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Today's authoritarian governance is far more ominous for democracy: Author Gyan Prakash
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Saket Suman | 26 Nov, 2018
That the nation is embodied in the Prime Minister is the telling
similarity between the Emergency of 1975-77 under Indira Gandhi and the
contemporary state of affairs in India under Narendra Modi; but unlike
the former, Modi's "authoritarian governance" is not based on "the
assumption of emergency powers by the executive", says Gyan Prakash, a
professor of history at Princeton University and author of several
highly acclaimed books, including "Mumbai Fables", which was adapted for
the film "Bombay Velvet", and the just-released "Emergency Chronicles:
Indira Gandhi and Democracy's Turning Point".
In his latest book,
that has just hit the stands with glowing endorsements by the likes of
Sunil Khilnani and Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Prakash, who was a member of the
influential Subaltern Studies Collective until its dissolution in 2006,
is quite vocal when it comes to drawing a comparison between the regimes
of Indira Gandhi and Narendra Modi. He contends in the book that
"Hindutva is fundamentally anti-democratic", adding that "Hindutva
ideologues target dissent as anti-national".
Asked what made him
reach this conclusion and what was its likely impact on Indian
democracy, Prakash said that the two situations are not exactly the same
but both the similarities and differences are revealing.
Modi's authoritarian governance, Prakash said, is by a combination of two factors.
"First,
the BJP government uses and abuses the centralising powers of the state
to weaken institutions and stifle dissent by terming it anti-national.
Second, unlike Indira Gandhi's Emergency, which never enjoyed popular
support, Narendra Modi's government is able to deploy Hindutva forces on
the ground to intimidate the opposition. In addition, it enjoys support
from the corporate media, particularly electronic media," Prakash told
IANS in an email from New Jersey, recalling that there was no private
electronic media during the Emergency, and the government-controlled
media never enjoyed the reach and influence that the media does today.
"For these reasons, authoritarian power is far more ominous for democracy today," he maintained.
He
said that the gatekeepers of democracy are its institutions --
political parties, the rule of law, an independent press, and avenues to
express dissent.
"You cannot realise democracy's substantive
promise of equality without its institutions. Centralisation of power in
one person or one office damages the health of these institutions.
There were some people in India who welcomed the BJP victory in 2014
even if they didn't agree with its Hindutva ideology. They thought that
because the BJP was a proper political party with seasoned national and
regional leaders, and not beholden to one family like the Congress, it
would respect and strengthen democratic institutions. But the stunning
depletion of its leadership to one oversized personality has meant that
the space for the expression of multiple and divergent views in the
party has contracted almost overnight. So has the possibility of the BJP
playing its role, as a political party, as a gatekeeper of democracy,"
he said.
In the book, published by Penguin Random House India,
Prakash argues that the surge of Hindu nationalism has catapulted
Narendra Modi into the kind of position that Indira occupied only with
Emergency. Asked if he was suggesting that there is an undeclared
emergency kind of a scenario in contemporary India, he said the term
conjures up a false and misleading similarity.
"The Emergency was
a very specific state action, a lawful suspension of the law. But
Indira's draconian laws and abuse of authority could never summon foot
soldiers on the street to back her power. The very fact that she had to
formally silence the press, meddle with the judiciary, and place over a
hundred thousand people in prison were signs that her power lacked the
force of popular support. The deployment of coercion to implement the
20-point programme, sterilisation drives, slum clearance campaigns, and
efforts to break through the controlled economy, signified that all was
not well with her regime at the ground level. This is why she resorted
to the Emergency to salvage her regime and its policy agenda," Prakash
explained.
He said the situation today is very different.
"Today
we witness an unprecedented combination of state power and populist
mobilisation in the name of development and the nation. Yes, there is a
growing centralisation of power, and attacks on institutions, abuse of
authority, etc., but what makes the current context radically different
is that moves at the top are joined by mobilisation from below. This
coordination between state and society -- deliberate or not -- threatens
democracy in a fundamental way, one that is not captured by the term
'undeclared Emergency'," Prakash maintained.
He said the Congress
has never come to terms with the legacy of 1975-77, and needs to
address it squarely, not with half apologies and part justifications.
"But
more important than apologies and acknowledgments is to recognise the
Indian political system's deeper and continuing failure to realise the
promise of democracy," he said, pointing to several chapters in
"Emergency Chronicles" that are devoted to describing how popular
discontent with the shortcomings in this regard found expression in the
JP movement.
"This is necessary to demolish the comfortable myth
that permits us to believe that nothing is fundamentally amiss in
India's experience with democracy, and that all the problems began and
ended with Indira," he said.
Priced at Rs 699, the 439-page book is available both online and at bookstores.
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