Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Uttar Pradesh. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Uttar Pradesh. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, May 02, 2013

'AKHILESH YADAV'S WIFE DIMPLE IS HANDICAPPED'

By Swetha Singh in Lucknow

Dimple Yadav is a known face in Uttar Pradesh.  She is a Member of Parliament from Kannauj and wife of Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav.

But Primary Education Council of Uttar Pradesh is made to believe that Dimple Yadav is a handicapped person. Not only that, according to the website, she has applied for a teacher's job on contract basis. To top it all her name figures at the top of the list of candidates who have qualified for next stage of selection process.

Monday, September 09, 2013

Muzaffarnagar Riots: The Start Of 2014 Election Games

By Sumitra Nandan / Lucknow

By various accounts, anywhere between 39 and 100 riots have taken place in Uttar Pradesh since the suave, iPad-carrying Akhilesh Yadav became chief minister of arguably India’s most communally sensitive state. During ten days preceding the violence in Muzaffarnagar and its surrounding areas in the powder keg known as Western UP,  there were incidents of violence, counter-attacks, various groups calling for bandhs and protests and finally a Mahapanchayat on Saturday where over 1 lakh Jats were in attendance. Emotions were running high since 27 August with the killing of a young man accused of molesting a girl, followed by the revenge killing of the two men who had killed apparently to protect their sister’s honour.

Thursday, August 01, 2013

Telangana History: Congress Will Win But TRS May Lose?

By Sanjay Singh / INN Bureau

After initial belligerence, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Kiran Kumar Reddy has made a complete about turn over the creation of a separate Telengana state. Reddy seem to be doing what Lalu Prasad Yadav did 13 years ago when then NDA government decided to bifurcate Bihar and carve out Jharkhand. “Over my dead body”, a defiant Lalu  then said but soon allowed a resolution for the creation of Jharkhand to be moved in the Bihar assembly and also have it passed.

Reddy is doing the same after threatening to resign over the “destructive decision”, he now wants to abide by the party high command decision and “move on”.

Monday, July 04, 2016

Modi's Cabinet Reshuffle: With 'Big Four' Immune, Will The Exercise Be Purely Cosmetic?.

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

With eyes on Uttar Pradesh assembly elections, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's cabinet reshuffle on July 5,  is expected to factor in the BJP's political strategy in Uttar Pradesh. Some new ministers will take oath at about 11 am at the Rashtrapati Bhavan and sources told INNLIVEat least two more faces from Uttar Pradesh may join the Cabinet.

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

INN IMPACT: Compared To 2G, Farm Loan Waiver Isn’t Even A Scam

It is tempting to label any report put out by the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) as a scam. But unlike its reports on 2G spectrum and coal block allocations (Coalgate), the CAG report on the UPA’s farm loan waiver scheme is not indicative of a scam.

This is not a report the UPA should get apoplectic about, nor anything for the opposition to salivate over. The scheme more or less achieved its social purpose – of providing debt relief to small and marginal farmers – and also its political purpose, which was to give the Congress party an edge in the 2009 elections.

What the CAG report uncovers is the systemic flaws that partially neutralised the objectives of the scheme – and this is not something unique only to UPA schemes. If anything, the Congress should brandish the report to show low the element of scandal really was in this scheme.

The “scam” element is nowhere near the Rs 1.76 lakh crore reported in 2G or Rs 1.86 lakh crore in Coalgate; if at all one should put a figure to it, by projecting the CAG’s negative observations from its sample audits to the whole scheme, the total amount involved in “lapses” would be around 22.32 percent. Given the Rs 52,000 crore spend on the scheme, the amount involved would be around Rs 11,600 crore, the lapses were extrapolated to the entire universe of beneficiaries. Little of it can be equated to graft.

This is what CAG did and what it found out.

The scheme, intended to provide 4.29 crore small and marginal farmers either with complete debt writeoffs or a one-time settlement of dues, was implemented in 2008-09, just in time for the Congress to benefit politically from it.

The auditor sampled 90,576 beneficiaries in 25 states and 92 districts to come up with a report on how the scheme was implemented or mis-implemented. And this is what it found.

One, 13.46 percent of those found eligible for debt waivers did not get them. This is a problem of exclusion, and the worst you can say is the UPA’s commitment to inclusion didn’t work here.

Two, 8.5 percent of those who got waivers were not eligible for it. This is where the scheme has the whiff of a scam, but it is not huge. Even when extrapolated over the entire Rs 52,000 crore writeoff mentioned by CAG, the amount involved would be around Rs 4,420 crore. Peanuts, compared to 2G or CWG or Coalgate.

Three, in 6 percent of the cases, or 4,826 checked accounts, farmers were not given their waiver entitlements correctly – 3,262 cases got “undue benefits” and the rest got less than they were entitled do. Undue benefits certainly reek of a smallish scam or bad implementation.

Four, banks and institutions made hay by claiming things they were not entitled to. For example, CAG found that in some cases the lenders did not incur any interest costs, but they still claimed reimbursements from the centre.

Five, the lenders did shoddy paperwork in helping farmers. If the main purpose of the scheme was to write off farm loans and make them eligible for further borrowings from banks, CAG found that banks did not give debt-relief certificates to 34 percent of farmers in order to entitle them to further loans.

But the real problem thrown up by the CAG report lies not in its main conclusions, but in what one can infer from the figures presented.

CAG figures show that Andhra Pradesh (Rs 11,354 crore) and Maharashtra (Rs 8,951 crore), two Congress-ruled states, apart from Uttar Pradesh (Rs 9,095 crore) were the biggest beneficiaries from the loan waivers. Congress won both Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra (in partnership with NCP), and made unexpectedly huge strides in Uttar Pradesh.

Forty-five percent of the eligible loan waivers (here the CAG mentions Rs 65,318 crore and not Rs 52,000 crore) went to these three states.

But here’s the real issue to investigate. Andhra Pradesh, as the biggest beneficiary, gave birth to the next localised financial crisis – the microfinance boom and subsequent bust soon after the loan waivers of 2008-09.

Andhra Pradesh has been over-penetrated by microfinance institutions, and by 2006 over 85 percent of microfinance beneficiaries were recipients of multiple loans.

