IAF’s Dramatic Aerial Rescue of 121 Indians From Wadi Sayyidna in Sudan Has Been Long in the Making

The dangers the mission entailed were underscored a few hours earlier on April 28 when Sudanese rebels fired at a Turkish Air Force C-130 as it neared the same airsstrip to evacuate Turkish citizens.

New Delhi: The remarkable and dramatic aerial rescue by the Indian Air Force (IAF) of 121 Indians stranded in war-torn Sudan, that was executed in pitch darkness on a remote airstrip late Thursday night and early Friday morning, qualifies unquestioningly as the stuff of military legend.

With calmness, dexterity and competence, IAF pilots landed their Lockheed Martin C-130J-30 ‘Super Hercules’ military transport aircraft at the ‘degraded’ Wadi Sayyidna airstrip that had neither any navigational approach aids nor critical landings lights, some 40km north of the Sudanese capital Khartoum, wracked by civil war.

Operationalising their on-board electro-optical infrared detection set to ensure that the pitted runway was free of obstruction and ‘inimical’ forces, the skilled and daring pilots used night vision goggles to land their transporter in total blackout conditions, an IAF statement declared.

The infrared detection set provides the four-engine turboprop transports the ability to conduct precision low-level flying missions airdrops and landings in darkness, while the night vision goggles further enhance the pilots’ situational awareness. The aircraft is also capable of landing and taking off from short and rudimentary runways, akin to the one at Wadi Sayyidna and has been configured by Lockheed Martin for the IAF for special forces operations..

Photo: IAF

Upon landing, after the cease fire by the two warring Sudanese sides expired on Thursday midnight, the aircraft engines were kept running, while eight IAF Special Forces Garud Commandos secured the passengers, which included a pregnant woman, and their luggage into the aircraft, the IAF’s statement said.

Thereafter, much like the landing, the take-off for Jeddah some 90 minutes flying-time away, too was successfully completed by the two C-130J-30 pilots using night vision goggles, which by no means is an easy task in tense and unfamiliar conditions and at high speeds, exacerbated further by palpable danger of being fired upon.

The entire nail-biting operation, the IAF added, lasted two-hours-and-a-half and would ‘go down in the annals of the forces history for its sheer audacity and flawless execution’.

The dangers the mission entailed were underscored a few hours earlier after Sudanese rebels, engaged in the civil war, fired at a Turkish Air Force C-130 transporter on the morning of April 28 as it neared the same Wadi Sayyidna airport to evacuate Turkish citizens. According the official Sudan News Agency the aircraft was damaged in the firing and one crew member was also injured.

The IAF, however, declined, on security grounds, to reveal where the concerned C-130J-30 was based, but the 12 strong fleet of transporters that were inducted into service 2011 onwards, are split between the 77 ‘Veiled Vipers’ Squadron based at Hindon, on New Delhi’s outskirts and the 87 ‘Wings of Valour’ Squadron at Panagarh in the east, from where they support the Indian Army’s deployment along the disputed line of actual control (LAC) with China.

The C-130J contracts were signed in 2009 during the Manmohan Singh government’s time — in the wake of the closer defence ties India developed with the US following the landmark 2005 nuclear deal. The overall cost of the acquisition was around around $ 1.5- 2 billion.

Both tactical air-lift squadrons have catchy mottos, wholly apposite to the perilous task one of their aircraft performed in Sudan. The former’s maxim is ‘Kill with Stealth’, while the latter’s is ‘Raiding Raptors’ – birds of prey, like eagles or hawks. The IAF spokesman also declined to name the pilots involved in the bold evacuation operation, citing security considerations.

The IAF and the Indian Navy, assisted by Indian Army personnel, comprise ‘Operation Kaveri’, launched recently by the government to evacuate some 3,500 Indian nationals stranded in Sudan after fighting erupted between the Sudanese Army and the country’s Paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The two opposing forces are engaged in a power struggle over who controls the resource-rich nation, located strategically at the crossroads of the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea.

Alongside, the Indian Navy has so far rescued over 1,000 Indian nationals from Port Sudan over the past week aboard three of their Russian-origin Talwar-class frigates and transported them to Jeddah, 160 nm (296 km) and 10 hours sailing time away, from where they are being airlifted home.

Photo: IAF

INS Teg, INS Sumedha and INS Tarkash were part of the IN’s ‘mission-based deployments’ that were originally conceived of in 2017 and subsequently operationalised. “The seeds of this highly successful evacuation mission were laid six years ago, following the permanent positioning of warships and surveillance aircraft by the Indian Navy along critical sea-lanes of communication in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) to execute an assorted spectrum of missions,” said naval analyst, Captain D.K. Sharma (retired). The swift and successful turnaround of ships carrying evacuees from Sudan is a direct consequence of this policy, he added.

At the time, former Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Sunil Lanba had approved a ‘focused and gradual transition cycle’ of deploying varied Indian Navy warships from periods of maintenance to full scale operations. And though the entire strategy was prompted by the threat posed in the Indian Ocean Region and surrounding waters by China’s expansionist People’s Liberation Army Navy, it also included employment of Indian Navy platforms on humanitarian assistance missions, as well as providing disaster relief to Indian Ocean Region littoral states.

Each of these deployed platforms routinely carried on board 40-tonne container ‘bricks’ containing essential supplies like food, clothing and fuel for contingencies like the one being undertaken in Sudan. Indian Navy personnel, officers said, were provided instruction in undertaking evacuations and were ‘prompt and professional’ in their approach, traits that were appreciated by other navies and served to enhance the forces and India’s profile.

But with some 2,000 or more Indians still awaiting rescue and fighting having broken out afresh in Sudan, India’s military will, no doubt resort to some form of jugaad or innovation, for which it is renowned, to successfully and competently conclude the rescue operation.

