A Bharat Ratna for the Blotted Legacy of Narasimha Rao

Three events depict a politician that went to any length to retain power, threw the constitutional principles to wind and took ideological scruples for a ride.

In the last leg of its second five-year tenure, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is showering Bharat Ratnas at an unprecedented pace. In a span of few weeks, five people have been awarded the Bharat Ratna, a record number in any given year since the inception of this highest civilian honour in 1954.

P.V. Narasimha Rao, who holds the distinction of the first non-Gandhi-family Congress Prime Minister to have completed a full five-year term in office (1991-1996), joins this coveted list. While some in the mainstream media have lauded this event, it behooves us to look at three important events in Rao’s long political career that smack of egregious misconduct and willful malfeasance. The scale of these events would ideally lead to political demise and relegation to ignominy in the annals of history but in this case have proven to be non-issues in conferment of the tallest laurel in the country.

Home minister during 1984 Delhi riots

The first event dates back to 1984, precisely the 6 dreaded, dark days between October 31-November 5, when Sikhs were slaughtered in the streets of New Delhi (and other places across the country) by frenzied mobs in retaliation to the assassination of then prime minister Indira Gandhi. The home minister of India and de facto man-in-charge of the country at the time was none other than Rao. According to the government’s own estimates, upwards of 3350 people were killed in New Delhi alone while the actual tally is thought to be manifold higher.

The Congress government of the day virtually washed its hands off of the basic responsibility of protecting the citizens. Police stood by as mute spectators as unspeakable horrors were committed against hapless Sikhs in an act of systematic genocide, a tool that has since been used by rightwing mobs with impunity against other minorities in similar subsequent massacres.

How could a learned, self-proclaimed intellectual like Rao let such a pogrom play out under his watch as the home minister?

A tongue that eloquently spoke 17 languages chose to remain tongue-tied while fellow citizens were mercilessly massacred. Some of his ardent supporters would like us to believe that this suave gentleman was a mere bystander at the time but another non-Gandhi family Congress prime minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, a Sikh himself, that completed not one but two terms as prime minister of India has publicly stated that Rao paid no heed to repeated requests to bring in the Army to stem the violence that will forever remain a blot in independent India’s history.

Prime minister during 1992 Babri Masjid demolition

The second event pertaining to his legacy is the December 6, 1992 destruction of Babri Masjid in Ayodhya. By then, Rao was firmly in the saddle as the indisputable prime minister of India. It is now a well-recognised fact that he did nothing to halt the juggernaut of L.K. Advani’s vitriolic Rath Yatra that not only flared up communal tensions in several cities across the country but culminated in the physical razing to the ground of a 500-year old mosque, the ramifications of which are still felt to this day and perhaps for many years ahead.

Contemporaries such as Lalu Yadav threw Advani behind the bars for flagrantly riling up communal tensions but Union government under Rao surreptitiously allowed him to stoke tensions. Memoirs written by multiple people who were either close to Rao at that time or were part of his cabinet have proven beyond doubt that he intentionally chose the path of inaction and indifference in the light of historic communal polarization.

As Asaduddin Owaisi pointed out in his Lok Sabha speech this past week, PM Rao was busy and inaccessible in a puja while Babri Masjid was being demolished by saffron goons. No wonder he was labeled as the “first BJP prime minister of India” by his party colleague Mani Sankar Aiyar.

The singular event of Babri Masjid demolition catapulted the BJP from a fringe party to eventually becoming the numero-uno party that it is today under the stewardship of Narendra Modi who owes it to those 1992 events for his eventual rise. In fact, he doubled up as both Advani and Rao in a unitary role when it came to his turn in 2002 as both the vitriol-spewing pracharak and the Nero-eque administrator. One has to certainly appreciate the humility of Modi in paying back his respects in kind to Advani and Rao to whom he owes so much!

With his stewardship of 1992 events, Rao holds the rare distinction of being at the helm during both of the heinous acts of violence in the Republic of India’s history that make us all hang our heads in shame even to this day.