As loans were turning bad, microfinance institutions were using strong-arm methods to recover loans, and by 2010 the Andhra government, rattled by a spate of farmer suicides, imposed an ordinance to restrain microfinance institutions (MFIs). By 2011, the Andhra microfinance boom story was over.

Connect the dots, and this is what needs further research.

Andhra Pradesh farmers received the highest amount of loan waivers (Rs 11,353 crore) in 2008. This enabled them to raise more loans from banks, but the waivers would have enabled them to also raise more from MFIs – thus creating a further buildup of loan burden that led to the final MFI bust in 2010-11.

Under the Centre’s debt waiver scheme, loans extended by microfinance companies were not eligible for waivers. But this is what CAG says: “During audit in five states (Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal), it was noticed that a private scheduled commercial bank have received reimbursements for loans extended to MFIs.”

The questions to examine are the following:
Did the centre’s loan waiver contribute to the buildup of MFI exposures and subsequent collapse? Did MFIs use the scheme to recover their own dues? Given that Andhra and Maharashtra were the biggest beneficiaries, was the loan waiver scheme hijacked by Congress politicians in these two states?

More important from a systemic viewpoint, do extensive loan waivers create a moral hazard for further overborrowing and defaults?

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

From women's media to rural media

By M H Ahssan

Newsletters in UP that began as a development effort to help women communicate among themselves have evolved into much more, addressing problems that are relevant to whole communities instead.

Seven years ago, many rural newsletters started off as mere communication tools for the women self-help groups. Their purpose was to initiate a dialogue between the women, share information and also, give them an opportunity to voice their opinion. Hand written, hand designed, they were a perfect reflection of women's empowerment in rural Uttar Pradesh. But today, they have emerged as the voice of not just these groups, but also of the villages. Various rural newsletters of Uttar Pradesh not only carry reports of the groups, but also the problems of the villages, their issues and as a bonus, give a peek into the happenings around the world. Some are making their presence felt on the national scene too; Khabar Lehariya has even won the prestigious Chameli Devi Jain award.

The April 2004 issue of the rural newspaper Gunagar of Jaunpur talks about the life of Bhimrao Ambedkar, coinciding with his birth anniversary. The December 2004 issue of Mitra from Oraiyya tries to focus on the problem of the caste biases in the village primary school and even goes ahead to show the issue to the block development officials. The development officials record the copy as an official complaint and take action against the erring school teachers. Several other newsletters like the Purvai of Varanasi, Bhinsaar from Pratapgarh, Dehriya from Sitapur, Bhaiyli from Mathura, Mahila Dakiya (the very first one in the series) from Chitrakoot are also making their mark. Mahila Samakhya, a prominent NGO working for the education and empowerment in Uttar Pradesh, supports these. Nirantar, a support group from New Delhi, supports Khabar Lehariya from Chitrakoot. While some of them are quarterly, others are bi-annual and some are even monthly.

The matters in these newsletters range from local civic problems like conditions of the hand pumps and the kharanjas (brick roads), local social issues like dowry, intoxication, violence against women, and even murders and other crimes. Household tips, gardening tips and details of the latest research are the added features of these newsletters, which are collected by the women themselves.

A peek into the newsrooms of these newsletters is an interesting task. The editorial comprises of the Resource Person of the Samakhya centre, the clerk and a few of the sangha women who are literate. Some of them are also involved with the designing aspect, trying to merge the folk designs in the newsletters to give them a better and more rustic look. The news is collected on the basis of the activities of the centre and also, as provided by these women. It is compiled and written on the newspaper or even typed by the women. Then, the print is carried to the printer (who is located as far as 25 to 30 kms away) by the women themselves and selected copies of the newsletter are printed. Every month or every quarter, some 700 to 1000 copies of these newsletters are printed at an estimated cost of around Rs 2,500 to Rs 3,000, which is partially funded by Mahila Samakhya and partially by the women through various income generating activities.

According to the women who are involved in bringing out these newsletters, people have now started coming from all over the village to give details about their problems to be carried in the newspaper. "For us, this is the most effective medium for voicing our problems. We started them to share the knowledge between our sangha, but now, even the villagers have got connected to these newsletters," say Kiran and Sushma of Mahila Samakhya Jaunpur. She cites several examples where villagers have told them about the problems and they have highlighted them in their papers. She adds that since these are the only newsletters which can carry any and every news the villagers flock to them.

Some of the issues which have been highlighted in these newsletters, have ended up bringing about a change in the villages. Once, one of the villagers told the sangha women about his repeated requests to the pradhan to get the only access road to his village repaired. The women noted the case in their newsletter and sent a copy to the Block development officer. Reading the news, the BDO ordered immediate construction of the road. Says Rajumari of Ujala Mahasangh of Mahila Samakhya, "We felt like real reporters, for our story had managed to show an impact. We published the acknowledgement letter from the villagers in an issue of our newsletter."

In another case, the parents of a girl stopped her from going to school. The girl came crying to the sangha workers, and wrote an emotional poem for her parents. "We published the poem in our newsletter and sent a copy of it to her parents. Reading the poem, the girl's parents were convinced about the significance of education for her and did not stop her from going to school," says Varsha of Mahila Samakhya Chitrakoot.

At times, the women have even managed to solve some problems of the village by highlighting them in their newsletters. "There are several cases related to civic problems and cases where women have been harassed. We have sent the copies of the newsletter with the problems to the block level officials, who tries to take quick action based on these reports," says Neelam of Mahila Samakhya Sitapur.

The growth of these newsletters has even amazed those who initiated the entire initiative. Talking about the growth of these newsletters, the Deputy director of Mahila Samakhya, Uttar Pradesh, Dr Kumkum Tripathi feels it is thanks to the dedication and sincere hard work of the women that these newsletters have scaled such heights. "They are a part of our regular publications and come what may, the printing of these newsletters does not stop. We started these newsletters to promote educational initiatives amongst our neo-literates, as they served a perfect medium to bridge the gap between them and knowledge. But after all these years and the success of these newsletters, we are surprised to see that these newsletters have now taken the form of newspapers, which even have a section for world news. What is more, they are not only focusing on problems of women, but those faced by men too."