 

At SCO Defence Ministers’ Meeting, Disparate Priorities Evident

Later, speaking to reporters after the conclusion of the meeting, defence secretary Giridhar Aramane emphasised that all member countries were ‘unanimous in their statement that the terrorism, in whatever form, shall be condemned and controlled.’

New Delhi: While the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation is not a platform for bilateral issues, the defence ministers’ meeting highlighted policy priorities, with India focusing on terrorism, while Russia reiterated its criticism of the west’s Indo-Pacific concept and creation of groups like the Quad.

While addressing the meeting on Friday, April 28, Indian defence minister Rajnath Singh underlined that any form of terrorist act or support towards it was a heinous crime against humanity.

“If a nation shelters terrorists, it not only poses a threat to others, but for itself too. Radicalisation of youth is a cause of concern not only from the point of view of security, but it is also a major obstacle in the path of socio-economic progress of society. If we want to make the SCO a stronger & more credible international organisation, our top-most priority should be to effectively deal with terrorism,” said Singh, as quoted by a government communique.

Later, speaking to reporters after the conclusion of the meeting, defence secretary Giridhar Aramane emphasised that all member countries were “unanimous in their statement that the terrorism, in whatever form, shall be condemned and controlled”.

While the issue of terrorism may have been pointed towards Pakistan, India also reiterated that a “robust” framework of regional cooperation should respect the “the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all member states by taking care of their legitimate interests”. 

The Chinese state councillor and defence minister Li Shangfu said Beijing was willing to work with other SCO members to implement the “Global Security Initiative”, which was a concept floated by President Xi Jinping in April 2022. A paper was also issued by the Chinese foreign ministry on GSI this February.

Besides, Li also said that China wanted to “deepen strategic mutual trust, enhance anti-terrorism cooperation, expand fields for cooperation and improve cooperation mechanisms, so as to contribute to global and regional peace and stability”. 

The Chinese statement also highlighted that Li asserted that Beijing was ready to work with other member states to “build a balanced, effective and sustainable security architecture”.

The Russian defence minister General Sergei Shoigu took a blunt aim at the West for attempting to integrate the emerging security architecture in the Indian Ocean with NATO.

“The West’s countermeasures for developing multilateralism could be evidently observed in the Asia-Pacific region. There the USA paved the way to disintegration of existing regional security system… The NATO is willing to establish dominance in Asia-Pacific region, that is why QUAD and AUKUS is integrating into the NATO,” he said

Russia has always opposed the Indo-Pacific policy, advocated by the West and supported by India, describing it as an attempt to encircle China. Along with the US, Japan and Australia, India is also a member of the Quad, a loosely-formed group of democracies.

The Russian ministers expressed his belief that the SCO’s “independent policies” towards global and regional security challenges could serve as a blueprint for the international community. 

He emphasised the need to strengthen SCO’s role as a key pillar of the emerging multipolar international system, one that promotes inter-state relations based on principles of equality, mutual respect, and compliance with international law.

Raising the Ukraine war, he said that the aim of the West in “provoking” the conflict in Ukraine was “inflict a strategic defeat on Russia, threaten China, and maintain its monopoly position in the world”

Moreover, he alleged that the weapons provided to Ukraine had ended up on the black market and had been acquired by terrorists.

Additionally, the General stated that NATO countries should bear the primary responsibility for post-war reconstruction in Afghanistan and should not be blamed for the current situation in the country.

Besides a virtual participation by Pakistan, defence ministers of eight SCO member states attended the meeting in New Delhi.

Why India Should Heed the Cry of Its Wrestlers 

Never in the history of Indian sports has an allegation of sexual harassment of such extensive proportion surfaced.

The wrestlers who brought glory to India in the Olympics, the Commonwealth Games, the Asian and World Championships are today fighting cases in the Supreme Court against the state and its de facto instrumentalities like the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) and its chief for alleged sexual exploitation of women wrestlers including minors.

This is not a case of the West accusing us of human rights violations. It’s the pride of India, our Olympic and World champions in wrestling, who are claiming to have lifted the veil from what could be the most extensive and most shameful moral decay in a section of our sports infrastructure. 

The main allegation 

A group of highly decorated wrestlers – Vinesh Phogat, Sakshi Malik, Bajrang Punia and others – have alleged that the head of the WFI – Bharatiya Janata Party MP Brij Bhushan Singh – and other office bearers have been sexually exploiting a large number of women wrestlers for over a decade. 

Pressed repeatedly by reporters to give details of the alleged sexual harassment that the wrestlers had faced, Vinesh Phogat said on  April 23, 2023: “Main aapko ek do example de sakti hoon. Kisi ladki ko band kamre mein bula ke usko pakad lena, zabardasti uske saath koi harkat karne ki koshish karna… wo kya hai ? Wo sexual harassment hai, wo kya hai?” (‘Calling a girl in a closed room and grabbing her, and then trying to forcibly do something wrong with her, is that not sexual harassment? What is that?)

Complaining to Prime Minister Modi 

Earlier in January 2023, giving another example of the sexual exploitation of women wrestlers, Vinesh Phogat said: “Lucknow mein camp kyun lagaya jaata hai, humne pradhan mantri se, khel mantri se humne subko request karke letter bhi…. shoshan wahan easily hota hai(‘Why are camps being held in Lucknow? We requested the prime minister and sports minister, and in writing to… exploitation happens easily there’ ) (the words in bold were completed by her colleague Sakshi Malik). 

