India’s PM Narendra Modi: What makes this Islamophobic strongman tick?

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jserraglio
Posts: 11954
Joined: Sun May 29, 2005 7:06 am
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India’s PM Narendra Modi: What makes this Islamophobic strongman tick?

Post by jserraglio » Tue Apr 23, 2024 5:36 am

Why Did Modi Call India’s Muslims ‘Infiltrators’? Because He Could.

The brazenness of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vilification of India’s largest minority group made clear he sees few checks at home or abroad on his power.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India was criticized by the opposition for remarks he made during a speech to voters in Rajasthan State.

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Right-wing Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India is embracing a Hindu-first domestic policy.

The New York Times
News Analysis
By Mujib Mashal
Reporting from New Delhi
April 23, 2024, 6:22 a.m. ET


Prime Minister Narendra Modi, his power at home secured and his Hindu-first vision deeply entrenched, has set his sights in recent years on a role as a global statesman, riding India’s economic and diplomatic rise. In doing so, he has distanced himself from his party’s staple work of polarizing India’s diverse population along religious lines for its own electoral gain.

His silence provided tacit backing as vigilante groups continued to target non-Hindu minority groups and as members of his party routinely used hateful and racist language, even in Parliament, against the largest of those groups, India’s 200 million Muslims. With the pot kept boiling, Mr. Modi’s subtle dog whistles — with references to Muslim dress or burial places — could go a long way domestically while providing enough deniability to ensure that red carpets remained rolled out abroad for the man leading the world’s largest democracy.

Just what drove the prime minister to break with this calculated pattern in a fiery campaign speech on Sunday — when he referred to Muslims by name as “infiltrators” with “more children” who would get India’s wealth if his opponents took power — has been hotly debated. It could be a sign of anxiety that his standing with voters is not as firm as believed, analysts said. Or it could be just a reflexive expression of the kind of divisive religious ideology that has fueled his politics from the start.

But the brazenness made clear that Mr. Modi sees few checks on his enormous power. At home, watchdog institutions have been largely bent to the will of his Bharatiya Janata Party, or B.J.P. Abroad, partners increasingly turn a blind eye to what Mr. Modi is doing in India as they embrace the country as a democratic counterweight to China.

“Modi is one of the world’s most skilled and experienced politicians,” said Daniel Markey, a senior adviser in the South Asia program at the United States Institute of Peace. “He would not have made these comments unless he believed he could get away with it.”

Mr. Modi may have been trying to demonstrate this impunity, Mr. Markey said, “to intimidate the B.J.P.’s political opponents and to show them — and their supporters — just how little they can do in response.”

The prime minister sees himself as the builder of a new, modern India on the march toward development and international respect. But he also wants to leave a legacy that is distinctly different from that of the leaders who founded the country as a secular republic after British colonial rule.

Before joining its political offshoot, he spent more than a decade as a cultural foot soldier of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or R.S.S., a right-wing organization founded in 1925 with the mission of making India a Hindu state. The group viewed it as treason when an independent India agreed to a partition that created Pakistan as a separate nation for Muslims, embraced secularism and gave all citizens equal rights. A onetime member went so far as to assassinate Mohandas K. Gandhi in outrage.

Over his decade in national power, Mr. Modi has been deeply effective in advancing some of the central items of the Hindu-right agenda. He abolished the semi-autonomy of the Muslim-majority state of Jammu and Kashmir. He enacted a citizenship law widely viewed as prejudiced against Muslims. And he helped see through the construction of a grand temple to the Hindu deity Ram on a plot long disputed between Hindus and Muslims.

The violent razing in 1992 of the mosque that had stood on that land — which Hindu groups said was built on the plot of a previous temple — was central to the national movement of Hindu assertiveness that ultimately swept Mr. Modi to power more than two decades later.

More profoundly, Mr. Modi has shown that the broader goals of a Hindu state can largely be achieved within the bounds of India’s constitution — by co-opting the institutions meant to protect equality.

Officials in his party have a ready rebuttal to any complaint along these lines. How could Mr. Modi discriminate against anyone, they say, if all Indian citizens benefit equally from his government’s robust welfare offerings — of toilets, of roofs over heads, of monthly rations?

That argument, analysts say, is telling in showing how Mr. Modi has redefined democratic power not as leadership within checks and balances, but as the broad generosity of a strongman, even as he has redefined citizenship in practice to make clear there is a second class.

Secularism — the idea that no religion will be favored over any other — has largely been co-opted to mean that no religion will be allowed to deny Hindus their dominance as the country’s majority, his critics say. Officials under Mr. Modi, who wear their religion on their sleeves and publicly mix prayer with politics, crack down on public expressions of other religions as breaching India’s secularism.