"It's not only the Sangha women who read the newsletter. Literate menfolk of our village too read the newsletter. Although initially it was tough for us to accept this initiative by the women, but then, we realised that it was a boon for the entire village as well," says Ramkishore Yadav, a village pradhan in Varanasi district. Like Yadav, many other men too shared similar views. For the villagers, the initiative has become an inseparable part of their everyday lives. It is more than a medium of communication for them, a powerful tool that has not only brought in changes in the respective villages but also mobilized the communities in and around these newsletters. These papers, the ones we would normally call 'alternate media', are touching lives in very mainstream ways.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

A Gandhian Institute Under Seige

By M H Ahssan

The manner in which the four-decades-old Gandhian Institute of Studies has been left in financial and administrative limbo for the past four years is a pointer to the increasing erosion of the autonomy of academic institutions under the present political dispensation.

THE autonomy of academic institutions has never been eroded to such an extent as it has today. Although the degree of autonomy enjoyed by institutions dependent on government grants varied from time to time, their overall sanctity has never been violated so badly. For more than four years now, the Varanasi-based Gandhian Institute of Studies (GIS) has been virtually under a financial siege, engaged as it is in a battle of attrition with the Human Resource Development Ministry. On June 27, when six eminent academicians, most of them sociologists, came out in support of the grant-starved GIS, a ray of hope seemed to have emerged for the troubled institute.

The 21-member Board of Management of the 40-year-old institute, founded by Jayaprakash Narayan, has been at loggerheads with the Ministry over the issue of control of the institute. For the Gandhians on the board, it has been a question of preventing the takeover of the legacies of Mahatma Gandhi and Jayaprakash Narayan by the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS). Apparently, the Ministry's decision to take on the institute was sparked off by the suspension and subsequent termination of faculty member Kusum Lata Kedia.

In dealing with the GIS, the Ministry has ignored all democratic norms. Funds were stopped after 1999 following complaints of financial irregularities. The GIS did not receive the Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR) grant and was deprived of the matching grant from the Uttar Pradesh government. However, an inquiry instituted by the ICSSR was unable to point out any serious evidence of financial malfeasance. Although the renewal of the institute's registration was challenged, it was stayed by the Allahabad High Court recently. All the audit objections that were made seem to have been cleared. But financial constraints have been affecting the payment of salaries, grant of retirement benefits and funding of research. Several faculty positions remain unfilled.

But the most peculiar aspect in the issue has been the role played by the ICSSR, which has been effectively used by the Ministry to starve the GIS of funds. Deeply perturbed by the state of affairs in the GIS and the arbitrary and partisan role enacted by the Ministry and the ICSSR, the six academicians issued a statement deploring the Council for trying to take over the institution. The signatories included Ashis Nandy, former Director, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), Dhirubhai Sheth, eminent sociologist, T.N. Madan, former Member-Secretary of the ICSSR, Andre Beteille, a national fellow of ICSSR, A. Vaidyanathan, former Director of the Madras Institute of Development Studies (MIDS) and veteran political scientist Rajni Kothari.

Their statement was prompted by a missive sent by ICSSR Member-Secretary Bhaskar Chatterjee to D.S. Bagga, Chief Secretary to the Uttar Pradesh government, and Anil Sant, District Magistrate, Varanasi, in February 2003, claiming that the institute was located on government land and that all its assets, including the building, had been created from government grants. This claim, according to a Board member, was patently false as the land belonged to the Sarwa Seva Sangh, which had purchased it from the Railways and leased it out to the Gandhi Smarak Nidhi in 1960. The Smarak Nidhi had spent money for the construction of the institute.

According to Sandeep Pandey, Magsaysay Award winner and member of the GIS Board of Management, the institute had functioned from 1960 to 1977 without any government aid. Pandey has resolved to resist the takeover. He is fighting back by rallying Gandhians, young and old, in order to save the institute. The Uttar Pradesh unit of the National Alliance for People's Movements (NAPM) has extended its support to the struggle.

In his letter to the District Magistrate, Bhaskar Chatterjee suggested that he contact "Acting Director" Kusum Lata Kedia as the ICSSR was receiving disturbing information that some of the moveable properties were being removed illegally from the premises, causing substantial loss to the Central and State governments. The mention of Kusum Lata Kedia as the Acting Director was strange, because the GIS Board had removed Kedia from service in August 2002. The usage was deemed improper as the ICSSR did not have the mandate to appoint directors of autonomous institutes, even if they happened to be funded by it.

Said Sheth: "The ICSSR has no business to do what it is doing. The Council gives a block grant, which is not for maintenance but for institutional purposes. The ICSSR cannot close the institution or change the Director. It is almost like the regime-change policy of George Bush." The central issue, Sheth said, was the autonomy of self-managed institutions. Like most autonomous institutes, the GIS was accountable only to its Board and to the grant givers insofar as the terms and conditions of the grants.

The ICSSR has termed the concerns expressed by the academicians as "misplaced". Responding to the concern raised by them, ICSSR Director Ranjit Sinha wrote that the grants to the Varanasi institute were discontinued on the grounds of serious irregularities, maladministration and financial impropriety. He added that the registration of the institute had been forfeited and unless the ICSSR was satisfied that the institution's credibility had been restored and its registration renewed, it would not be able to disburse grants. The issue of registration was sub judice, he said, and until the Allahabad High Court gave a final verdict on the matter, it would be impossible to take further action. He denied that an ICSSR member-secretary had written to the Uttar Pradesh Chief Secretary. But both the letters, one to the Chief Secretary, dated February 4, 2003, and the other to the District Magistrate, dated February 20, belie the claims of the ICSSR Director.

On the issue of the registration of the institute following the stay ordered by the High Court, Sandeep Pandey said: "As of now, it is a registered society and there is no outstanding charge of financial irregularity." Pandey said that there was sufficient documentation regarding the ownership of the land, which only went to show that the GIS was not standing on Central government property.