Prime Minister Modi has said he personally knows not only Vinesh Phogat but her entire family. While consoling Phogat for failing to win a medal at the Tokyo Olympics, Modi had said to the wrestler: ‘Kya beta, bahut gussa aa gaya? Apne aap pe gussa kyon karti ho, haan?… Vinesh, main to tumhare poore parivaar ko jaanta hoon…. Varna, aisa karo, hafte das din ke baad mummy bahno sub mere yahan aao.” (‘Child, don’t be angry with yourself. I know your whole family, so come and see me in a week or 10 days with your mother and sisters’).

Yet Vinesh Phogat along with Sakshi Malik and Bajrang Punia – the three champions spearheading the agitation for action against Brij Bhushan Singh on sexual harassment charges – chose to agitate on the streets, not once but twice, to tell the whole world about the alleged deep rot in the Wrestling Federation of India.

Why did she and they do that?

This week, Phogat again told the media, “Maine pradhan mantri ko inki [Brij Bhushan Singh] shikayat kar di thi jo jo mere saath hua tha . Tokyo ke baad mein unhone mujko bulaya tha. Main apni family ke saath gayi thi…”. (‘I complained to the Prime Minister about him [Brij Bhushan Singh], about what happened with me. [The PM] called me after Tokyo, and I went with my family…’)

The prime minister on his part has publicly voiced extreme concern at the way women are treated in general. On August 15, 2022, he told the nation from the ramparts of the Red Fort: “Lekin mere bhitar ka dard mein kahan kahun…humari bolchal mein, humarey wyawhar mein, humarey kuchh shabdo mein hum nari ka apman karte hain. Kya hum swabhav sey, sanskar sey, rojmarsh ki zindagi mein nari ko apmanit karnewale har baat se mukti ka sankalp le sakte hain?” (Where should I reveal the pain inside me.. In our day to day conversation, in our behaviour, in some of our words, we insult women. Can we not – in our nature, our sanskar, in our day to day life – pledge to stay away from any such talk which insults women?).

If Vinesh Phogat had apprised Modi of the alleged sexual assault/harassment of women wrestlers, including herself, as claimed by her, then it would be reasonable to expect there to have been initiation of some action by the prime minister.

Surely, an enquiry should/would have been ordered. If so, what were its findings? The unprecedented dharna by wrestlers at Jantar Mantar in January 2023 and its renewal this week despite Prime Minister Modi apparently being made aware of the allegations of sexual assault/harrasment of women wrestlers, would indicate that either the allegations were found to be baseless, or, possibly, that the rot was too deep for the truth to come out easily in a short time.

The silence of the BJP top brass is deeply disturbing. 

The return to Jantar Mantar 

The dharna was called off in January 2023 after the Union government ordered a formal investigation by a seven-member committee which is headed by Olympic medalist Mary Kom, a Modi government-nominated member of the Rajya Sabha, and whose members include Olympics medallist Yogeshwar Dutt who has twice contested  an election on a BJP ticket. At that time, Vinesh Phogat had told Rajdeep Sardesai of India Today TV that feelers were being sent for a patch up between the WFI and the complainants. That apparently did not happen, and this week the wrestlers returned to Jantar Mantar. The protesting wrestlers have now demanded that not only should the FIR filed by the seven wrestlers be registered, but that their names should not be disclosed publicly in keeping with the law governing sexual harassment allegations, that the recommendations and findings of the seven-member committee be made known, and that Brij Bhushan Singh be arrested and prosecuted. 

Enter the Supreme Court 

In view of the delay by the police in registering the FIR, the wrestlers moved the Supreme Court, which not only issued notice to the Police Commissioner, but observed (as reported in the Indian Express), “There are serious allegations of sexual harassment in the petition, which is instituted by professional international wrestlers who have represented India”, that the matter merited urgency, and that “the matter requires the consideration of this court in exercise of its jurisdiction under Article 32 of the Constitution”. 

In interview after interview, Vinesh Phogat and her colleagues had said that the wrestlers did not want to reveal the names of the sexually harassed wrestlers. In that context, the Supreme Court observed, “For the purpose of these proceedings, the identity of the petitioners shall be redacted and the cause title be read as ‘XYZ and Others vs State NCT of Delhi and others’”. 

On April 28, 2023, the Supreme Court was informed by counsel for Delhi Police that it will register the FIR of the complainants against BJP MP Brij Bhushan Singh. The case is expected to be heard again next week. Significantly, the counsel for the complainants has asked for a court monitored investigation, which was opposed by the solicitor general. 

In view of (1) the inordinate delay in registering the FIR in a matter that involved a cognizable offence, (2) the vulnerability of the complainants (one of whom is a minor) and the alleged attempts to pressurise them and their parents, (3) the profile of the accused BJP MP, (4) the fact that the matter was being enquired into by a ministry headed by Anurag Thakur in respect of whom the Supreme Court has in a separate case of alleged hate speech asked Delhi Police why an FIR has not been registered against him, and (5) the seriousness of the issues involved, as observed by the CJI himself while issuing notice to Delhi Police, it is likely that there could be a court monitored investigation into the complaints filed by the wrestlers. 

The political fallout 

The opposition has been served an explosive issue on a platter by the Modi government. The protesting wrestlers who initially wanted to keep their grievances apolitical and had turned away politicians like Brinda Karat from Jantar Mantar in January 2023, are now welcoming political support. A matter that could have been addressed by initiating timely action against Brij Bhushan Singh, regardless of his political clout in east Uttar Pradesh, may now become an alarming political liability for the BJP, besides jeopardising the BJP’s ‘beti bachao’ initiative – which could become a subject of public ridicule. There is no doubt that the BJP has lost ground due to this explosive allegation and the subsequent filing of FIRs against Brij Bhushan Singh. A Supreme Court monitored investigation, if ordered, would be a further setback to the BJP’s claims to be a party committed to women empowerment.

