Modi sounds more and more like Bush, bullying others into making decisions. If he wins, the only hope to save India would be a stronger opposition, who would have the balls to oppose frivilous bills in the interests of the common good. Sadly in America, the first and supposedly mature democracy, the senators and congresspersons were cowards and betrayed America by not standing up to the bully and going to war and destroying America and its economy. Could this happen in India? I hope not.
Continued - http://mikeghouseforindia.blogspot.com/2014/04/could-modi-be-development-disaster-by.html
Mike Ghouse
www.MikeGhouse.net
Courtesy - India Together
Could Modi be a development disaster? By Ashish Kothari
Perhaps those who
will cheer most if Modi becomes PM are the corporate sector and a part
of the upwardly mobile middle classes. To them, people's struggles for
justice, movements by the poor to resist displacement and land
acquisition, and environmental activism are all 'hurdles' to the profits
and prosperity they dream of.
According to
Prajapati and Shah, Gujarat today has 30 per cent of India's major
"accident hazard" industries and over 4500 hazardous chemical factories.
Moreover, Anklesaria and Vapi in Gujarat have topped India's 'critical
polluted areas' list in 2009, 2011 and 2013.Yet, as the duo found out
from information generated using the RTI Act, there is as yet no
disaster emergency plan, and the Gujarat State Disaster Management
Agency (which has the Chief Minister as chairman) does not even have
consolidated information on the industries. So much for Modi's
much-touted efficient governance!
To add to this is the evidence
of the poor state of health and education in the midst of the so-called
Gujarat miracle. It has abysmally high school dropout rates (58 per
cent), especially amongst adivasis (78 per cent) and Dalits (65 per
cent), and it scores low on a number of health indicators. That is not
surprising perhaps, given that its expenditure on education and health
is significantly below the national average.
Full Report:
As real as the fears of Narendra Modi
being a socially divisive Prime Minister are the dangers of his brand
of development. In a recent campaign speech in Goa, Modi declared that
if he becomes PM, he will ensure that mining is re-opened in the state;
never mind the fact that it is the Supreme Court that has stayed it, due
to its severe impacts on water, environment, and people's livelihoods.
In
fact, Modi's tenure as Gujarat Chief Minister has been marked by a
spate of such decisions with scant regard for either nature or for the
poor, and a disdain of democracy. His penchant for mega-follies, such as
the Rs. 2063-crore statue of Patel that he is getting installed by the
Narmada river, only make the prospects of his taking over the country's
reins that much more scary.
The UPA's record is not particularly
positive, what with nearly 2.5 lakh hectares of forest land having been
diverted in just a decade for such projects and continued
forcible acquisition of land resulting in dispossession of farmers,
adivasis, fisherfolk and others. Communities, people's movements and
NGOs are up in arms over the rapidity with which the Union Environment
minister, Mr. Moily, has given environmental and forest clearances to
mining, industrial and infrastructural projects. But even this vast
scale of social and ecological disruption could be overshadowed if
Modinomics is given free rein.
If anyone still has doubts that
sacrificing the environment for so-called development is justified for a
country like India, look no further than a recent report
by that most aggressive promoter of the current model of development,
the World Bank. It estimates that the environmental damages India is
subjected to, such as disease caused by air pollution, knocks 5.7
percentage points off its economic growth.
Given that growth in the last few years has not been much above this, and that the Bank report
accounts for only some of the many kinds of damage, it is more than
likely that even by measures of conventional GDP indicators, the economy
is on decline. Not to mention that hidden in these figures is the
horrifying and incalculable socio-cultural impact of displacement,
dispossession, disease, premature death, malnutrition, and loss of
employment that such damage entails.
The Gujarat model is a classic example of all this. In a recent report,
labour and environmental activists Rohit Prajapati and Trupti Shah have
laid bare the ecological and social impacts of Modinomics. To be sure,
they have been outspoken critics of the excesses of past regimes too.
Their analysis of the government's own records show seriously inflated
figures of new employment creation, chronic underpayment, deliberate
dispossession of farmers to create a mass of cheap labour for industries
and coercive land acquisition. Both Prajapati and Shah are based in
Vadodara, Gujarat, and members of the organisation Radical Socialist.
According
to Prajapati and Shah, Gujarat today has 30 per cent of India's major
"accident hazard" industries and over 4500 hazardous chemical factories.
Moreover, Anklesaria and Vapi in Gujarat have topped India's 'critical
polluted areas' list in 2009, 2011 and 2013.Yet, as the duo found out
from information generated using the RTI Act, there is as yet no
disaster emergency plan, and the Gujarat State Disaster Management
Agency (which has the Chief Minister as chairman) does not even have
consolidated information on the industries. So much for Modi's
much-touted efficient governance!
To add to this is the evidence
of the poor state of health and education in the midst of the so-called
Gujarat miracle. It has abysmally high school dropout rates (58 per
cent), especially amongst adivasis (78 per cent) and Dalits (65 per
cent), and it scores low on a number of health indicators. That is not
surprising perhaps, given that its expenditure on education and health
is significantly below the national average.
There is a serious
neglect of the poorer or socially marginalised regions of the state
(with northern Gujarat and tribal areas being the most neglected) and of
already marginalised sections like Muslims. This does not even factor
in the ill-health being caused by chemical and other forms of pollution.
The fact that Modinomics has been particularly iniquitous and socially
disruptive is laid out in great detail by a number of analysts in the book Poverty Amidst Prosperity: Essays on the Trajectory of Development in Gujarat, edited by Atul Sood.
Modi's
developmental paradigm includes sidestepping all norms to make land and
water available to corporates such as the Adanis, Reliance and Tatas,
including environmental clearances based on flimsy impact assessment,
hugely subsidised land and resource allocations, and forcible land
acquisition. It also has more than a touch of megalomania.
