Indias founding values are threatened by sinister new forms of oppression | Madhav Khosla
By employing drones and facial recognition against the opposition, Narendra Modi seems heedless of civil liberties and justice
The anger is extraordinary for its depth and ferocity. In protests that have spread across the worlds largest democracy, Indians of all stripes have taken to the streets. Two weeks ago, the government amended the citizenship law to speed up applications for refugees from surrounding countries who are Hindu, Christian, Parsi, Jain or Buddhist but not Muslim. The law coincides with an attempt to create a new list of Indias citizens, a task whose precise mechanism has evolved in recent days. Regardless of the details, it will be a Kafkaesque exercise during which poor people with few official documents will have to prove their citizenship. If they happen to be Muslim, the citizenship law means the consequences they face will be different. Detention centres mushrooming across India reveal what those might be.
The pan-Indian nature of the outcry is striking. India has long been home to disobedience, but the scale and reach of the present discontent is rare. Though the protests have been painted as a conspiracy limited to Muslim and elite forces, elements that have come together to suppress the real India, there seems to be genuine and diverse opposition to the plainly exclusionary citizenship law. As the drama and horror have unfolded, both the protesters and the state have acted in familiar ways. We have seen student agitations, silent marches, legal orders, police brutality and recriminations. Yet there is something special about this episode, something new on each side.
Unlike many an agitation in Indian history, these protests have not centred on specific goals and policies. While the context is the citizenship law, the message has been that Indias essence hangs in the balance. For its independent history, the nation has mostly been liberal and democratic, in stark contrast to much of the post-colonial world. Now, with the countrys identity being framed in terms of its majority Hindu population, its status is changing. Importantly, the communalisation is taking place with state absolutism. In Kashmir, for example, where the regions constitutional autonomy was annulled in August, there has been a lockdown spanning travel, communications and ordinary life. With institutions such as the judiciary hardly visible, state authority has faced few obstacles.
The protests have expressed concern at both the redefinition of Indianness and the decline in democratic freedoms. A noticeable feature in the outrage has been an emphasis on the constitution. The document expresses a strong commitment to individual autonomy. For Jawaharlal Nehru, the countrys first prime minister, the only way to consolidate India was by removing all sense of difference from the political point of view between the so-called majorities and minorities. Indias birth, as I have argued in a forthcoming book, was the first major attempt to create democracy in a non-western land burdened with poverty, illiteracy and diversity. The present discontent has highlighted the contrast between the ideals on which the nation was formed and the direction in which it is quickly heading.
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