The need for justice 

Never in the history of Indian sports has an allegation of sexual harassment of such extensive proportion surfaced.

The opposition may find it hard to resist the temptation to use the court process as a political tool to hurt the BJP but the affected wrestlers have nothing to gain from its politicisation. On January 21, 2023, CJI D.Y. Chandrachud had, inter alia, said: “The philosophy of the constitution is premised on the supremacy of the constitution, rule of law…. freedom and dignity of the individual and integrity of the nation”.

It is hoped that the rule of law shall prevail, and the dignity of our athletes shall be protected. For that to happen, justice must be delivered in this case, and in all such cases, in a time-bound manner.

Rahul Singh is a former civil servant who retired from the Ministry of Defence, Government of India.

Textbook Controversies and the Missing Voice of the Teacher 

Classroom teaching will continue to be exam centric. And yet possibilities remain. Although textbooks can change with every changing political regime, history cannot be wiped out. Teachers are thus one of the most important players here.

Textbooks by the National Council of Educational Research and Training are once again back in the news and this time, too, it is the arbitrary removal of specific chapters and sentences from the class 11 and 12 history and political science textbooks that is to blame.

While the NCERT has defended the deletions based on the Union education ministry’s proposed plan to rationalise the curriculum since the pandemic and have called the non-disclosure of specific prunings an ‘oversight’, the ‘rationalised’ content have been published online and are soon going to be made available to students in the new academic session.

The steps, as expected, invited sharp criticism from a large section of academics, especially historians, and many members of the opposition. Social media meanwhile erupted with satirical and rather creative memes. 

While it would be useful to understand why school textbooks are subjected to frequent and random changes and what makes them vulnerable to controversies, what is also striking is the complete silence of the key stakeholders – teachers, students, and parents – who are directly going to be affected by the alterations. 

Unpacking the State-Curriculum Linkage

The centrality of textbooks within the teaching learning process in schools is undeniable.

Teachers consider it as the most important teaching tool, their primary responsibility being completion of the ‘syllabus’. For the students too, it is often the only source of what is ‘worthwhile’ to learn – knowledge that they are supposed to memorise and regurgitate during examinations, based on which they are promoted to the next class. 

Yet textbooks have a public life and often occupy the centerstage of political controversies. Prescribed by the state, they reflect the aspirations of the ruling regime as to how ideas of the nation and citizenship need to be imagined. Since the very existence of a modern nation state demands the creation of a citizenry imbued with a sense of national pride and loyalty towards the nation, schools often play the role of an ‘Ideological State Apparatuswith their overt (textbooks) and hidden (daily rituals, disciplinary regime, celebrations) curricula playing a key role in transforming young children into ‘ideal citizens’ who can contribute towards nation building.

This explains why textbooks become the repository of ‘official knowledge’ – knowledge that is carefully selected by those in power along with dominant sections of the society. Research on textbooks and curricula both in the developed countries (the United Kingdom, the United States of America and Japan) and many of the developing countries including India bear testimony to this.

As political regimes change, textbooks get rewritten to suit their specific requirements, thereby throwing up contesting visions of the nation and citizenship. These changes are mostly visible in language and social science textbooks, especially civics, political science and history, which explains why they become mired in controversy.  

Historically, the social sciences emerged as a school subject during the 19th century in the context of the rise of the modern nation state. While civics was introduced in schools to inculcate among the young citizens obedience and patriotism, history was taught to instil in them a sense of pride and oneness through the construction of a shared past. Hence the need to glorify the past, create heroes and uphold a common heritage that would act as a glue to unify a diverse populace and iron out differences. A close examination of the history of nation-states in Europe explains this.

Representative image of history books. Photo: Michael Cugley/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

In the context of changing political regimes within nation-states, with support bases from divergent social groups and communities, history then becomes a contested site, where differing ideologies with opposing agendas clash. This explains why from time to time the history curriculum and textbooks are subjected to controversies. This also helps to understand why they become the repository of selected knowledge and why certain historical figures and communities, events or processes capture the limelight during a particular regime while others are pushed to the margin, vilified, or totally obliterated.

The same holds true for political Science and civics. Whatever challenges the agenda of the party in power or is critical of it must be shelved. This explains the recent deletions in the NCERT textbooks.

Textbooks in the Indian Context  

Historically the colonial experience firmly established the ‘textbook culture’ in the educational journey of Indian students. This colonial legacy continued even after 1947. As India was gradually emerging as an independent nation state in the post-colonial years it was confronted with the daunting challenge of nation-building. This necessitated the forging of a national identity robust enough to weld together the diverse cultural loyalties and reign in the discordant notes of narrow regional parochialism to create a citizenry that was responsible, loyal, and patriotic.

One way to achieve this was by introducing a national curriculum and making available inexpensive and uniform quality textbooks throughout the country. It was for this purpose that the NCERT was established in 1961. The social cciences, introduced as school subjects around the same period were part of this nation-building and modernisation project.

The first two national curriculum frameworks (introduced during two successive Congress regimes in 1975 and 1988) despite their many limitations, upheld an idea of India based on secular values and celebration of its syncretic culture.  The memories of Partition and the bloody communal riots perhaps necessitated a construction of a past that upheld a history of harmonious co-existence and cultural amalgamation. 

At its core was the Nehruvian idea of a pluralistic nation based on ‘unity in diversity’ and the principles of equality, social justice, and secularism.

The Nehruvian idea of India as a nation was and continues to be challenged by the Hindu right in the form of Hindutva, or ‘cultural nationalism’. It envisions the creation of a ‘Hindu Rashtra’ that projects India as exclusively a Hindu country, thereby reducing the Muslims and Christians as ‘cultural outsiders’.