Also read: For ‘Bharat Ratna’ Chaudhary Charan Singh, Politics Meant the Art of the Possible

‘Corruption got institutionalised’ during Rao’s regime 

The third event that also holds historical significance is of a different shade but also blot-worthy in its own regard. In July 1993, Rao’s minority government barely scraped through a no-confidence motion by allegedly bribing MPs from Jharkand Mukthi Morcha (JMM) and Janata Dal (Ajit) leading to the narrowest margin in history of Indian Parliament of 14 votes. As Fali Nariman put it, “it was in this year (1993) that corruption got institutionalised in India”. The no-confidence motion itself was tabled alleging rampant corruption in Rao’s government and he solved it by corrupting politics even more. As CPI (M)’s Prakash Karat put it then, “The problem created by the suitcase has been solved by the suitcase.” Rao was eventually found guilty in the bribery case prosecuted by the CBI and became the first former Prime Minister of India to be sentenced to 3-year imprisonment in a corruption case. He obtained reprieve from the Supreme Court eventually and escaped further infamy.

In essence, these three events depict a politician that went to any length to retain power, threw the constitutional principles to wind and took ideological scruples for a ride. No wonder that he is awarded the Bharat Ratna by the present dispensation that out-did him in all those respects and some more!

G. Naveen is a physician by profession and rationalist by passion. His articles are devoted towards voicing the concerns of downtrodden and marginalised communities.

Babri Demolition Trial: Murli Manohar Joshi Deposes, Pleads Innocence

The senior BJP leader accused the then Congress government of falsely implicating him and called the CBI’s witnesses ‘liars’.

Lucknow: Deposing in the Babri Masjid demolition case, veteran BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi on Thursday asserted before a special CBI court that he was innocent and implicated in the case by the then Congress government at the Centre.

The 86-year-old leader made his statement under Section 313 of the Criminal Procedure Code through a video conference to the court of special judge S.K. Yadav, who is holding the trial in the case.

Former deputy prime minister L.K. Advani, 92, is also slated to depose before the Lucknow court through video links from New Delhi on Friday.

In his deposition to the court, Joshi accused the then Central government of falsely implicating him out of political vendetta.

He also refuted the prosecution evidence saying they all were “false and inspired by political reasons”.

The entire investigation was conducted under political influence and he was charged on the basis of false and fabricated evidence, Joshi told the court.

At this, the judge asked him why then the prosecution witnesses have deposed against him and Joshi retorted that all the witnesses are liars. They have deposed due to political reasons and under the influence of police, he claimed.

During the court proceeding, the court posed as many as 1,050 questions to Joshi and he replied to each one of them.

As the judge sought Joshi’s comment over various pieces of evidence led by the CBI on the basis of different video clippings and newspaper cuttings, the former Union human resource development minister said the entire evidence is “false and fabricated”.

During the proceeding, judge Yadav apprised Joshi of the statement of a CBI witness, in which he had averred that Kalyan Singh was sworn in as Uttar Pradesh chief minister on June 25, 1991, and went to the Ram Janmabhoomi site in Ayodhya the next day along with his cabinet colleagues.

Also read: The Political Undertones of Choosing August 5 for Ayodhya Ram Temple ‘Bhoomi Pujan’

The judge told Joshi that, according to the CBI witness, Kalyan Singh had pledged for building the temple at the very place, chanting Ram lalla hum aayenge, mandir yahi banayenge (Lord Ram, we will come and make the temple here itself).

The judge then asked Joshi to explain the statement of the CBI witness.

Joshi replied that it was true that Kalyan Singh had gone to Ayodhya but, he said, the rest of the averment of the prosecution witness was false.

The judge also showed Joshi a photograph taken on June 26, 1991, at the Ram Janmabhoomi premises, in which he is seen standing with the then Uttar Pradesh chief minister Kalyan Singh and asked the BJP leader to explain it.

Joshi dubbed the photograph as fake, pointing out that there was no negative of the photograph on the CBI records.

The photograph was handed over by one Swapna Das Gupta to the CBI during the investigation.

The judge also referred to many newspaper reports on alleged statements of Advani and Shiv Sena’s late chief Bala Saheb Thackeray on the Ram Janmabhoomi issue and sought Joshi’s response to them.

Joshi asserted that the relevant news items were false and were made part of the investigation by the CBI due to political malice and ideological differences.