However, there has been hardly any let-up in the harassment faced by the Board members. On April 15 and 16, the Board members were not allowed to enter the office; and they had to hold their meeting in a corridor. Pandey was abused verbally by the Varanasi Station House Officer when he and others sat in a peaceful dharna on the institute's premises. Commenting on the state of affairs in the GIS, Anil Mishra, honorary deputy director of Rajendra Bhavan and a former member of the Board, said that it was unfortunate that a few persons were holding the entire institute to ransom.

A former member-secretary of the ICSSR told Frontline that the autonomy of the ICSSR had been diluted over the years. The Council's constitution expressly states that a social scientist ought to be appointed as member-secretary, but of late the tendency had been to fill the post with a bureaucrat. "How will the autonomy of the ICSSR be protected vis-a-vis the government if its member-secretary is a bureaucrat and that too from the same Ministry?" asked the academician, who preferred not to disclose his identity. Although the ICSSR is funded by the Ministry, its administrative and financial control rests with itself. Its chief executive officer is the member-secretary and not the chairperson. Thus, the post of the ICSSR member-secretary entails great responsibility.

It was also learnt that the ICSSR had been increasing its representation on the boards of some of its funded institutes without their concurrence. According to informed sources, the ICSSR had written to the boards of two institutes - the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Kolkata, and the MIDS, Chennai, - calling for increased representation from the Council. And even before the two institutes could respond, the ICSSR sent a letter stating that it was appointing a second representative. A funding agency, most academicians feel, cannot take over the role of administrator.

Bimal Prasad, former Indian Ambassador to Nepal and former president of the GIS, said that on more than one occasion he had written to Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, requesting his intervention in the matter. Noted Sarvodaya leader Siddharaj Dhaddha had written to the then President, K.R. Narayanan.

Yogendra Yadav, a Fellow at the CSDS, said: "I do feel that it is an attempt to take over something which is now institutionally fragile but is of significant symbolic value. The value is that it is attached to Jayaprakash Narayan's name." He feels that the Bharatiya Janata Party is trying to get associated with the Gandhian legacy. This, he said, had made the struggle for the GIS a politically important one.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Exclusive: BJPs Narendra Modi Will Contest From Varanasi

By Sanjay Singh | Delhi

It’s final now. Besides Gujarat, Narendra Modi will find his second political home in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, a city that according to mythology has the blessings of Lord Shiva. But those waiting for an official announcement will have to wait a bit longer.  Why is there no announcement if the issue has been sealed by the party and the RSS? 

The answer lies in another question and two other reasons. Before a decision on Varanasi is made official, somebody in authority needs to tell an 80-year-old veteran and sitting party MP that he needs to vacate that seat for the greater good of the BJP, which ironically includes Joshi’s personal prospects too. Some believe Joshi could actually be in a difficult position should he contest from this city.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Think & Act: First Agra, Next Aligarh: Get ready For Your City For Hinduvta 'Reconversion Drive'

The issue of reconversion – or ghar wapasi -  as the proponents of the exercise would like to call it, is likely to keep western Uttar Pradesh on the boil for the rest of this year. After Agra, the Bajrang Dal and the Hindu Jagaran Manch are planning a similar campaign in Aligarh on Christmas day. The overt communal nature of the exercise is expected to have political repercussions too.

Although the Bharatiya Janata Party does not officially endorse such campaigns, one of its firebrand MPs, Mahant Adityanath of Gorakhpur better known as Yogi Adityanath, has been actively involved in such campaigns for many years.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Telangana: Birth Of A New State And Death Of Many Things

By Newscop | INNLIVE

ANALYSIS When labour pangs become insufferable, doctors suggest a Caesarean section. The baby is extracted out of the womb. Doctors in India are often accused of forcing Caesarean section on a mother, to earn a quick buck, and deny the child a natural birth, besides putting the mother at risk. 

The birth of India's 29th state is a case of precisely that. The time of Telangana's birth had come. The pain was at its peak. But spindoctors did not allow Telangana a natural birth. What happened in Lok Sabha was inevitable; the way it happened was totally avoidable.

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

In India, 3626 Villages Named On Ram, 3309 After Krishna

By Kajol Singh / INN Bureau

What's in a name, or two, or 6,77,459? In the case of India's villages, that list tells us they love gods, goddesses, nation builders and mythologies above all else, and that, when they migrate, they often take the name of their place of origin with them.

INN went through the names of all 6,77,459, inhabited and uninhabited, villages in India, as listed in Census 2011 — data for which was released recently. Lord Ram ranks way up there, with 3,626 villages named after him, in almost all parts of the country except Kerala, while Lord Krishna is a close second at 3,309.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Alarming Alert: Flesh Bodies For Sale, By Men Too In India

By Tejaswini Pagadala | Hyderabad

Male prostitution, both forced and voluntary, is a reality that is often forgotten in the discourse on gender rights and issues. INNLIVE throws light on the lives of male sex workers in the country. 

As the clock strikes seven every evening, they get down to business. Plain-clothed men, who look just like any other bystander on the road, await their clients. Picked up by women who drive luxury cars, or catering to men looking for cheap sex, they live a clandestine life satisfying the needs of both sexes. Meet Hyderabad’s male sex workers.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

336 Suicides Everyday in India

By Kanwaljeet Singh

‘AP, TN, Karnataka, Maharashtra & West Bengal Have Highest Number Of Suicide Deaths’

India reported an average 336 suicides every day in 2007 with more men ending their lives than women, the latest report of the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) has revealed.

Although suicide was a nationwide phenomena, five states — Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka — registered consistently higher number of suicidal deaths during the last few years. Overall, 2007 recorded an increase of 3.8% over the previous year’s figure of 118,112.

Poverty was surprisingly not the major reason for suicide with more people ending their lives due to family (23.8%) and health problems (22.3%) than bankruptcy or sudden change in economic status (2.7%), love affairs (2.8%), dowry dispute (2.6%), unemployment (2%) and suspected/illicit relation (1.1%). Only 2.3% of people committed suicide due to poverty.

A definite trend is also noticed among different states which, perhaps, speaks volumes about the ‘psychological state’ of people than their actual difficulties which they might be facing before being prompted to take the extreme step.