His
plans for the Patel statue are symptomatic; envisioned as the world's
largest (and possibly the costliest too), the tourism associated with it
will take away lands, water and other resources of 70 villages. A
substantial part of this is adivasi agricultural land, and the state
government has created a Kevadia Area Development Authority with special
powers to acquire such land or declare it non-agricultural.
Then
there is the Kalpasar project, in which Modi wants to dam the Gulf of
Khambhat to create the world's largest freshwater reservoir, purportedly
to fulfil the state's water needs. Apart from the colossal social and
ecological costs of such a project, this completely ignores much
cheaper, more sustainable, and more democratically managed alternatives
to water security such as those demonstrated by civil society groups in
Kachchh and Saurashtra.
It is unlikely that Modi will change his
developmental outlook should he take the seat in Delhi. He will instruct
the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) to carry on Mr. Moily's
good work of clearing every project that comes its way and if some of
the environmental laws that people fought to get in the 1980s and 1990s
seem to be in the way, he will initiate measures to dilute them. This
has in any case been the trend since economic globalisation was
introduced into India and Modi will take it much further.
It is
also possible that some of the progressive rights-based legislation and
programmes that the UPA brought in, largely due to civil society
initiatives it was open to, will be modified. Activists in Gujarat report
that there is an atmosphere of intolerance and authoritarianism that
discourages ay form of dissent. A fifth of the murders of RTI activists
in the country in recent times, have taken place in Gujarat; one of
these was of environmental and social activist Amit Jethwa, who had
exposed the links of BJP MP Dinu Solanki with illegal mining near Gir
forest.
According to Prajapati and Shah, when villagers and
activists announced a peaceful protest against Modi's visit to the
Narmada river to 'break the ground' for the Patel statue on 31 October
2013, they were detained and told that no-one should speak out when the
CM is there.
Earlier in 2013, a public hearing for a proposed nuclear power station in Bhavnagar district
was held under heavy police bandobast, in an atmosphere of repression
and fear. Protests by fisherfolk, farmers, adivasis, marginalised people
in villages and cities who are being displaced or whose lands are being
taken away to be given at a pittance to private companies have been
ignored or ruthlessly quelled.
Across India, many of the
struggles for rights-based laws, such as the Right to Information Act,
have been driven by citizens asking for greater voice and more direct
democracy. If Gujarat's record is an indication, it is likely that such
struggles will be dealt with harshly by Modi as PM.
In respect of
all the above, particularly the model of globalised 'development', Modi
and the BJP are no different from other mainstream political leaders
and parties. They perpetuate a longer history of appropriation and
centralised control of land and natural resources (which saw the biggest
thrust during colonial times) and build on the blind adoption of the
western model of development by our leaders since independence. But
Modi's combination of undemocratic functioning, megalomania, faith in
big private corporations, and social divisiveness could take the
destructive model to new heights.
Modi will also accentuate
further the utter disregard for alternative forms of well-being that
have characterised previous regimes. India has thousands of on-ground
practical alternatives, such as sustainable agriculture and forestry,
rural and urban small scale manufacturing, crafts-based jobs, artisanal
fisheries, localised service sector employment, decentralised water
harvesting and energy production in villages and cities, direct
self-governance by gram sabhas and struggles for social justice for
women, Dalits and others, among many more. Several of these are in
Gujarat, and a small sample can be seen at www.vikalpsangam.org.
Perhaps
those who will cheer most if Modi becomes PM are the corporate sector
and a part of the upwardly mobile middle classes. To them, people's
struggles for justice, movements by the poor to resist displacement and
land acquisition, and environmental activism are all 'hurdles' to the
profits and prosperity they dream of.
Some of UPA's rights-based
legislations, the revision of the Land Acquisition Act, or moves by
individual ministers, such as the conscientious current Minister for
Tribal Affairs, have also alarmed these sections. These are seen as
brakes on India's ascendance to global superpower status.
It is
of little consequence to these supporters of the globalised growth model
that it has created almost no net growth in employment in the formal
sector, has left well over half the country's population in poverty and
ill-health and that it is undermining the prospects of healthy, decent
living of future generations. This has been analysed in great detail in
Churning the Earth: The Making of Global India (Viking/Penguin 2012).
Unfortunately,
it is possible that large parts of even other classes will vote for
Modi, dreaming of reaching the same status as the 10 per cent of Indians
who own 53 per cent of its wealth today. That will be a colossal folly,
for in such a model of development, these dreams will only become
nightmares, just as they have wherever it has been imposed by whichever
party in power.
And so, the final question: who then does one
vote for? The UPA has unfortunately not shown itself to be particularly
respectful of ecological issues, social and economic equity, or the
needs of dignified employment (though one must not deny their
contribution to rights-based legislation and programmes). The Aam Aadmi
Party shows some promise of a different kind of politics and economic
strategies that may benefit the 'common' person, but with no policy
statement or manifesto till now, it is difficult to gauge.
Separately,
I have written how all this makes it imperative to make national
elections far less consequential than they are now. But that's in the
long run, and one needs to decide on the upcoming elections. All I can
say is that most constituencies are likely to have at least one person
who is known to be honest, has worked his or her way up through social
causes, and is upfront in defending sustainability, social justice and
secularism. Let us hope that enough such people enter Parliament, so
that irrespective of which party forms the government and who becomes
the Prime Minister, no one shall have the free rein to ruin the country
through short-sighted policies and sell-out to corporations.
http://www.kashmirtimes.com/newsdet.aspx?q=30853
—(Courtesy: India Together)
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