This found reflection in the National Curriculum Framework for School Education 2000 introduced during the first stint of the National Democratic Alliance. It redefined the national identity by embedding it in a Hindu majoritarian, patriarchal, and upper-caste ethos. It was severely criticised for undermining the constitutional values of secularism and democracy, promoting cultural revivalism, and doing away with rational discourse. The social science textbooks which were published had to be withdrawn upon judicial intervention by the apex court.

NCF 2005 and the innovations introduced in social science textbooks 

 The NCF 2005, operationalised during the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance’s first stint, aimed at purging the education system of the attempted ‘saffronisation’ and reiterating a national identity based on the ideals of secularism, egalitarianism, pluralism, and social justice.

Under the directorship of the renowned educationist Krishna Kumar, a large of group of reputed academicians, well known civil society members, educationists, and activists as well as professionals working in diverse fields like law, environment and gender issues joined hands to work on school curriculum. It was critically acclaimed by scholars for having introduced radical shifts, both in terms of the nature and source of the knowledge as well as its pedagogic imagination. 

For instance, to counter the homogenising tendencies inherent in the centralised nature of textbook production under NCERT, the NCF 2005 suggested reorienting the curriculum through ‘multiple ways of imagining the Indian nation’ and balancing the national perspective with the local. To achieve this, the NCF 2005 proposed a more decentralised mechanism of knowledge-generation in which teachers, students and the local community would feel ‘empowered to bring in their own realities to the content of social studies’. This, it was argued, would enable students from different parts of the country to relate to the textbooks. 

The curriculum also proposed the inclusion of the perspectives of the Adivasi, Dalit and other marginalised communities in curriculum and textbooks as also that of women which it was suggested needed to be provided space in discussions related to any historical event or contemporary issues. 

Further, citizenship education was reimagined and situated within the perspectives of human rights and critical pedagogy. While this was aimed at providing the students with ‘an opportunity to reflect critically on issues in terms of their political, social, economic, and moral aspects’, the inclusion of the constructivist approach attempted to transform the classroom into a democratic space where students and teachers could be encouraged to engage in dialogue and thus learn to accept ‘multiple views on social issues’ through ‘democratic forms of interaction’.

A perusal of the textbooks reveal that these innovations are mostly evident in the environmental and social sciences.

The history textbooks which were conceptualised and written by a team of reputed historians across the country and from diverse schools of thought, are imaginatively designed. With thematic presentation of concepts and ideas supported by colourful visuals and a range of primary sources, these are aimed at familiarising young readers with the nuances of the historian’s craft, enabling them to master some of the key historical thinking skills – arranging events and processes in a chronological sequence, understanding cause and effect relationship, interpreting, and analysing sources and differentiating between fact and opinion.

The textbooks not only succeed in breaking the conventional style of writing history as a monotonous narrative of dynastic achievements in a didactic manner, but shifts the focus to social history, especially how ordinary people-women, men, and children lived their daily lives. Even the narration of major themes like the freedom movement and the emergence of national consciousness are presented in a layered manner, highlighting how different social groups responded differently to it with some even staying away from it for their own specific reasons.

April 6, 1930: Gandhi being greeted by Sarojini Naidu at Dandi.

The political science textbooks, both in the middle school (namely ‘Social and Political Life’) and at the secondary and higher secondary levels too marked a refreshing departure from their earlier lacklustre versions typically characterised by a mechanical representation of the state as a monolithic and paternalistic structure with little or no space highlighting its lapses and failures, features which were far removed from lived realities of students.

Through the inclusion of various creative expressions like storyboards, case-studies many of which expose the failures and gaps in the functioning of the state, along with colourful visuals, popular political cartoons, and government data ample space have been created for the students to meaningfully engage with ideas like democracy, citizenship, and social justice.

Further they are encouraged to critically reflect on these key ideas with the help of different levels of questions (comprehension, reasoning, application, analysis, inference etc.) both within the chapter and at the end. 

Filled with these innovative ideas, the post-NCF 2005 social science textbooks have thus laid down a template regarding how the subject can be creatively imagined and provide a critical lens to students to view the world around them.

Surely the rationalisation process must have reduced the pressure of curricular load for students, especially those appearing for the Class 12 board examinations in 2024. Moreover, the curriculum and textbooks, having been in operation since more than two decades are in urgent need of a review. However, the way certain chapters have been deleted and sentences pruned appear arbitrary, deliberate, and politically motivated. While the NCERT has shared the names of the experts who were consulted none of the members of the original textbook writing committee were taken on board. The apex body also does not seem to have any plan to reinstate the deletions in future.

The he Possibilities for Future

Though not surprising, what remains conspicuous in the prevailing public discourse is the complete silence of the teachers. The reasons for this could be multiple. One could be the general apathy prevalent among the teaching community towards the subject owing to its perceived non-utilitarian and low status in comparison to the natural sciences and mathematics.

Moreover, it is largely true that while the NCF 2005 and the textbooks ushered in radical shifts both in the nature of the content and pedagogic imagination, the teachers were not adequately trained to implement the innovative ideas. Devoid of agency the teachers have continued to function as the perennial ‘meek dictator’ and have confined themselves to deliver their responsibility in a routinised manner following conventional pedagogic practices (chalk and talk and dictation of notes).

Further their mandatory engagement in numerous ‘official duties’ beyond their teaching responsibilities have left them with little or no interest to participate in larger discourses around textbooks and curriculum. 

Classroom teaching will continue to be exam centric. And yet possibilities remain. Although textbooks can change with every changing political regime history cannot be wiped out. Rather, it will continue to thrive in libraries, archives, and reliable online platforms.

