Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
Both Benazir and Jayalalitha lie buried in the ashes of their follies. Both will
rise from these ashes like the legendary Phoenix:
Jayalalitha and Benazir were both destined from early youth to
be figures larger than life. Both had a good academic record.
Jayalalitha was forestalled, by her mother's ambitions for her,
from going to university, while Benazir went all the way to Oxford.
Yet, from what I have been able to glean from girls who were at
school with Jayalalitha, it is clear that she was among the most
outstanding students of her generation and would have done well
in any profession she cared to take up.
At about the age Jayalalitha
soaped to the top of the Madras film industry -- 16/17 -- Benazir
accompanied her father to Shimla. Before they were out of their
teens, both knew they were going to be names in the history books.
The sense of manifest destiny was only confirmed by the trauma
which both were subjected to before they emerged into their own
from the shadows of their respective famed associates -- her father,
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, in Benazir's case; her companion, MGR in
Jayalalitha's case. The trauma was worse for Benazir as she went
through the gruesome experience of the hanging of her father.
Jayalalitha's trauma was more political. Through his long illness
from 1984 to 1987, it remained unclear whether MGR was, in fact,
prepared to anoint Jayalalitha his successor. There was a bitter war
between MGR's wife
Janaki and Jayalalitha which led only to the victory of their
shared enemy, Karunanidhi, in the state assembly elections of
January 1989.
Following her rout in those elections, Janaki decided
voluntarily to remove herself to the United States, leaving Jayalalitha
free to rally her political troops. She did so with astonishing
success. Those five years in the white heat of politics, steeled
Jayalalitha and forged her political character.
Both JJ and BB came through the furnace to attain the summit of
political power at a comparable stage in their lives; the late
thirties/early forties. Jayalalitha is five years older than Benazir
and became chief minister nearly three years after Benazir became
PM. Benazir was once dismissed, defeated, then restored before
being humiliatingly worsted at the polls; Jayalalitha lost badly
the first time round, won overwhelmingly at her next two outings
(the Lok Sabha election of 1989 and the assembly-cum-Parliament
elections of 1991) before being.
Today, both empresses lie buried
in the ashes of their follies. Both, I have little doubt, will
rise from these ashes like the legendary Phoenix.
Both are very wealthy women who understand the need for money.
Both seem unable, however, to distinguish need from greed, or
cupidity from stupidity. Both need emotional succor for the trauma
they have been through. Both have found it in companions who give
them solace, but, in return for extending emotional stability,
demand a heavy price in unwarranted, unbridled power.
Benazir, the first time round restricted such illegitimate, if awesome power,
to her husband, Asif Zardari, with whom she seemed besotted. Either
because, as is rumoured in Pakistan, she was fed up with his philandering
or because, in her second term, she needed, like in some Byzantine
or Mughal court, to counter the power of her spouse in affairs
of state, the shadowy Naheed Khan, a lady confidante, became, like
Sasikala, the feared Mistress of the Household, to whom all must
pay court.
As with Sasikala, so with Naheed Khan and Asif Zardari,
it would be impossible to tell, without full investigation, whether
the loot of the public exchequer was their private enterprise
or at the behest of the principal.
Certainly, the political price for public disgust with the goings-on
in the premier household had to paid, in Madras as much as in
Islamabad, by the principals. Jayalalitha today has but two seats
in the Tamil Nadu assembly where on the morrow of the 1991 election
she commanded all but one. And the once-invincible PPP is reduced
to less than 20 seats in the Pakistan national assembly, a complete
wipe-out in Punjab, Baluchistan and the Frontier, and to a mere
Opposition role even in Sindh.
All the party's MNAs are elected
from Sindh alone, and that too from feudal-rotten boroughs increasingly
under threat from urbanisation, modernisation and clan rivalries
of both the inter-clan and intra-clan kind. On the face of it,
both ladies, having taken their bow on the stage of history, have
now bowed out. However, it takes but little scratching below the
surface to recognise that they are down, yes, but no, not out,
at least not yet.
Both may be expected to ride back to power on
the same steed -- through prosecution in the courts of law being
regarded as persecution in the court of the people.
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