Political
Diary
New Delhi, 11 May
2021
Regionalism To Fore
‘VETO’ ON OUTSIDER
By Poonam I Kaushish
Pre
1947 India resounded to “throw out the British”. Sprinkled with nationalism,
all pledged to make India united and secular. The 2021 Mera Bharat Mahan is all about chucking the “outsider aam aadmi” from States. All promising to
make their respective States more local chaap.
Underscoring, 21st Century India’s rajnitik
dal-dal: Caste+ Creed+ Region=Raj
Gaddi.
Trust
Ulta Pulta UP’s Chief Minister Yogi
to turn the Centre’s vaccination policy on its head: Any one from any State can
get the jab according to their location. The Saffron Chief Minister begs to
differ and mandated: Slots only for State residents between 18-44 years who must
produce a local address proof to get vaccinated. Not for him the economic and human cost to
the country if everyone is not vaccinated quickly.
His
logic? The State Government has purchased vaccines for its people by investing
its own money to order it. Therefore, only locals will be vaccinated, not
‘outsiders’ who are cornering vaccines. Of the 100 doses administered daily
only five locals get vaccinated as outsiders make up 25% to 50% of
beneficiaries.
Predictably,
this has unleashed the genie of regionalism in the State whereby it has sent ‘outside’
residents in a tizzy. A Noida professional hailing from Madhya Pradesh is now
scouting for openings in Delhi or Haryana as he does not have a local UP ID
proof. Ditto, of others in Ghaziabad, Meerut etc.
In
Tamil Nadu all eyes are on Stalin to fulfil his promise of 75% reservation for
locals. Pertinently, this despite the Supreme Court’s Constitution Bench last
week striking down Maharashtra’s law granting 13% reservation to Marathas in
educational institutions and 12% in Government jobs in the State over the 50%
limit in quotas. It saw no merit in the State’s argument that 85% of the Maratha
population is backward.
In
March Haryana Governor gave his assent to the Haryana State Employment of Local
Candidates Bill providing 75% reservation for local candidates applying to
private sector jobs that pay less than Rs 50,000 per month. Big deal, if it
contravenes Article 14 and 19 (equality before law and right to practice any
profession anywhere in India).
Taking cue Karnataka too decided to reserve Group C and D jobs for ‘Kannadigas’(who stay in the State for over 10 years and studied
Kannada until Class 10) in both public and private sector, addressing a
long-standing demand by pro-Kannada groups.
This
does not surprise me. Over the years regionalism has remained the most potent
force in Indian politics since Independence whereby State after State has upped
its ante against outsiders and been the main basis of formation of many
regional Parties.
In
1952 the fast-unto-death by Telugu leader Potti Sriramulu for a Telegu State
out of composite Madras Presidency resulted in Andhra Pradesh. In 1966 the Shiv
Sena launched its agitation against Kannadigas in Maharashtra and became the
self-styled champion of everything Marathi nurtured on the infamous ‘Marathi manoos' standard, by which
practically everyone in Mumbai was an ‘outsider' except 28% Maharashtrians. Then
followed North-East reorganization on the basis of locals and tribals in the 1970s.
Our
netas too reveled in playing the
regional card. In the 1999 Lok Sabha polls, BJP dubbed Congress Lucknow
candidate Karan Singh, former J&K’s Sadr-i-Riyasat
‘outsider’ vs ‘insider’ Vajpayee.
Never mind, Lucknow is miles away from Gwalior, Vajpayee’s birthplace.
Interestingly, the Sangh again portrayed ‘Vajpayee the local’ in Himachal, by
underscoring his love for Manali.
Thus,
regionalism thrived with Parties and leaders making it their mantra. Former Prime Minister and kisan leader Charan Singh floated
farmer-oriented Janata Party and Devi Lal Lok Dal in Haryana. Badal Akali Dal
in Punjab, NT Rama Rao Telugu Desam in Andhra, Bangla’s Mamata Banerjee
Trinamool Congress and Naveen Patnaik launched BJD in Orissa. All with a common
USP: “We are locals who shall rule, Delhi is dur --- the outsider.”
Another
form of regionalism found expression in inter-State boundary disputes between
Karnataka and Maharashtra on Belgaum where Marathi speaking population is surrounded
by Kannadigas, between Kerala and Karnataka on Kasargod, Assam and Nagaland on
Rengma reserved forests and Punjab and Haryana over Chandigarh.
Then, wrangling
over water resources: Narmada between Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat, Krishna by Karnataka
and Andhra and Cauvery among Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. Another quibble between Punjab
and Himachal over Ravi river and electricity sharing between Punjab and Delhi.
Questionably,
is regionalism ingrained in our psyche? Do we realize its ramifications of
further dividing people on regional lines which is antithetical to hope of
narrowing India’s burgeoning regional divide, thereby unleashing a
Frankenstein?
Undoubtedly,
citizens should have equal job opportunities across the country. The problem
kicks in when locals demand their pound of flesh and to some extent, rightly
so. Arguably, why should people from outside a State apply for menial jobs? If
outsiders corner sweepers or helpers jobs where should the locals go for their
bread and butter? Join militants and take up guns? Does that promote national
integration?
Moreover,
regionalism is a serious threat to development, progress and unity which could
challenge internal security by insurgent groups who propagate and fan feelings
of regionalism against the country’s mainstream politico-administrative setup
and give rise to regional Parties.
Consequently,
regional demands become national imperatives whereby policies are launched to
satisfy regional demands which are extended across the country. Take Minimum Support
Price given to sugarcane, it helped Maharashtra farmers
but was implemented across all States resulting in agitations of farmers
belonging to UP, Punjab and Haryana.
Add to
this continuous
neglect of a region by the Centre resulting in uneven pattern of socio-
economic development have created regional disparities as seen in BIMARU States
(Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and UP) leading to economic
migration due to low rate of economic growth, poor infrastructural facilities
in backward States, political and administration failure, low level of social
expenditure by poor States on education, health and sanitation along-with
vote-bank politics on language and culture.
Today our unity in
diversity is perhaps on the brink of extinction, that although India still
remains one country, some are demanding to be allocated a portion for their
“families”. Giving rise to conflict due to jobs tussle
between migrants and locals, thanks to failure to create enough employment
opportunity.
Clearly,
regional economic inequality is a potent time bomb directed against national
unity and political stability as Indian nationalism continuously grapples with
regional nationalism. Time our leaders rise above petty politricks, think
beyond vote-bank politics and cry a halt to regionalism as it is detrimental to
long-term growth.
They
need to think creatively about how to achieve the goal of putting everyone on
equal footing. Merely banking on regionalism and reservation will not spell unity.
The need of the hour is to develop each region of India, through devolution of
power to local Governments and empowering people for their participation in
decision-making.
After all, Article-19, gives every citizen a fundamental right
to move around and settle down peacefully any part of the country. Social
justice and equal opportunity is not the prerogative of only locals given how
our caste-creed politics has already become divisive and self-defeating. No
longer will young India accept that power in regionalism can be transformed
into power in numbers. As citizens of India our netas should respect the fundamental right of every person. Hum Bihari hain toh kya
huah, dil wale hain!
----- INFA
(Copyright, India News & Feature
Alliance)
|