As teachers continue to teach, why can’t they make the classroom experience truly meaningful and worthwhile for the students and themselves whenever the opportunity arises?

In times when textbooks are no longer the only source of information, nothing stops them from taking the initiative to access diverse sources – newspapers, library, television, and various online platforms – and sift through layers of misinformation. They can create space within the classroom and outside of it for deeper engagement with key issues through constructive debates and critical reflection. Their educational objective need not always be limited by the instrumentality of examinations.

Prompted by genuine interest and real quest for knowledge and truth, such an engagement has the potential to serve the purpose of nation building and actualisation of democratic citizenship as enshrined in the Indian constitution.  

Rupamanjari Hegde teaches at the Azim Premji University. The views expressed are personal.  

Enforcement Directorate Searches 3 Premises Linked to Byju’s Founder

The ED has tweeted that it has seized “various incriminating documents and digital data” from the premises.

New Delhi: The Enforcement Directorate has conducted searches at three Bengaluru premises linked to the firm which runs the online tutorial portal Byju’s today, April 29.

The ED has tweeted that it conducted searches at three premises – reports have said that two are linked to the business and a one is a residential property – connected to Byju’s parent company, Think & Learn Private Limited, and its founder Raveendran Byju under provisions of Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA).

The tweet has further claimed “various incriminating documents and digital data” were seized by ED officials.

The Hindu has quoted a statement by the ED in which officials have said that it is focusing on Rs 28,000 crore of Foreign Direct Investment or FDI it received between 2011 and 2023 and Rs 9,754 crore overseas direct investment by the company.

The ED has allegedly also summoned Byju several times but he has not appeared, it has claimed.

Byju’s legal team has said that the company has been transparent with the authorities and will continue to be so.

Karnataka will vote for the assembly elections on May 10.

Karnataka: Congress Headed for Clear Majority, BJP Could Perform Its Worst, Says Pre-Poll Survey

The rich and the poor issue is driving this election, say experts.

Note: This is part 3 of Eedina’s survey report on Karnataka elections. You can read part 1 and part 2 here and here

New Delhi: A pre-poll survey conducted by the Kannada outlet Eedina says that Congress appears to be headed for a clear and comfortable majority, much beyond the 113-seat mark, in the forthcoming Karnataka assembly elections.

The assembly elections will be held in a single phase on May 10. Counting will be done on May 13.

The survey predicted that Congress will win 132-140 seats with a vote share of 43%. And, this could be Congress’s best performance in the last three decades, it added.

BJP is predicted to win 57-65 seats, with a vote share of 33%. For comparison, BJP won 104 seats in the 2018 assembly elections.

However, note two important points here: first, BJP has never won a majority in the state on its own, and Congress always had a better vote share. Secondly, BJP came to power in controversial circumstances, by toppling the Congress-Janata Dal (Secular) government 14 months after elections in 2019.

The survey added that BJP could witness its worst performance in the last two decades, except 2013 when the party was split. For the JD(S), too, this could be its worst performance, it added.

“It’s clear that corruption and incompetence are the main reasons for which the BJP is being thrown out if the opinion polls come true,” Dr. Vasu H.V., coordinator of Eedina survey, told The Wire in an interview on April 27, Thursday.

“At the same time, there’s yet another angle to it that the oppressed communities and Ahinda in Karnataka, which comprise Dalits and [people belonging to the] backward [caste/communities] are more in favour of the Congress for quite sometime…And, more poor [people] are voting in favour of Congress. So, price rise and other issues, the economic decline in the last three to four years, post-COVID-19 developments, all [of these factors] have resulted in this opinion poll. There are also many welfare programmes the Congress has identified with.”

Yogendra Yadav, a renowned psephologist and a political scientist, concurred. He told The Wire, “As you go from the rich to the poor, Congress’s vote increases. It’s a pyramid. In the case of BJP, the pyramid is upside down. As you go to the poorer sections of the society, BJP’s votes shrink.”

Saying that caste is not the only thing to discuss during elections, he said, “With each caste community, rich and poor make a difference. Within the Lingayats, the poorer Lingayats tend to vote a little more for the Congress. Within the ‘upper’ castes, the same story. On the other hand, within Dalits and Muslims, the richer Dalits and Muslims tend to vote a more for the BJP.”

He said the rich and the poor issue is driving this election. “That’s why the Congress is very carefully targeting poor and the very poor,” he added.

During the interview, Dr. Vasu pointed out that coastal Karnataka, which includes Udupi, the epicentre of the hijab controversy, is a BJP stronghold.

On April 28, Friday, Eedina, in its press release, elaborated, “In terms of regions, the survey shows that the Congress may sweep the northern regions of Hyderabad Karnataka and Mumbai Karnataka, while the BJP may hold its lead in coastal and central Karnataka. In the south, the BJP may improve its vote share, but not win many seats. The JD(S) is also likely to lose seats in South Karnataka to the Congress.”

The survey was conducted from March 3 to April 21 in 204 constituencies across Karnataka. A total of 41,169 persons were randomly selected from the electoral rolls and were interviewed at their residence by trained citizen journalists of the Eedina network, said the press release.

Also read: Karnataka: In Quest for Majority, Congress and BJP Look To Weaken Each Other in Their Strongholds

Electoral rolls

Just a few days ahead of the assembly polls in Karnataka, reports of voter data theft and manipulation by private companies have emerged. The News Minute reported on April 26 that a private company openly advertised on its website that “it has sensitive information including mobile numbers and WhatsApp numbers of voters. The company provides login access to potential clients who can then enter the site and buy information and services of their choice for as little as Rs 25,000.”

Sources in the Election Commission of India (ECI) told the news outlet that the “format of the data on sale is similar to the data stored on ERONET, a government portal with ECI data on voters that only election officials can access”.

