Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
Yawn! Dairy of a somnambulist
Monday
Woke up in a cold sweat in the middle of the night. It was the
nightmare that did it. I dreamt I had received an invitation to
a swearing-in at Rashtrapati Bhavan. And when I got there it was
not for me but Ramakrishna Hegde. Damn him. He ruins my night
most nights and then I get blamed for dozing through the day.
Would these media blokes be so nasty about me if they were started
awake every night by vision of their proprietors sacking them?
I tried to drop off again, but the nightmare continued, now with
Kesri bursting in on my reveries with a hideous cackle. I was
just getting into a lovely dream of watching Joginder Singh dunking
that @%#! Venkatagiri Gowda in a vat of boiling oil, when my bedside
telephone rang. It was my private secretary, Mahendra Jain saying.
"Your wake-up call, Sir." I promptly fell asleep. At
last.
(Fragmentary records (charred but readable) recovered after the
recent arson at the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences, when
angry out-patients burnt down the building to attract the attention
of doctors on strike, show that the Wake-Up Call was recommended
by the AIIMS psychiatrist who was concerned at the serious impact
of sleepless nights on the health of the prime minister.
Experiments
on a random sampling of Karnataka politicians had shown that they
responded best to contradictions. For example, if the Supreme
Court ordered the release of Cauvery waters, they promptly turned
off the tap; and if the Bachchawat Award said the height of the
Almatti Dam be restricted, they promptly raised it. Doctors at
AIIMS reasoned, therefore, that if you asked the prime minister
to wake up, he'd fall asleep. It worked - like a dream! -- Editors. )
Tuesday
That wretched Mani fellow is at it again;
going on and on about me sleeping. Mahendra suggested
dunking the guy in a vat of boiling oil. "Impossible, "I
told him, "Joginder is stashing away all the oil available
to deal with Venkatagiri Gowda. And the deficit in the oil pool
account is too large to import any more."
"Then why don't you ask the petroleum minister to release
you a few litres from domestic stocks?" suggested Mahendra.
He really can be so naive sometimes. Must again ask the Cabinet
secretary to find me a replacement. I asked him once. The chap
said he would pass on the request to the women and child department.
"Why W&C?" I wondered.
"Because that's where they can best get a nanny." He
replied - mysteriously. I wonder what he meant.
Anyway, someone has to take Mahendra in hand. So, I patiently
explained to him that even though I am Prime Minister (and, therefore,
top dog) I can't ask the petroleum minister to spare me any oil
because the petroleum minister is from Tamil Nadu -- and the wretched
fellow will immediately demand that I match every litre of oil
he spares me with an equal number of cusecs of Cauvery waters.
Where, then, will that leave me in Haradanahalli?
My explanation only sent Mahendra into deeper depression. "I
told you, saar," he said, "better five years as King
in Karnataka than five months as Puppet in PMO." I cheered
him up. "Don't worry Mahendra, we'll soon be back in Bangalore."
I wonder why he looked aghast.
(Clarification from H.K. Dua, information adviser to the prime
minister (in conversation with the editors): "The prime minister
had got it wrong. He thought Mahendra looked aghast because none
less than the prime minister was confirming that they would soon
be back in Bangalore. Actually, Mahendra looked aghast because
just then I rushed in clutching the day's news-clippings. Mahendra
thought I had overheard the prime minister's remark about being
back in Bangalore soon and would release it to the press as official.
He need not have worried. The press already knew. For I had rushed
in without knocking only to show the PM without delay the stark
headlines of the day. They uniformly read: 'Gowda back in Bangalore
Soon.' Obviously, I should have told the press that the prime
minister was not somnambulant - but clairvoyant!")
|