The following piece
in the HT 07-10-08 reflects what people like me are going through
today... hence I present it here for you verbatim... - it
is about the current state of affairs of the nation and how it has
impacted people like me..
The
last line underscores the mindset of people like me, who feel helpless
about the law and order situation around me, are seeking... and
believe me, we are not insane, when we demand a gun for ours and our
family protection.... on a side note, I see a parallel between
India today and the US of the past, which might have led the gun laws
to be set up there 'cos I think the US has probably gone through
similar times before it reached today's state. But
that does not help me today 'cos my safety is at stake and I need
protection from what the state has failed to control... increasing
violence and reducing value of the human life.... ----------- Searching high and low for the law - Gautam
Chikermane, (HT)
There
are two forces of physics acting upon a changing India today. On the
economic front, as India expands into global terrains, a centripetal
force is gathering momentum, best represented by the country's 8 per
cent growth rate. This force, however, is being pulled back, through
an equally strong centrifugal force that looks inward, is fragmented
and savage in its execution. Caught in between are the rest of us. If
economic development and mass prosperity have to be delivered, the
politics of violence that the centrifugal force represents needs to
die. And there lies a political opportunity for Elections 2009.
The most
high-profile wart of this centrifugal force is the Nano’s
undignified exit from Singur. Last week Ratan Tata had
said that Mamata Banerjee had pulled “the trigger on his head”,
forcing him to move out of West Bengal to Gujarat, the trigger being
his employees’ safety.
Earlier,
L.K. Chaudhury, CEO of the Italian company Graziano Trasmissioni, was
beaten to death by workers in Greater Noida, some 20 minutes from the
national capital, with the Labour Minister subtly trying to build
political capital from the crime by saying, “This should
serve as a warning for managements.” (He later backtracked, but the
damage was done.) North Indians are being targeted in Mumbai
by Raj Thackeray and his Maharashtra Navnirman Sena as an investment
into future elections to garner jingoistic support. Churches are being
burnt in Orissa and nuns raped under the blind eyes of the police
while the state’s highly articulate Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik
says he’s doing his job. A young journalist dies a mysterious
death in Delhi and its Chief Minister Shiela Dikshit says women should
not be “adventurous” and that companies, not the police, should
take responsibility for their safety. The message from our
politicians who have built walls of protection with taxpayers’ money
around themselves and their families: India is,and will continue to
be, run by thugs, so please watch out for yourselves.
As the rest of us take events like these
in stride and get desensitised by the never-ending images on TV,
permanent headlines in newspapers and infinite opinions on blogs,
never has the need for law and order as the first and foremost
electoral expectation of voters been so high, so acute. Law and order
is something we are supposed to take for granted. It is only riding
this safety infrastructure that we can do anything else — pursue
jobs, buy groceries, watch films.
On the other hand, we are gradually beginning to accept
lawlessness,particularly by the rich, the powerful and the organised
mobs they manage to cobble, as one more dinner-table discussion —
‘Pass the death toll, please.’ As this anarchy gets political
support, we are gradually being pushed into a corner, where an
unvoiced frustration with governance is systematically eating into
our democratic and civilised innards. With weapons in the
hands of a small clutch of ineligible political aspirants, the man on
the street has never been in as much physical danger as
today.
Lawmakers are breaking the
law as if it’s their birth right. And when stopped — as Virendra
Kumar Khatik was, as he tried to barricade the arms of the law from an
anti-encroachment drive, only to face collateral damage — action is
taken, not against the honourable Member of Parliament for attempting
to come in the way of the law, but against the junior policemen who
tried to implement it. They’ve been charged with an attempt to
murder and have been suspended from duty. Shed a tear for
them.
Those whom voters have
entrusted with democratic power and white car privileges — and with
them the responsibility to provide law and order — are all but
numbed into submission under this new force gathering strength, issue
by issue, in state after state. Leadership at the highest levels is
reeling under the weight of a moral compulsion to let people, who any
right-minded person would call murderers, rapists, repeat offenders,
and bad characters, have a free run on the rest of us, feed on our
livelihoods, our fears. And our freedoms. (“Today, terrorists are
being worshipped,” said Justice J.N. Patel referring to Raj
Thackeray, who, in turn, instead of feeling the fear of the law as any
law-abiding citizen should, is brazenly asking the court to “define
a terrorist”.)
The
CPI(M)’s West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee
virtually offered a free hand to Mamata Banerjee and her mob to stop
workers seeking nothing more than an honest day’s job from working.
The Congress’s Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh is
standing still, watching non-Maharashtrian citizens of India being
beaten and threatened, their businesses, taxis and trade being
destroyed. The Biju Janata Dal’s Orissa Chief Minister Naveen
Patnaik has nothing more than lofty words to offer Christians being
mauled in his state.
We, the
silent majority, have allowed this small band of hoodlums to decide
whether we have the right to work, to religion, to celebration, to
life, to love. Too busy to look beyond the prosperity that the
economic centripetal force has brought, in the form of our
2-BHKs and iPhones, we are allowing a new political culture to invade
our country.
It’s
almost as if we are being conquered all over again, this time by some
of the smartest minds this country has produced, minds — like the
smart lawyers, accountants and financial engineers who recently ran
the global financial system aground — that are finding and punching
holes in the law to usurp power.
A leveraged buyout is underway, where a small bunch of
private interest groups cobble together to create visible damage for
maximum impact. We are being forced into believing that violence is
the currency of political or social intercourse in a modern,
trillion-dollar economy. That if we want something bad
enough, we can just go out and collect thugs. This faith needs to be
destroyed. These mobs and their political masters need to be dragged
under the purview of the law, before this belief system becomes a mass
religion. For any responsible party, this presents a so-far ignored
political opportunity. In the last elections, with a focus on economic
growth, our attention moved from 'roti-kapda-makaan' to
'bijli-sadak-pani'.
It’s
time now to go back to basics and devise a new slogan around
‘suraksha-kanoon-dand’ (safety-law-punishment) — and implement
it ruthlessly. Political profits are guaranteed. Until that happens,
can anyone tell me where I can buy a gun? (C) HT
07-10-2008
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