The owners of the company are yet to be traced, the report added.

The Election Commission of India officials are investigating whether the company could have been used to bribe voters by depositing money into their accounts using UPI, the report said.

In November last year, another news investigation had revealed that the Bengaluru civic body had given permission to a private NGO to collect voters’ data. Following the TNM report, Congress, the main opposition party in the state, had demanded chief minister Basavaraj Bommai’s resignation.

Another report shows how electoral lists are being manipulated in Karnataka. TNM reported on April 25 that the names of more than 7,000 voters are set to be deleted from the electoral roll of Shivajinagar constituency in Bengaluru.

The issue started in October 2022 when a group of BJP “sympathisers”, per TNM, claimed there were 26,000 fake voters in the area, and that many had moved out of the area. The list mainly consisted of Muslim names as Shivajinagar is a Muslim-dominated area.

Following the complaint, ECI issued notices to 9,159 people and asked them to submit their residency proof. “While 22 residents have been granted a reprieve after submitting proof of their continued address, the fate of the remaining voters hangs in the balance, leading to accusations of voter harassment and a violation of the fundamental right to vote,” the report said.

The TNM investigation also found that hundreds of voters, particularly Muslims and Dalits, in the Shivajinagar constituency were in danger of having their names removed from the electoral roll.

How the Civil Servant Can Really Guard Taxpayers’ Money

PM Modi recently asked civil servants to consider before a decision as to whether the ruling party is using the taxpayer’s money in the nation’s interest or for its own interest. This advice is, indeed, critical to our development process.

The Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, raised some very important issues while addressing civil servants recently.

Addressing them on the occasion of Civil Services Day, he advised them to consider – before taking any decision – whether the ruling party is using the taxpayer’s money in the nation’s interest or for its own interest. To check, specifically, whether the ruling party is using taxpayer money to advertise itself or to spread public awareness, and whether it is appointing its own workers to institutions or adopting transparency in appointments. He also advised them to evaluate whether political parties are changing policies to create new avenues for black money.

He asked young bureaucrats to get things done rather than letting things happen.

The prime minister’s address raises some very important issues of governance. The civil service is governed by important norms of conduct. Its members are expected to be fair, just and empathetic to people’s issues. They must be upright and honest, and have excellent knowledge of the issues of governance. When interacting with people, they should especially look at the underprivileged and deprived sections of the population and suggest or implement policies which look after their needs .

The need for young civil servants to get things done rather than letting them linger is very important. It is critical to our entire development process. Similarly, the need for transparency in appointments is important in our democracy. This idea must pervade all appointments whether by the Centre or by states. We need to work on this. However, for correcting certain aberrations in our system of governance, institutional reforms are required.

Consider the question of freebies. In the parliamentary system of governance, prior to elections, political parties issue their manifestos. These often contain a lot of freebies, with each party trying to outdo the other. While these are sought to be justified on grounds of empowering the people, there is a strong feeling that they are aimed at garnering maximum votes disregarding the financial health of the state. Free financial benefits to individuals from taxpayers’ money, must have very objective criteria. In the absence of such criteria, there is profligacy, financial mismanagement – and the economic ruin of the state.

The truth is that in recent years, all political parties have favoured giving financial benefits to individuals on a large scale. In successive elections, political parties have become more profligate at the expense of the taxpayer. Considering that this malady is widespread, an institutional solution is required. The Finance Commission could be charged with this responsibility. It could provide a ceiling on such transfers to individuals. Any state exceeding it should lose its share from the financial devolution from the Union government. Some similar disincentive needs to be devised for Union government-sponsored freebies. Also, it is only appropriate that when individual benefits are to be given, civil servants put forth their views clearly and suggest an alternative policy approach. This may result in some changes and saving of taxpayers’ money in some cases.

An important development in recent times is the huge amount of money spent on advertising. Such advertisements invariably have photos of political dignitaries and praise for work done by their government. The Union government and most states do this. While there is no data which can be cited, my experience is that the money spent on such advertisements has multiplied manifold. A substantial sum of money goes into telling the people how well the leader and his government is doing instead of informing them about new schemes and how they can avail themselves of the benefits of these schemes. This is an enormous waste of taxpayers’ money.

To be sure, this is a very sensitive issue and I doubt that either the Union government or any state will agree to curtail this expenditure as they are all getting a lot of free publicity at the taxpayer’s expense. However, the central government must take the lead in this. There is a clear need to separate politics from administrative schemes. The CAG can be requested to issue clear financial norms for this.

An important question raised during the prime minister’s address was the generation of black money. This is linked closely to corruption and to policies which may incentivise a black money economy. Often, vested interests with political connections are involved in the award of large contracts. Civil servants have a tough job. In large infrastructure contracts or award of concessions for coal blocks or oil fields or other major infrastructure projects or in several areas relating to states, there is need for complete transparency so that corruption is minimised and black money generation curbed.

In some areas of international trade and investment which have problems of over-invoicing or under-invoicing, or foreign investments from non-transparent jurisdictions, there is need for greater vigilance. Civil servants can work on policies to minimise corrupt practices by constant systemic reforms. This is a very difficult area as powerful interests may be involved. It will be appropriate to set up a group of officers to constantly work on it and suggest changes and employ technology that will minimise corruption. Civil servants have a crucial role in this entire field.

B.K. Chaturvedi is a former Cabinet Secretary and member, Planning Commission of India.

This piece was first published on The India Cable – a premium newsletter from The Wire & Galileo Ideas – and has been republished here. To subscribe to The India Cable, click here.

Karnataka MLA’s Texts With Details of Voters’ ID Cards Deepens Electoral Data Concerns

Malleswaram MLA, C.N. Ashwath Narayan – also the BJP candidate for the constituency in the upcoming polls – has sent messages on WhatsApp to voters. These messages have details of their individual voter’s ID cards.