The latest report of the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), released in November and covering the year 2007 has revealed much more. Incidentally, it is not the comparatively poor states like Bihar, Orissa and Uttar Pradesh, which witnessed suicides in higher numbers. The dubious distinction, in fact, went to well-off states like Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.

Out of the total 122,637 suicides committed in the country in 2007, the highest, 15,184, was reported from Maharashtra followed by Andhra Pradesh (14,882), West Bengal (14,860), Tamil Nadu (13,811) and Karnataka (12,304). These five states accounted for 57.9% of the total suicides reported in India. The remaining were reported from the other 23 states and 7 Union Territories (UTs). Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state (16.6% share of population) reported comparatively lower percentage, accounting for only 3.2% of the cases.

As far as suicides committed by farmers (16,632) are concerned, Maharashtra (4,238) surpassed all other states with its Vidarbha region becoming the focal point.

According to the NCRB’s report, Karnataka saw 2,135 farmer suicides, Andhra Pradesh (1,797), Chhattisgarh (1,593), Madhya Pradesh (1,263) and Kerala (1,232). Although the overall figure shows a slight fall from 17,060 in 2006, the broad trend remained unchanged with indebtedness becoming the main cause.

Referring to the sex profile of persons committing suicide during 2007, the NCRB report said social and economic causes led most males to kill themselves whereas emotional and personal causes mainly drove women to end their lives. Sex wise figures show that the male-female ratio of suicide victims for 2007 was 65:35. However, the proportion of boys-girls suicide victims (upto 14 years was 48:52.

Sunday, March 12, 2017

From identity to economics: How the BJP is changing Indian politics

After tactically using caste arithmetic, the party has also consciously tried to undermine social justice as casteism and secularism as appeasement.

The Uttar Pradesh Assembly election results are not a one-time anomaly. They are repeat of the 2014 Lok Sabha results. In fact, the Bharatiya Janata Party has improved on its performance in 2014. Because the party seems set to stay in Indian politics for a long innings, it is important to reflect on what its politics means and what it is doing or going to do once in power in such an overwhelming manner.

While the BJP has cynically employed the use of religious identity, it has also consciously sought to downplay identity politics or social justice on the basis of caste or community in the last decade, particularly in the last few years. This is clear from the way the party brought a non-Jat politician to lead Haryana and encouraged a counter-mobilisation against the Jat hegemony. It also appointed a non-tribal chief minister Jharkhand and has persisted with one in Chhatisgarh. The party does not even seem to mind a Gujarati hegemony.

Where the party excels at is to package and present itself as rising above caste and community, decrying social justice as casteism, and secularism as appeasement, as Vandita Mishra points out in the Indian Express, after having carefully and “astutely picking a large number of its candidates from the large scatter of non-Yadav OBC [Other Backward Classes] castes, for instance, to add them to its traditional upper caste Brahmin-Thakur mix”, even while making a pronounced bid for backward caste support.

In fact, the success of the party’s political vision is evident from the fact that what appeared earlier as impossible seems to be the new normal now. For example, in a state like Jharkhand, the party brought in fundamental change by amending the land tenancy laws so as to serve the corporate capital and yet there was hardly any effective resistance to the move.

Most of the BJP’s important leaders also happen to be well-honed cadres of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. The party seems to have made an effort to ensure that such candidates are given crucial postings, with a view to a more disciplined and ideologically committed leadership for the governments – at the Centre and in the states.

In other words, the BJP has sought to downplay one of the traditional basis of politics – that of social identities – because it hampers growth and expansion of capital.

The 2014 Lok Sabha results and now the Uttar Pradesh Assembly election results have shown how the BJP has created an anti-local, anti-caste, anti-region political ambience by ensuring that a combination of Narendra Modi and Amit Shah become acceptable to people across regions.

The Manifesto of the party for Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections began by saying:

“The Party has begun the implementation of aims of social and economic justice through good governance (sushashan) under the leadership of Shri Narendra Modi”.


Beyond this point the Manifesto talked in an idiom of class and professions, laying down how the party’s perspective on and vision of development has to reach the youth, poor, business community, women and others.

The party simply does not use the concept of social justice the way other political formations do.

Economic argument
It is in this sense that one can see how the BJP seeks to build a political agenda beyond the social identities. It tries to reach out to all of them through some economic argument or the other.

The party seems to know and understand that gradually it has to be a politics of class, which will allow it to expand because its historical legacy of being a brahmanical political force alienated it for quite some time from the Muslims and Dalits.

In the last three years or so, the party has amply shown how well religion and other social and cultural affiliations can only be used to ensure a very clearly defined rule of corporate capital. However, these affiliations along with that of nation, and other such are only instruments for mobilisation, if at all.

The violence in campuses could be seen as an example of how the party uses the instrument of lumpenism to ensure that voices of dissent can be suppressed by use of collective force.

Social justice is not a term often invoked by the Indian State after 2014. And yet the BJP cannot completely do away with the decades-long practices of positive discrimination in policy making because the move might invite strong counter mobilisation against it. Which is what explains the party’s conscious decision of going slow on its earlier discourse and policy programmes based on social identities. But the so-called slips of tongue on quotas and reservation and demonisation of Dalit activists is a clear indication of what many of the party’s leaders think on these questions.

In days to come, the BJP would rather focus on policy areas that would more proactively bring Dalits and tribals within the fold of the market. The policy decisions of the BJP are aimed at breaking the consensus on the need of taking affirmative action to remove social inequalities among groups.

Social reengineering
The BJP seeks to transform everybody into an individual, concerned only about their own self, while ironically seeking votes from them or expressing outrage in the name of Hinduism. The collective, as noted above, continues to be invoked when needed but only as a mere source of mobilisation to move towards a fragmented/individuated situation.

This thinking, while destroying their social and cultural allegiances, would transform each citizen into somebody who would cease to be concerned about the marginalised, oppressed or discriminated groups and communities. This would also lead to weakening of any opposition to whatever the state would do – from handing over the economy to corporate capital to making education institutions into skilling centres among other things.

​The BJP campaigns in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections mocked the gains that the Other Backward Classes and Dalit political mobilisations have made in these states. The party has routinely sought to underplay that there was any significant historic element of caste based discrimination. In Haryana, for instance, the party has come down heavily on unionisation of workers in the industrial belts of the state.

