Deve Gowda suffers from Alice in Wonderland syndrome
V C Bhaskaran
During the charade which our political bartenders put up last week, a statement of far-reaching consequence made by Union Home Minister Indrajit
Gupta went unnoticed. He said on authority
that Pakistan's Inter Service Intelligence had struck deep roots
in Kerala and Tamil Nadu, and communal situations in both states
were pretty dangerous.
Both Kerala and Tamil Nadu are ruled by
parties which form the United Front. When Sitaram Kesri pulled the rug from under Prime Minister H D Deve
Gowda, the apparent reason for his act was that the UF experiment,
meant primarily to forestall communal forces, had failed. In other words, the Deve Gowda government
had not contained the Bharatiya Janata Party which, in the eye of the Congress
and the UF, is 'communal.'
But the Communist home minister's frank
admission of the enemy in his own backyard -- Marxist-ruled Kerala
and Dravida Munnetra Kazagham-ruled Tamil Nadu -- went unnoticed by these champions of secularism.
Who does not know that the ISI's pernicious designs are motivated
solely by Islamic fundamentalism? It is just as well that it was
E M S Namboodiripad's Marxist government which made history by carving out
the Muslim-dominated Malapuram district. Our political
leaders having turned into brokers, the larger interests of
the country's unity and integrity have remained mere slogans.
In its 50th year of Independence, India stands exposed as a nation of petty people. After all, the battle in
New Delhi was never over principles, but for personal gains. During
the past 10 months or so, many among the country's top
political leadership have been either in jail or on bail. Our hotchpotch
prime minister's main concern has been to silence his Congress opponents
on whose support he came to power.
Of course, he hogged maximum publicity with his tours
abroad, including one with the whole of his brood, and
announcing gift packages for different parts of the country. Being
leader of a dozen regional and local parties, Deve Gowda obviously
could not think of the country as a whole. He has proved
time and again that he is no more than a taluk-level politician,
who naturally could not get out of the Alice in Wonderland syndrome.
While Alice was a poor innocent country girl, Deve Gowda is at best
a rustic.
Deve Gowda's reported bid to ensure even the BJP's support to
remain in power knocks the bottom off his 'secular' credentials.
It has been power at any cost with the UF. And the height of Deve Gowda's
political naivette was to try and implicate Kesri in criminal cases.
Insiders say that
Kesri took the extreme step when he got wind of Deve Gowda's plan
to arrest him. The arrest was to be effected on April 4. So Kesri took pre-emtive
action on March 30 itself, and put Deve Gowda in the dock.
As D-day came closer, it was pathetic to see Deve Gowda declaring
that the UF stand during talks with the Congress was that the leadership issue was not negotiable.
And all the while Deve Gowda's partners were busy trying to find an
alternative for him! So much for the UF's 'principled stand.'
The BJP, which has been blowing hot and cold during the past
week and more has not come off with flying colours either. While
party supremo Atal Bihari Vajpayee's immediate reaction
was that the party was readying for a mid term poll, the
national executive said it was keeping all its options
open.
The party spokesman did not stress its earlier stand that
its first option was to vote the government out.
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