New Delhi: The sitting MLA of Karnataka’s Malleswaram assembly seat, C.N. Ashwath Narayan – also the Bharatiya Janata Party candidate for the constituency in the upcoming polls – has sent messages on WhatsApp to voters. While that is innocuous enough, the fact that these message include excerpts from electors’ individual voter identity cards has led to outrage. 

As per a report in the Deccan Herald, “A few residents (of the constituency) called it illegal and questioned how the MLA, who is also a cabinet minister (in the current Basavaraj Bommai government), could have access to voters’ mobile numbers.”

Narayan is Minister of Skill Development, Entrepreneurship and Livelihood in Karnataka.

The report pointed out, “While candidates contesting elections have access to the electoral rolls in image format, the Election Commission does not share mobile numbers with any candidates, nor are the numbers linked to the voter ID.”

The message sent to voters from the BJP MLA’s office included their names, voter ID card number, relatives’ names and the booth address. Naturally, the MLA also had access to voters’ corresponding mobile numbers. The newspaper report said one of the voters has lodged a formal complaint with the returning officer of the constituency on the matter. 

The controversy also found its way to Twitter, with citizens’ group members alleging that it amounted to the violation of one’s privacy.

Though the MLA’s office said the messages had gone only to those who had shared their mobile numbers with them earlier, activists have called such a claim untrue. “Suspecting illegal access to the data,” Vinay Kumar, a member of Citizens for Sankey Collective, was quoted saying, “candidates are only given access to electoral rolls in image format and not in text format.”

“These developments took place just after the controversy over the theft of electoral data involving NGO Chilume had rocked the state,” said the newspaper. 

In November 2022, The News Minute and Pratidhvani, in a sensational joint investigation, had shown that Chilume (a private entity) had collected personal data from lakhs of voters in Bengaluru by posing as Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike officials.

In another exclusive report by TNM last week, yet another Bengaluru-based private firm was shown to have been found selling voter data in bulk to candidates contesting the state assembly polls. The report said information about the latest firm’s illegal action came to light after an independent candidate alerted the Election Commission of India on being approached by a seller of data. 

Only ECI officials have access to such sensitive data. The TNM report published last April 26 said, “According to sources in the Election Commission, what is of concern is that the format of the data on sale is similar to the data stored on ERONET, a government portal with ECI data on voters that only election officials can access.” 

It said the Commission officials “are investigating whether the company could have been used to bribe voters by depositing money into their accounts using UPI (Unified Payments Interface).”

US-Bound Tanker, With 24 Indian Crew on Board, Seized by Iran Near Oman

The ship’s operator, a Turkish firm called Advantage Tankers, has said that the crew members taken under such circumstances are in ‘no danger’.

New Delhi: A US-bound oil tanker, which had 24 Indian crew on board, was seized by the Iranian Navy off the coast of Oman, AFP reported.

The ship’s operator, a Turkish firm called Advantage Tankers, told the news agency that the crew members taken under such circumstances are in “no danger”.

“Similar experiences show that crew members of vessels taken under such circumstances are in no danger,” it said, adding that the company was “in close touch with all the appropriate authorities to obtain the release of the crew and vessel”.

The vessel was being taken to a port by Iran’s Navy because of an “international dispute”, the operator told AFP in a statement.

The report said that the tanker had crashed into one of the vessels of the Iranian Navy, leaving two of their crew members missing and injuring several others.

The US Navy has demanded the ship’s immediate release, slamming Iran’s “continued harassment” in Gulf waters.

“Iran’s actions are contrary to international law and disruptive to regional security and stability,” US Navy’s Mideast-based 5th Fleet said in a statement. “Iran should immediately release the oil tanker.”

It identified the vessel as the Advantage Sweet. It was headed for Houston, Texas.

According to the Associated Press, the 5th Fleet said the Iranian seizure was at least the fifth commercial vessel taken by Tehran in the last two years.

The ship’s listed owner appeared to be a Chinese company, AP reported.

The seizure comes after the US, the UK and the European Union toughened sanctions against Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps on April 24, citing alleged human rights violations by Tehran.

Tensions have escalated since 2018 when then-US President Donald Trump withdrew the US from a multinational accord that froze Iran’s nuclear programme, and reimposed crippling sanctions on its economy.

In Photos: IAF Rescues 121 Stranded People at Night From Airstrip North of Khartoum

‘The airstrip in question had a degraded surface, with no navigational approach aids or fuel, and most critically or landing lights.’

New Delhi: Photos from the Indian Air Force show how a C-130J aircraft of the Indian Air Force rescued 121 people from a small airstrip at Wadi Sayyidna, which is about 40 km north of Khartoum in strife torn Sudan.

The passengers included a pregnant woman along with people who the IAF says had no means to reach Port Sudan, from where most Indians are being taken to Jeddah city in Saudi Arabia.

As many as 1,360 Indians have returned to India on four flights from Jeddah. Fighting broke out in Sudan earlier in April, and as two rival generals are fighting for control, over 3,000 Indians have been caught in the violence.

This convoy was led by the Indian Defence Attaché. “The airstrip in question had a degraded surface, with no navigational approach aids or fuel, and most critically or landing lights (that are required to guide an aircraft landing at night),” the IAF has said, adding that the operation took place in the dark of the night, with the help of electro-optical and infra red sensors to ensure no obstruction on the runway.

Upon landing, the aircraft engines were reportedly kept running while eight IAF Garud Commandos secured the passengers and their luggage into the aircraft. The runway was unlit the whole time, the IAF says.

All photos below were released by the IAF.