It has thus sought to delegitimise all movements that claim to represent social or economic justice. Which is why there is hardly any large scale resistance even when, for instance, the Haryana government unabashedly celebrates its foundation year using the symbol of a conch with a chariot embedded in it among other things. The party has thus got away by introducing overtly religious motifs in a secular country. Nor is there any public anger when workers are

The BJP represents a new moment in Indian politics. It understands and knows how to manipulate the social and cultural milieu much better than any other force towards making India fully compatible to the workings of corporate capital and seeking to break down the consensus on community and caste-based concepts of social justice.

If the political forces fail to understand this they would find it difficult to counter the BJP’s winning streak, even in 2019.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

INDIA'S RICHEST POLITICIANS

Editor Speaks: There’s an old saying that money is the mother’s milk of politics. In the Indian context, it’s more a question of milking the state. We have reached a level of cohabitation where money, corruption and unethical deal-making occupy the same bed. Increasingly, people are joining politics to make money or stay out of jail. Money power is the dominant factor in today’s electoral politics.

Back in the mid-90s when HNN was launched, I remember meeting politicians who were struggling to make ends meet. When we featured them next, they had become overnight millionaires. The point is not that we can’t have wealthy politicians but the question of how they earned their wealth. I am sure there are many legitimately rich politicians but politics increasingly resembles a profitable business rather than a public service today.

It wasn’t always so. Money power has played a positive role in politics: Industrialist G.D. Birla bankrolled Gandhi’s campaigns and along with other businessmen entered politics inspired by the freedom movement. It was in the late ’60s, when ‘Aya Ram Gaya Ram’ entered the political vocabulary, that money became a major factor. Since then the situation has only worsened with the dawn of coalition governments in the late ’80s.

With the likelihood of not being returned for the next term, they make hay while the sun shines and quite blatantly. No wonder many of these governments have been termed as ‘cash and carry’ ones. These days, it’s almost impossible to find a poor politician except among the Left parties. Adding to the scenario is the fact that a large number of businessmen have joined politics in recent years, either elected or nominated by various parties.

So who are India’s richest politicians? Thanks to a Supreme Court ruling in 2002, the filing of assets data is mandatory by anyone contesting an election. In order to establish exactly who are India’s rich politicians, we undertook a study along with EmpoweringIndia, an initiative of the Liberty Institute led by Barun Mitra. It took three months of exhaustive research at the Election Commission and Rajya Sabha Secretariat by staffers Swati Reddy and Kajol Singh under the supervision of Editor in Chief M H Ahssan to list the richest politicians whose submissions are open to debate.

The filing of assets data is mandatory but not verified. Some legislators have shown an increase in wealth of over 500 per cent in four years. Yet, the statistics are revealing. Of the 215 Rajya Sabha members for which we have data, 105 are crorepatis. Of the 522 Lok Sabha members, 135 are crorepatis.

Members of legislative assemblies seem wealthier than many of the MPs. The top five MLAs across the 30 states are worth Rs 2,042 crore. Uttar Pradesh has the richest chief minister and 113 crorepati MLAs. One indication of how this money has been accumulated is that of 150 wealthiest MLAs, 59 don’t even have a PAN card! Our cover story looks at India’s richest politicians across various categories. A handful are legitimate businessmen, the rest only serve to reinforce the dubious nexus between power and money.


Richest politicians
A lean bare man on the banks of a river near Champaran, his eyes moist with sadness, letting go of his shawl for a poor woman downstream to cover herself and her child. This poignant moment from Richard Attenborough’s biopic on Gandhi is perhaps the most eloquent image of selfless politics.

The gentle giant—loved as Bapu and revered as the Mahatma—epitomised the philosophy of public service as one who gave up everything to be one among the huddled millions. Nearly a century later there is little evidence—in reel or real life—of the high moral ground once straddled by that generation.

The brazen parade of the Prada Prado set zipping across cities in cavalcades, appropriating security funded by public money is evidence that politics has since morphed into a largely self-serving enterprise. The pretense of khadi and Gandhian values went out of vogue with the Gandhi cap long before the Gucci generation stormed the political arena in the 1980s.

The transition is best described by Rajiv Gandhi who said at the Congress Centenary in Mumbai in 1985 that politics has been reduced to “brokers of power and influence, who dispense patronage to convert mass movement into feudal oligarchy”. Yes there are those who enter politics to serve the public cause but they are exceptions rather than the rule. Entering public life is now an investment of time and effort for dividends to be earned from political entrepreneurship. A joint study by HNN and EmpoweringIndia (an initiative of the Liberty Institute) of the reported assets of our elected representatives reveals a startling contrast between the rulers and the ruled.

In a country where over 77 per cent of the populace, or an estimated 836 million people, earn an income of Rs 20 per day and over 300 million are living below the poverty line, nearly half the Rajya Sabha members and nearly a third of those from the Lok Sabha are worth a crore and more. Just the top ten Rajya Sabha members and the top ten Lok Sabha members have reported a cumulative net asset worth Rs 1,500 crore. The 10 top losers in the last Lok Sabha polls—including Nyimthungo of Nagaland who reported total assets of Rs 9,005 crore —is Rs 9,329 crore. Members of legislative assemblies seem wealthier than many MPs. The top five MLAs across the 30 states are worth Rs 2,042 crore. Of these 150 crorepati MLAs, 59 don’t even have a PAN card.

And don’t look for a correlation between the state of the state and the wealth of the legislators. Uttar Pradesh boasts of the largest number of people—59 million or over a third of its population—living below the poverty line. Not only is Mayawati the richest chief minister in 30 states, the state also boasts of 113 crorepati MLAs. Similarly, Madhya Pradesh which has over 25 million of the 60 million people living below the poverty line boasts of 80 crorepati MLAs. The Marxists are the stark exception in this study too. The CPI(M) has 301 MLAs across 10 states but has only two MLAs with declared assets of over Rs 1 crore. Of the 537 candidates who contested on a CPI(M) ticket, only seven had assets of over Rs 1 crore, of which five lost in the elections.