Joshi told the court that he would present evidence in his defence at the appropriate stage of the trial.

After Joshi completed his deposition to the court, judge Yadav asked his office to send a copy of his statement to the CBI in New Delhi.

The CBI will then get Joshi’s statement signed by him in New Delhi and send it back to the court in Lucknow.

The court recorded Joshi’s statement in the presence of his counsel Vimal Kumar Srivastava, K.K. Mishra and Abhishek Ranjan.

The counsel for prosecution agency CBI, Lalit Singh, R.K. Yadav and P. Chakravarti too were present in the court during its proceeding.

The court is presently at the stage of recording the evidence of various accused, totalling 32, in the Babri mosque demolition trial after examination of the prosecution witnesses.

A photograph of the Babri Masjid from the early 1900s. Copyright: The British Library Board

At this stage of the trial, an accused gets the opportunity to refute the prosecution evidence against him.

The mosque in Ayodhya was demolished on December 6, 1992, by ‘kar sevaks‘ who claimed that an ancient Ram temple existed at the same site.

Advani and Joshi were among the BJP leaders, spearheading the Ram Janmabhoomi temple movement at that time.

The court is conducting a day-to-day hearing in the case to complete its trial by August 31 as directed by the Supreme Court.

BJP leader and former Madhya Pradesh chief minister Uma Bharti had appeared in person earlier this month before the court to make her deposition in the case.

In her testimony, she too had accused the then Congress government at the Centre of implicating her in the case due to political vendetta.

Another senior BJP leader and former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Kalyan Singh too in his deposition to the court on July 13 had accused the then Congress government at the Centre of levelling “false and baseless allegations” against him in the Babri mosque demolition case.

Singh, during whose tenure as UP CM the mosque in Ayodhya was demolished, had said that he was falsely implicated in the case.

Babri Demolition Case: Advani to Depose on July 24; Murli Manohar Joshi on July 23

The court is recording the statements of the 32 accused under Section 313 of Criminal Procedure Code to enable them to plead their innocence if they so want.

Lucknow: A special CBI court on Monday set July 24 as the date for recording the statement of former deputy prime minister L.K. Advani in the 1992 Babri mosque demolition case.

The 92-year-old BJP leader’s statement under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure will be recorded through video conferencing.

In his order, Special Judge S.K. Yadav also fixed July 23 for recording the statement of BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi through video conferencing.

The court is recording the statements of the 32 accused under Section 313 of Criminal Procedure Code to enable them to plead their innocence if they so want.

The court, which is conducting day-to-day hearings to complete the trial by August 31, as directed by the Supreme Court, set July 22 for former Shiv Sena MP Satish Pradhan to depose before it through a video link.

Also read: The Political Undertones of Choosing August 5 for Ayodhya Ram Temple ‘Bhoomi Pujan’

On Monday, it recorded the statement of accused Sudhir Kakar who appeared in person, though earlier he wanted to depose through a video link.

Like the other accused, Kakar claimed that he was innocent and was falsely implicated by the then Congress-led central government for political reasons.

The court will record the statement of accused Ram Chandra Khatri on Tuesday.

BJP leader Uma Bharti had earlier this month appeared in person before the court.

She had also accused the then Congress-led central government of framing her due to political vendetta.

The mosque in Ayodhya was demolished on December 6, 1992, by ‘kar sevaks’ who claimed that an ancient Ram temple had stood on the same site. Advani and Joshi were leading the Ram temple movement at that time.

Babri Demolition Case: Advani, Joshi, Bharti to Appear in Person When Called, Says Court

The court has been conducting day to day proceedings in order to conclude the trial by August 31, as directed by the Supreme Court.

Lucknow: A special court hearing regarding the Babri Masjid demolition case on Monday put BJP veterans L.K. Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi and Uma Bharti on notice to appear in person when asked to record their statements.

The court is recording the statements of the 32 accused under section 313 of the CRPC, an opportunity for them to respond after the Central Bureau of Investigation completed the examination of its witnesses.

The three leaders were earlier exempted from personal appearance in court till further orders.

Special judge Surendra Kumar Yadav said that while granting this exemption it was clarified that they would have to appear in person “as and when their presence was required”.