While right-wing officials promote conversion to Hinduism, which they describe as a “return home,” they have introduced laws within many of the states they govern that criminalize conversion from Hinduism. Egged on by such leaders, Hindu extremists have lynched Muslim men accused of transporting cows or beef and hounded them over charges of “love jihad” — or luring Hindu women. Vigilantes have frequently barged into churches and accosted priests they believe have engaged in proselytizing or conversion.

“What they have done is to create a permissive environment which encourages hate and valorizes hate,” said Harsh Mander, a former civil servant who is now a campaigner for social harmony.

In reference to Mr. Modi’s speech on Sunday, he added: “This open resort to this kind of hate speech will only encourage that hard-line Hindu right in society.”

Tom Vadakkan, a spokesman for the B.J.P., said the prime minister’s comments on Muslims had been misinterpreted. Mr. Modi, Mr. Vadakkan said, was referring to “intruders” or “illegal migrants” who the party claims are being used by the political opposition to “redefine the demography.”

Privately, Western diplomats in New Delhi do little to hide their discomfort with some of Mr. Modi actions as a democratic ally, from the targeting of minorities to his crackdowns on opposition and dissent. But they acknowledge that he is exploiting a particularly open season in the global order, with many of their own capitals providing a less positive example than they once did, and with so much focus on China and trade deals.

Mr. Markey, the Washington-based analyst, said the U.S. government was holding back from voicing concerns publicly for several reasons beyond its national interest in having India serve as an economic and geopolitical counterweight to China.

The United States, he said, realizes the growing limits of its public criticism in changing partner nations’ behavior. That was demonstrated most recently by the repeated instances in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel ignored President Biden’s demands that the Israeli military change its conduct within the war in Gaza.

Criticism of Mr. Modi, Mr. Markey added, could also backfire for U.S. politicians who “do not want to get crosswise with Indian diaspora groups.”

But Mr. Modi may not remain immune as he pursues closer partnerships with the United States in areas like joint weapons manufacturing, transfer of high technology and sharing of intelligence.

“My sense is that Washington’s increasing discomfort with Modi’s domestic politics is gradually lowering the ceiling of potential U.S. cooperation with India,” Mr. Markey said. “The question is just how far Washington is willing to trust India. Will India be treated as an ally in everything but name, or as a partner more like Vietnam or Saudi Arabia?”

Belle
Posts: 5133
Joined: Tue Mar 17, 2015 10:45 am

Re: India’s PM Narendra Modi: What makes this Islamophobic strongman tick?

Post by Belle » Wed Apr 24, 2024 6:18 pm

A much more balanced view.

Narendra Modi is unbeatable
Francis Pike
The Spectator

Voting in India’s national elections started last Friday. It will take six weeks to complete, which is less of a surprise when one considers that in a population of 1.4 billion people there are 969 million voters, 2,600 political parties, 28 states and 780 languages. It is a logistical task of dazzling scale, not only for India’s election commission but also for its political leaders.

Why then, in January, did Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi kick off his re-election campaign to secure his record third five-year term of office in the remote northern city of Ayodhya? This city, in a district with only a few million inhabitants, is a pinprick in the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP), an area with a population of around 250 million people. (If UP were a country, it would rank as the 5th largest by population).

Ayodhya’s importance is twofold. Firstly, it is the birthplace of Lord Ram, the eponymous hero of the 24,000 verse Ramayana, which constitutes one of Hinduisms most important texts. On 22 January, Modi, wearing tradition golden robes, unveiled the black stone idol to Lord Ram which stands in the centre of the newly-built temple. Secondly, the temple of Ram was built on the ruins of the centuries old Babri Mosque named after the first Mughal emperor, Babur.

Modi, India’s nationalist leader, is in no doubt.

It was burnt down by rampaging Hindu nationalists in 1992, and the result was communal violence throughout India. Some 2,000 people, mainly Muslims, died in the riots, including 900 people in Bombay. I arrived to live in the city some two months after the end of the riots, but nevertheless became quickly aware of continuing racial tensions. Modi’s consecration of the Ram temple was in a sense the culmination of the Ajodhya story. For Modi, the temple presents itself as part of his nationalist narrative of India’s triumph over foreign rule by the Moguls – and indeed by Great Britain.

In 1992, communal riots were particularly bad in Prime Minister Modi’s home state of Gujerat. At the time, Modi was a member the volunteer organisation known the RSS (Rashtriya Swayamevak Sangh). RSS’s leaders, pracharaks, such as Modi, are required to be celibate, hence Modi’s famed sexual abstinence.

Although Modi, who started his working life as a station platform chai wallah, had an arranged marriage forced on him by his parents at the age of 18, he left his wife almost immediately. Supposedly the marriage was never consummated. In search of spiritual adventure, he travelled around northern India visiting ashrams (Hindu monasteries) before scaling the ranks of first the RSS and then the BJP, becoming chief minister in 2001.