As the old maxim goes, power begets power and money attracts riches. Clearly, it pays to be in power. Take the last round of Assembly elections which afforded the study an opportunity to compare the increase in wealth. In Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh where the BJP was in power, the average assets of candidates increased by five times.

In Karnataka too where the Congress ruled in rotation with Deve Gowda’s JD(S), Congress candidates reported a fivefold rise in their assets. Mercifully, wealth doesn’t always ensure success. In all, 365 crorepatis contested the Lok Sabha elections in 2004; 88 lost their deposits, and 114 came second.

Last December in Delhi the Congress learnt this important lesson again when they found that Congress candidates who lost in Delhi were on an average richer than those who won. But wealth clearly does matter, all other things being constant.

The caveat emptor here, as with all matters concerning transparency in public life, is that we are going by what the political class has chosen to declare. After all, the statement of assets filed by candidates is at best a confession of sorts mandated by two Supreme Court judgements of May 2002 and March 2003.

There are several gaps in the information available. Of the 542 Lok Sabha members, details of assets are available for only 522. Similarly in the Rajya Sabha, only 215 members have filed details of assets.

There is no institutional mechanism to cross-check facts, nor is there a requirement for candidates to declare the source of wealth, or the increase in wealth of candidates in subsequent declarations. In Mizoram for instance, none of the 10 top candidates have reported possessing a PAN card even though their wealth is in excess of Rs 1 crore.

What is worse is that although MPs who are ministers file annual statements of their assets, the information is not available to the public. This virtually negates the concept of scrutiny that would prevent misuse of position of power and enrichment. Indeed, what should be openly available is denied even under the Right to Information Act.

It is tragic that the Office of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh—who has been described as integrity personified—has been made party to this decision to deny the information. Again, while Central ministers are required to file a statement of assets, there is no such requirement for ministers in states.

The adulterous cohabitation of power and pelf is conspicuous across the political spectrum. The chasm between the declared and perceived reality is all too obvious to be missed. Contrast the wealth reported and wealthy lifestyles of those elected to high office.

Clearly the tip of the benami iceberg has not even been touched. In a country with a stark asymmetry in opportunities and ability, political power enables bending and twisting of policy, converting politics into the elevator politicians ride to reach the pot of gold. Living room conversations in middle and upper middle class homes are dotted with whose son, daughter or son-in-law is raking it in using the benami route to accumulate property and assets.

Television footage of currency notes being waved in Parliament during the last trust vote, the airborne campaigns witnessed during the polls in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, money spent in fielding dummy candidates, funding of party offices, travel in Toyota SUVs costing over Rs 75 lakh each and private charters that politicians avail of to fly within the country are all pointers that are hard to ignore.

Bankers and brokers talk in not so hushed tones about the role of politicians in corporate scams. There is also speculation about the real beneficiary and benami ownership of at least two airlines, several real estate ventures, pharmaceutical units and infrastructure companies. The corporate concept of ‘sleeping partner’ has a whole new connotation in the political world. As long as the real incomes, wealth and funding of politicians remain opaque, governance will continue to suffer and democracy will be rendered more often on the liability side in the balance sheet of development.

Television footage of currency notes being waved in Parliament during the last trust vote, the airborne campaigns witnessed during the polls in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, money spent in fielding dummy candidates, funding of party offices, travel in Toyota SUVs costing over Rs 75 lakh each and private charters that politicians avail of to fly within the country are all pointers that are hard to ignore.

Bankers and brokers talk in not so hushed tones about the role of politicians in corporate scams. There is also speculation about the real beneficiary and benami ownership of at least two airlines, several real estate ventures, pharmaceutical units and infrastructure companies. The corporate concept of ‘sleeping partner’ has a whole new connotation in the political world. As long as the real incomes, wealth and funding of politicians remain opaque, governance will continue to suffer and democracy will be rendered more often on the liability side in the balance sheet of development.

Wealth leadership
1. T. Subbarami Reddy
Indian National Congress
Rajya Sabha, Andhra Pradesh
Total Assets: Rs 239.6 cr

2. Jaya Bachchan
Samajwadi Party
Rajya Sabha, Uttar Pradesh
Total Assets: Rs 214.3 cr

3. Rahul Bajaj
Independent
Rajya Sabha, Maharashtra
Total Assets: Rs 190. 6 cr

4. Anil H. Lad
Indian National Congress
Rajya Sabha, Karnataka
Total Assets: Rs 175 cr

5. M. Krishnappa
Indian National Congress
MLA, Vijay Nagar, Karnataka
Total Assets: Rs 136 cr

6. MAM Ramaswamy
Janata Dal (Secular)
Rajya Sabha, Karnataka
Total Assets Rs 107.7 cr

7. Anand Singh
BJP
MLA, Vijayanagara, Karnataka
Total Assets: Rs 239 cr

8. Anil V. Salgaocar
Independent
MLA, Sanvordem, Goa
Total Assets: Rs 91.4 cr

9. N.A. Haris
Indian National Congress
MLA, Shanti Nagar, Karnataka
Total Assets: Rs 85.3 cr

10. Mahendra Mohan
Samajwadi Party
Rajya Sabha, Uttar Pradesh
Total Assets: Rs 85 cr

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Elections 2014: Where’s The Party, The Leader, The Fight?

By M H Ahssan | INN Live

The country’s oldest political party. A painful generational change. And a fierce electoral battle. Can Rahul Gandhi pull together a Congress party that is clearly in disarray?

In little less than a month, five states go to polls and in a little more than seven months, the country will vote in the General Election. The battlelines are drawn and the two principal parties of the country — the Congress and the BJP — are readying for the showdown. Barbs are being exchanged on a daily basis, verbal blows traded between Congress Vice-President Rahul Gandhi and the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, Gujarat CM Narendra Modi, both in the real and the virtual world.

Friday, November 01, 2013

Any Guesses? Where’s The Party, The Leader, The Fight?

By M H Ahssan / INN LIve

The country’s oldest political party. A painful generational change. And a fierce electoral battle. Can Rahul Gandhi pull together a Congress party that is clearly in disarray?