He said the three accused are directed that they will ensure their presence in the court on the date to be fixed by the court. No date was immediately fixed.

The purpose of Monday’s order was to alert the three that they have to appear soon before the court, CBI counsel Lalit Singh later said.

Also read: Ayodhya’s Class of 1992: The Key Conspirators

The court has so far recorded the statements of four of the 32 accused under section 313. On Monday, Ramji Gupta’s statement was recorded.

The accused include former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Kalyan Singh, former deputy prime minister L.K. Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi, Uma Bharti, Vinay Katiyar, Sadhvi Rithambara, Sakshi Maharaj, Champat Rai and Ram Vilas Vedanti.

The court has been conducting day to day proceedings in order to conclude the trial by August 31, as directed by the Supreme Court.

L.K. Advani, M.M. Joshi and Uma Bharti had appeared before the special court on May 26, 2017.

The three had then sought bail from the court and also moved an application seeking exemption from personal appearance during the proceedings. This was allowed by the court till further orders.

Under section 313 of the CRPC, the accused get the chance to make their statements after the prosecution has completed the examination of their witnesses.

The Babri Masjid was demolished in December 1992 by “kar sevaks” who claimed that the mosque in Ayodhya was built on the site of an ancient Ram temple.

SC to Conclude Hearing of Ayodhya Case on October 17

The judgement in the matter is to be pronounced by November 17 as the CJI will retire on that date.

New Delhi The Supreme Court Friday said it would wrap up the hearing in the politically sensitive Ram Janambhoomi-Babri Masjid land dispute at Ayodhya by October 17.

A five-judge Constitution bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, on the conclusion of 37th day of the hearing, fixed the schedule for the final leg of the lengthy arguments.

The bench said the Muslim sides to the dispute would complete the arguments on October 14 and thereafter, two days would be granted to the Hindu parties to sum up their rejoinders by October 16, and October 17 would be the last day for wrapping up the hearing.

Also read: Ayodhya Title Dispute in the Supreme Court: All You Need to Know

The bench, also comprising justices S.A. Bobde, D.Y. Chandrachud, Ashok Bhushan and S.A. Nazeer, had earlier fixed the deadline of October 18 to conclude the hearing.

The judgement in the matter is to be pronounced by November 17 as the CJI will retire on that date.

Babri Demolition Case: Special CBI Court Summons Former UP CM Kalyan Singh

After serving a full five-year term as governor, the 87-year-old leader, who was the CM when the Babri Masjid was demolished in 1992, rejoined the BJP on September 9.

Lucknow: A special CBI court has issued summons to former Uttar Pradesh chief minister and BJP leader Kalyan Singh, directing him to appear on September 27 in connection with the Babri Masjid demolition case.

The court is conducting the trial of accused persons, including BJP leaders L.K. Advani, M.M. Joshi, Uma Bharti and others for allegedly conspiring to demolish the mosque at the disputed Ram Janmbhoomi-Babri Masjid site in Ayodhya.

Taking note of the information given by the members of the Bar association that Singh’s term as Rajasthan governor expired in the first week of this month, special judge S.K. Yadav on Saturday passed the order on a pending application that the CBI had moved on September 9.

After serving a full five-year term as governor, the 87-year-old leader, who was the Uttar Pradesh chief minister when the Babri Masjid was demolished in 1992, rejoined the BJP on September 9.

Also read: Babri Demolition Case: As Kalyan Singh Rejoins BJP, CBI Moves Court to Summon Him

The court had taken up the application and asked the CBI to produce papers that the term of Singh as the governor has expired. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) had then sought time to produce the papers, saying it did not receive any documents from its headquarters.

On the information given by the members of the bar association, the court issued the summons to Singh for appearing before it on Friday.

Moving the application, the CBI pleaded that Singh was chargesheeted in 1993. It further pleaded that the Supreme Court, in April 2017, had said that Singh could not be brought in as an accused to face trial due to the constitutional immunity granted to governors under Article 361 of the Constitution.

The top court had, however, allowed the CBI to move for summoning of Singh as an accused as soon as he ceased to be the governor. All the accused are on bail in the case, the trial of which is being conducted on a day-to-day basis, on the directions of the apex court.