Manmohan Singh's transformation from a mascot to a mask is complete
New Delhi
4 May 2013
On 3 May 2013, India went to sleep with the news of the
arrest of the Railway Minister’s nephew for receiving a bribe. What should
surprise the discerning is not that a politician’s kin was involved in
corruption but that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) carried out the
arrest, particularly at a time when the country is in the midst of a debate on
the independence or otherwise of the premier investigating agency; when the
Supreme Court is asking for the agency to be insulated from executive
interference; and at a time when the scam-ridden ruling coalition, which is
stumbling from one crisis to another, can easily do without another crisis of
its own making.
For a government that does not shy away from letting the CBI
loose on errant allies to rein them in, and for an agency whose director says
it is a part of the government, not an autonomous organisation, the arrest of
the minister’s nephew by the CBI should raise some perplexing but pertinent
questions. Are we to believe, for instance, that the CBI acted on its own and
that it did not take its political masters into confidence before arresting a
minister’s kin? Or that the Department of Personnel and Training to which the
agency reports and, by extension, the Prime Minister’s office under which the
department falls, did not intervene? Or, worse still, the CBI director had an
axe to grind with the Railway Board official who bribed the minister’s nephew?
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Singh Yadav was not
betraying any secrets when he told journalists at Allahabad in April that
anybody who does not act according to the Congress party’s wishes faces
persecution through CBI. Neither was his father Mulayam Singh Yadav of the
Samajwadi party, who amplified it by saying that the CBI was misused by the
Congress the moment any party took it on. MK Stalin of the DMK would not
disagree with the Yadavs; the agency raided his house in March barely two days
after the party pulled out of the UPA. Finance Minister P Chidambaram
disapproved of the action by the CBI, saying it will be misunderstood. Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh, in turn, said that the government did not do it.
Not for a moment is it being suggested here that there is
indeed something more to the arrest of the Railway Minister’s nephew than meets
the eye. Whatever be the circumstances of his arrest, Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh cannot escape the blame for presiding over a tainted government. If his
administration can take credit, rightfully, for giving to the nation
path-breaking initiatives such as the Right to Information, the Right to
Education and the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, it
must own up to its acts of omission and/or commission, too.
Nobody is yet calling Manmohan Singh corrupt but there is no
denying that his Teflon image has taken a beating from his heydays in 2004,
when he was pitchforked into the prime minister’s chair. Four years into its
second consecutive term, the government has not come out smelling of roses
after the various scams in 2G spectrum, Commonwealth Games, Adarsh housing
society, coal ‘gate’ and purchase of helicopters. Surely, the Prime Minister
cannot possibly blame compulsions of running a coalition on all the scams !
True, as Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi puts it, “One man riding a horse
cannot solve the country’s problems”, but try telling that to a Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi or a Nelson Mandela ! Simply put, giving up without trying or
looking the other way is tantamount to abdication of one’s responsibilities.
Ironically, for a technocrat-turned-politician he has allowed his party to go
out of its way to penalise the honest and make an example out of them for all
to see. A case in point is the brazen manner in which the party has treated a
certain bureaucrat for taking undue interest in a matter. You can imagine what
message that sends out to the world at large.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh would be doing a singular
disservice to his reputation and legacy and that of his administration if he
does not rid himself of inertia and live up to the expectations of the New
Middle Class, which can be impatient, demanding, unforgiving but generous to a
fault, too. Already, his political rivals dismiss him as weak. Some in the
media call him an underachiever. If he stays the course, the time is not far
when he will be described, not uncharitably, as a Mukhota (mask) for all things
corrupt. That epithet was reportedly used for Atal Behari Vajpayee to hide or
camouflage the BJP’s proclivities. Manmohan Singh could find it hard to live
down that epithet if he does not stop the buck with himself. Silence may not be
an option going into an election year, and it certainly won’t help him to win
friends and influence people.
The transformation of Manmohan Singh from the proverbial
outsider to the consummate insider is complete. Well before the advent of
Facebook and Twitter, Manmohan Singh enjoyed enormous goodwill among the Indian
middle class. His personal integrity was never in doubt. Therefore, it came as
a disappointment to the Aam Aadmi (common man) when scams began tumbling out of
the government’s closet. Disenchantment with the political class began
manifesting itself in various forms, most recently in the form of a public
movement against corruption. That movement spawned many clones across India in
its many cities, towns and villages. But as the middle class learnt much to its
dismay, Manmohan Singh’s so-be-it attitude on the issue of the India-US nuclear
deal did not extend to areas of governance that touched their everyday lives,
be it jobs, prices or corruption. Today, he runs the risk of alienating the
very people who give him the benefit of the doubt every time his government is
embroiled in a new scam.
No comments:
Post a Comment