coexistence of religions in India.

Akbar, Jahangir and Shahjahan gave special attention to the development of the language and it would be unjust to not include Aurangzeb in the list. Shayasta Khan, maternal uncle of Aurangzeb, was noted poet of Sanskrit language who even wrote a treatise called Rasakalpadruma. Other noted Sanskrit poets of the time like Devdatta, author of Gurjarishakatam, acknowledged Aurangzeb and his son Azam Shah in the opening lines of the treatise. 

Also read: #RightSideUp: A Tale of Two Universities, ‘Hindu Guilt’

Mohammed Hanif Khan Shastri is the most recent example of a Muslim Sanskrit scholar who was awarded with fourth highest civilian award of the country, Padma Shri (literature and education) in 2019 by President Ramnath Kovind for his immeasurable service to the nation as professor of Sanskrit at the Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan. He also won the National Communal Harmony Award in 2009   

The politics of language replaces language with religion to create anxiety over fragile identity politics driven by a ‘politics of hurt’.      

Does cultural Hinduism strengthen political Hindutva?  

The invented ‘precariousness’ of the Hindu religion tries to establish a direct link between ‘cultural Hinduism’ and the political ideology of ‘Hindutva’ nurtured by VHP and RSS.

It is this soft communalism or cultural Hindutva which reaches a wider section of the society and sows the seeds for spreading stronger communal hatred.

The narrative constructed by the protestors of BHU are based on soft Hindutva ideology, but is essentially based on the popular communal ideas according to which Islam, ‘a religion of violence’ and Hinduism, a religion of peace can never share the same place. Besides, the appointment of a non-Hindu would dismantle the predominance of Brahmins in the working of the Sanskrit department.            

Was Hindutva the fundamental idea behind the Banaras Hindu University?

It is also important to delve into the history of the Banaras Hindu University where ‘H’ doesn’t represent the politically driven perspective of Hinduism. BHU stands on the southern outskirts of Banaras at the bank of the Ganges.

Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya, with the vision of spreading scientific education and rationality, left his legal practice and focused upon the development of the university which he formally announced at the 21st session of Indian National Congress in December 1905. 

On November 22, 1911, the Hindu University Society was registered by Malaviya with the support of Annie Besant. He spent a few years to raise funds for the actual foundation of the university.

A statue of Madan Mohan Malviya outside Banaras Hindu University. Credit: BHU website

A statue of Madan Mohan Malviya outside Banaras Hindu University. Photo: BHU website

With persistence, he could wield the support of few princely states and nobles such as Kashi Naresh Prabhu Narayan who gave land at the southern outskirts of the present day Varanasi; the Raja of Darbhanga state, Maharaja Sir Rameshwar Singh Thakur; and the last Nizam of Hyderabad, Mir Osman Ali Khan who donated Rs 1 lakh for the construction of the university.

The foundation stone of the university was laid by the Sikh saint of the time, Baba Attar Singh ji of Punjab in 1914.

I now come back to the original matter of discussion. A university which was constructed with a vision and contribution of various personalities of the time comes to a point where religion is evoked for the appointment of an assistant professor.

If religion is the deciding factor of the country’s education system and language becomes the battle ground of communal battle against identities, I believe that even gods can’t save the people of this country.

Looking at the increasing saffronisation of educational institutes, the repercussions are not just limited to the destruction of the liberal structures of the societies, but it is the threat to the century-old composite traditions of India or South Asia at large where variegated religious, ethnic and linguistic identities have lived with each other and developed a distinct cultural field of shared heritage.

Several syncretic identity groups like Dadhis, Mirasis, Manganiyars and Langas who have carried this tradition through generations are now under constant attack from dominant political narratives of religions.

An anonymous poet from the same community expressed the dilemma.

Vahid tang nazar ne mujhe kafir mana,
Kafir samajhte hain ki musalman hu mai

(‘The narrow sight of the world labelled me a Muslim
And the Muslims treated me as Hindu’) 

Retrospectively, the Indian education system and philosophy is based on the secular notions of learning, and therefore the development of the institutions of learning are based on inclusivity of various caste, creed, religion, gender or class.

Protests against the appointment of the Dr Firoz Khan at Banaras Hindu University not only exhibits right wing political propaganda for further polarisation but is also an attack on composite culture.

Minakshi Rajdev is a PhD scholar at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University.