Rediff Navigator News

Commentary

Capital Buzz

The Rediff Interview

Insight

The Rediff Poll

Miscellanea

Crystal Ball

Click Here

The Rediff Special

Meanwhile...

Arena

Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar

H D Deve Gowda How can anyone trust in the objectivity of a prime minister who, as chief minister a bare nine months ago, retorts 'Not a drop more' to farmers of a neighbouring state losing their winter crop for lack of water in the Cauvery? And how can anyone trust in the fairplay of a CM-turned-PM who thinks it witty to riposte that Karnataka does not build dams to supply Tamil Nadu with water?

And now can anyone expect justice from a CM who, the moment he becomes PM, smuggles Rs 20 billion to dam the waters of the Krishna from entering Andhra Pradesh from Karnataka in the guise of an Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme under which no irrigation project anywhere in India is going to receive a tithe of the benefit which Karnataka's CM in Delhi has gifted to Karnataka's CM in Bangalore? Does it surprise you that the gentleman protesteth too much?

And having slipped up on this disingenuous sleight of hand, what alternative has Deve Gowda got but to proclaim to the gullible on Independence Day that he is the prime minister of India, not the chief minister of Karnataka? The people of India, beginning with the people of Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, do not believe him; and if the people of Karnataka ever thought that statement really represented his policies, that would be the end of his political career in Karnataka. Hence this politics of dissimulation being paraded as the management of contradictions. This is the prime ministership of a Dead Man Walking.

It is this dilemma which is at the heart of the larger question of regional satraps cobbling together a national government. If they sacrifice their national outlook to their regional compulsions, the nation loses. And if they sacrifice their regional compulsions to their 'national outlook', they lose their regional identity and hence their regional base. And so the chief ministers of distant West Bengal and remote Assam are asked to do what the prime minister, but for his Kannadiga origins, would have been required to do vis-a-vis his home state and Andhra Pradesh or between his home state and Tamil Nadu.

Do you think even a Narasimha Rao would have had to face such a crisis of credibility, such a humiliating confession of no-confidence?

A hundred days of this coalition of country bumpkins has shown - for those who care to see (and I confess that many, perhaps most of my peers don't see or don't want to see) - that the country needs the national outlook of a national party at the helm of the nation if the national interest is to take precedence over the regional interest. The next crisis will come when the AGP, having been authorised so thoughtlessly to negotiate with the ULFA without preconditions, places its demands. Who will then sort out the mess? A technical committee of the DMK and the LTTE?

So far, Deve Gowda's problems give cause only for amusement; soon, they will give cause for concern. Before that tragedy overtakes the nation, we must find some way of returning, at least in some measure, to that happy day when even a Charan Singh could be trusted to place the national good above the regional imperative.

There is but one ray of hope in this enveloping gloom. I suggest the prime minister give up his Hindi lessons. He is not going to be required to make another speech from the ramparts of the Red Fort. One of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse will take over from him long before the nation celebrates the 50th anniversary of its Independence.

Mani S Aiyar

Home | News | Business | Sport | Movies | Chat
Travel | Planet X | Freedom | Computers
Feedback

Copyright 1996 Rediff On The Net
All rights reserved