In little less than a month, five states go to polls and in a little more than seven months, the country will vote in the General Election. The battlelines are drawn and the two principal parties of the country — the Congress and the BJP — are readying for the showdown. Barbs are being exchanged on a daily basis, verbal blows traded between Congress Vice-President Rahul Gandhi and the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, Gujarat CM Narendra Modi, both in the real and the virtual world.

Monday, January 12, 2015

‘Speak, For Thy Tongue Is Free’: Urdu Poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz

The language that ignited Ghalib’s tongue and fired Faiz Ahmed Faiz’s poetry is finding new takers in the country.

In 1954 the Central Working Committee of the Bharatiya Janta Sangh, a precursor to the Bhartiya Janta Party(BJP) declared Urdu to be “The language of no region in India, it being only a foreign and unacceptable style of Hindi with a foreign script and foreign vocabulary imposed on India during a period of foreign domination.”

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Escape Velocity? Rahul May Contest From Telangana

By M H Ahssan / INN Live

After preaching about escape velocity to Dalits, Rahul Gandhi may well be practising it himself, in hard core political terms. Just like the BJP is contemplating the prospect of Narendra Modi contesting from Lucknow or Benaras, the prospect of the Congress vice president contesting from the Medak parliamentary constituency in prospective Telangana state as his second option is being considered. 

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Choosing Next BJP President!

According to media speculation the new BJP president will be chosen within the next week. The choice becomes significant one year before the next general election. The importance of the President of India’s major opposition party cannot be minimized. Newspapers had indicated that RSS Chief Mr. Mohan Bhagwat favoured a second term for Mr. Nitin Gadkari. However that is no longer certain. Two events create doubts.First, the Enforcement Directorate has issued income tax notices to Mr. Gadkari. This suggests that the government is all set to publicize allegations of financial irregularity by the BJP President. Whatever the doubts about the authenticity of the charges or their gravity, the adverse publicity that the government could generate in an election year would be considerable. In the event the strongest election issue against the UPA government – its mind boggling corruption – would be effectively blunted. Discretion therefore may dictate that Mr. Gadkari be denied a second term.

The second event relates to the recent meeting between Mr. Advani and Mr. Bhagwat which was followed by a meeting between Mr. Advani, Mr. Gadkari and Mr. Ram Jethmalani. In the latter meeting Mr. Advani acted the peace maker between Mr. Gadkari and Mr. Jethmalani who had criticized the BJP President and then been expelled from the party for indiscipline. Mr. Jethmalani publicly ate his words and Mr. Gadkari welcomed him back in the party. From this unsavoury episode it appears that some sort of compromise between the RSS and Mr. Advani may have been achieved. It was an acknowledged fact that Mr. Advani was the strongest impediment to Mr. Gadkari getting a second term as President.

Mr. Narendra Modi’s emergence as an aspirant for the Prime Ministerial candidate had not been universally hailed by the BJP central party and that had led to a flurry of activity. On November 28, 2012 it was pointed out in these columns:
“There are three discernable poles of power and influence in the BJP. Party President Mr. Nitin Gadkari backed by the RSS represents one pole. Mr. LK Advani with the parliamentary party behind him represents the second pole. Gujarat Chief Minister Mr. Narendra Modi who has caught the imagination of the party cadres represents the third pole…Mr. Narendra Modi is the front runner to become the prime ministerial candidate of the party in 2014. Earlier the RSS and its nominated party president Mr. Gadkari were perceived to be in opposition to Mr. Modi…Now there is no conflict between the RSS plus Mr. Gadkari on the one hand and Mr. Modi on the other. The RSS would like to continue Mr. Gadkari in his post as party president for a second term. That would suit Mr. Modi because a weakened Mr. Gadkari would perforce cooperate with him after the Gujarat assembly election. The potential threat to Mr. Modi’s ambitions comes from Mr. LK Advani…But the RSS is not enamoured of Mr. Advani. He is too tall a leader to have in the past acted as obediently as Mr. Gadkari…For Mr. Advani to strategically position himself for 2014 he would have to become the BJP President by replacing Mr. Gadkari for the next presidential term.”
Could the recent meetings held by Mr. Advani with the RSS Chief and BJP President suggest that his wishes have been fulfilled? More likely a half way compromise may have been reached. The RSS may have agreed to keep the issue of the next Prime Ministerial candidate open giving Mr. Advani the chance of staking his claim on the strength of his acceptability among NDA allies. The RSS would be the gainer from open rivalry between Mr. Modi and Mr. Advani facilitating a divide and rule approach. As far as the next party presidential candidate is concerned there might emerge an altogether new compromise candidate. Who could that be? Media speculation has identified three front runners, Mr. Manohar Parrikar, Mr. Shanta Kumar and Mr. Rajnath Singh.

If media speculation is correct, the chances of Mr. Rajnath Singh seem brightest. While the individual qualities of the others may be no less, the fact of representing India ’s largest state in an election year could prove to be the clincher. If the badly damaged prospects of the BJP through inept leadership are to be revived it can only be done by a spectacular electoral performance in Uttar Pradesh. Mr. Rajnath Singh as a forward caste leader is a competent manager with a proven record in conflict management. Backward caste leader Miss Uma Bharati has already returned to the BJP having migrated from Madhya Pradesh to Uttar Pradesh.

More significantly, Mr. Kalyan Singh is poised to return to the BJP. It may be recalled that the BJP’s finest hour in Uttar Pradesh occurred during his tenure as Chief Minister when the party had won 57 Lok Sabha seats. Mr. Rajnath Singh had forged the winning Thakur-Backward alliance. Inner party intrigue and mismanagement led to Mr. Kalyan Singh’s ouster costing BJP 28 seats in the ensuing election. In 1999 BJP won 29 Lok Sabha seats. By 2004 and 2009 its UP tally had reduced to 7 and 10 seats! The prospect of reviving a combination of forward and backward caste leaders to turn around the BJP fortunes in the state may tempt the RSS to select Mr. Rajnath Singh as the next BJP President.

This conjecture is based of course upon a rational understanding of the situation. Experience suggests that decisions taken by political parties in India are anything but rational.