The RSS is a Hindu spiritual and paramilitary organisation which operates throughout India. It has between five and six million members. Millions attend its 59,000 shakhas, daily branch meetings. Its political influence within the ruling BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party: Indian People’s Party) is such that apart from Modi, its members include 24 state leaders.

Hindu nationalism is thus central to Modi’s identity as a politician. His is in effect a quasi-religious leader as well as India’s prime minister. Inevitably, in a country where 79.8 per cent of the population are practicing Hindus, compared to 14.2 per cent who are Muslim, Modi plays to his strengths.

But it would be a mistake to think that Modi’s electoral success is solely reliant on religion. He is a brilliant electoral operator. A known technophile, he cultivates his ascetic image through television, his website and extensive use of Elon Musk’s social media platform, X. Above all, Modi has developed his cult status through his monthly Mann ki Baat (Talking from the Heart) radio shows in which he delivers homilies about cooking, water conservation, schoolwork etc. With a regular audience of 230 million people, the show is a phenomenon. At the same time, he can deliver brilliant one-liners, and cutting ad hominen attacks on his political opponents.

Electoral skills aside, Modi as a politician is a real-world operator of substance. He became the BJP leader through his astute management of Gujerat’s economy, which he made into one of India’s most successful states. India has been a bigger task. He has given emphasis to the upgrading of India’s previously decrepit infrastructure, including its highways, railways, water distribution, power supply and its banking system.

As a result, India has become investable and is an increasingly attractive alternative to China. Foreign direct investment into India rose from $36 billion when Modi came to office in 2014, to $76 billion in 2023. No wonder countries, Britain included, are beating a path to India. Some countries, such as Switzerland, have already secured free trade deals.

Ultimately the electoral success of Modi and the BJP has been established by economic competence. It is in this arena that the Congress party, after more than half a century of political dominance, failed. On the BBC World’s Hardtalk in 2005, interviewer Stephen Sackur disapprovingly asked why India had abandoned socialism, Congress party finance minister, P. Chidambaram, bluntly replied: ‘socialist means do not deliver. We tried that for thirty years.’

Indeed, after the collapse of India’s main trading partner, the Soviet Union, in 1991, the economic ideologies of the formerly socialist Congress party and the BJP were barely distinguishable. At that time, I used to meet young Congress government technocrats in Delhi, such as Jairam Ramesh (later a minister for the environment), who were as enthusiastic about structural economic reform as the young Turks I knew who surrounded Margaret Thatcher when she came to power.

Internecine factional struggles within the Congress party were finally capped by blatant corruption.

However, by 2009, Congress had lost its mojo – without a belief in socialism, what was Congress’s point? Furthermore, the institutional corruption of bureaucratic government remained intact. The electoral credit won by Nehru for achieving independence had been dissipated by an increasingly diminished dynastic line from Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi and now Rahul Gandhi, who is a pale shadow of his forbears. Internecine factional struggles within Congress were finally capped by blatant corruption. Gandhi, a poor orator, is seen as internationalist rich kid born with the proverbial silver spoon. Tepid statements such as ‘India is the country of love, not hatred’ are unlikely to sway the electorate his way.

Unlike Modi, Rahul Gandhi has failed to craft a credible narrative for Congress. And his complaints about the Prime Minister’s supposedly anti-Muslim ‘hate speech’ rhetoric this week ring hollow. Rahul’s grandmother, Indira, was not averse to using the Hindu card, particularly against the Sikhs, to promote her political ambitions. Moreover, under Modi, communal violence has largely been notable for its absence. According to opinion polls, a not insignificant proportion Muslims support the BJP. Overall, polls predict a landslide victory for Modi.

Modi, India’s most consequential leader since its founding father, Nehru, may not be to the taste of the progressive international media, but his achievements thus far have been globally significant. An economically powerful India is an increasingly important counterweight to China. By comparison, Nehru and his daughter Indira were pro-Soviet socialist blowhards who completely failed to make their country fit for the 20th century, let alone the 21st century.

After ten years in power, Modi has laid the groundwork for the transformation of India into a great world power. Whether he completes the job remains to be seen. But Modi, India’s nationalist leader, is in no doubt. As he recently declared: ‘The work of these 10 years… this is a trailer, I have a long way to go’. A fourth term in office, starting in 2029, may not be beyond him.

jserraglio
Posts: 11954
Joined: Sun May 29, 2005 7:06 am
Location: Cleveland, Ohio

Re: India’s PM Narendra Modi: What makes this Islamophobic strongman tick?

Post by jserraglio » Wed Apr 24, 2024 6:32 pm

Strongmanophilia sits deep in Right-field awaiting the call to the bullpen. Orbán, Duda, Erdoğan, DeSantis, Trump, Netanyahu, and now Modi.

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