City Memo – Arundhati Roy on Anna Hazare’s Siege of Delhi General by The Delhi Walla - August 22, 2011August 25, 201119 We’re not Anna. [Photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] If what we’re watching on TV is indeed a revolution, then it has to be one of the more embarrassing and unintelligible ones of recent times. For now, whatever questions you may have about the Jan Lokpal Bill, here are the answers you’re likely to get: tick the box — (a) Vande Mataram (b) Bharat Mata ki Jai (c) India is Anna, Anna is India (d) Jai Hind. For completely different reasons, and in completely different ways, you could say that the Maoists and the Jan Lokpal Bill have one thing in common — they both seek the overthrow of the Indian State. One working from the bottom up, by means of an armed struggle, waged by a largely adivasi army, made up of the poorest of the poor. The other, from the top down, by means of a bloodless Gandhian coup, led by a freshly minted saint, and an army of largely urban, and certainly better off people. (In this one, the Government collaborates by doing everything it possibly can to overthrow itself.) In April 2011, a few days into Anna Hazare’s first “fast unto death,” searching for some way of distracting attention from the massive corruption scams which had battered its credibility, the Government invited Team Anna, the brand name chosen by this “civil society” group, to be part of a joint drafting committee for a new anti-corruption law. A few months down the line it abandoned that effort and tabled its own bill in Parliament, a bill so flawed that it was impossible to take seriously. Then, on August 16th, the morning of his second “fast unto death,” before he had begun his fast or committed any legal offence, Anna Hazare was arrested and jailed. The struggle for the implementation of the Jan Lokpal Bill now coalesced into a struggle for the right to protest, the struggle for democracy itself. Within hours of this ‘Second Freedom Struggle,’ Anna was released. Cannily, he refused to leave prison, but remained in Tihar jail as an honoured guest, where he began a fast, demanding the right to fast in a public place. For three days, while crowds and television vans gathered outside, members of Team Anna whizzed in and out of the high security prison, carrying out his video messages, to be broadcast on national TV on all channels. (Which other person would be granted this luxury?) Meanwhile 250 employees of the Municipal Commission of Delhi, 15 trucks, and six earth movers worked around the clock to ready the slushy Ramlila grounds for the grand weekend spectacle. Now, waited upon hand and foot, watched over by chanting crowds and crane-mounted cameras, attended to by India’s most expensive doctors, the third phase of Anna’s fast to the death has begun. “From Kashmir to Kanyakumari, India is One,” the TV anchors tell us. While his means may be Gandhian, Anna Hazare’s demands are certainly not. Contrary to Gandhiji’s ideas about the decentralisation of power, the Jan Lokpal Bill is a draconian, anti-corruption law, in which a panel of carefully chosen people will administer a giant bureaucracy, with thousands of employees, with the power to police everybody from the Prime Minister, the judiciary, members of Parliament, and all of the bureaucracy, down to the lowest government official. The Lokpal will have the powers of investigation, surveillance, and prosecution. Except for the fact that it won’t have its own prisons, it will function as an independent administration, meant to counter the bloated, unaccountable, corrupt one that we already have. Two oligarchies, instead of just one. Whether it works or not depends on how we view corruption. Is corruption just a matter of legality, of financial irregularity and bribery, or is it the currency of a social transaction in an egregiously unequal society, in which power continues to be concentrated in the hands of a smaller and smaller minority? Imagine, for example, a city of shopping malls, on whose streets hawking has been banned. A hawker pays the local beat cop and the man from the municipality a small bribe to break the law and sell her wares to those who cannot afford the prices in the malls. Is that such a terrible thing? In future will she have to pay the Lokpal representative too? Does the solution to the problems faced by ordinary people lie in addressing the structural inequality, or in creating yet another power structure that people will have to defer to? Meanwhile the props and the choreography, the aggressive nationalism and flag waving of Anna’s Revolution are all borrowed, from the anti-reservation protests, the world-cup victory parade, and the celebration of the nuclear tests. They signal to us that if we do not support The Fast, we are not ‘true Indians.’ The 24-hour channels have decided that there is no other news in the country worth reporting. ‘The Fast’ of course doesn’t mean Irom Sharmila’s fast that has lasted for more than ten years (she’s being force fed now) against the AFSPA, which allows soldiers in Manipur to kill merely on suspicion. It does not mean the relay hunger fast that is going on right now by ten thousand villagers in Koodankulam protesting against the nuclear power plant. ‘The People’ does not mean the Manipuris who support Irom Sharmila’s fast. Nor does it mean the thousands who are facing down armed policemen and mining mafias in Jagatsinghpur, or Kalinganagar, or Niyamgiri, or Bastar, or Jaitapur. Nor do we mean the victims of the Bhopal gas leak, or the people displaced by dams in the Narmada Valley. Nor do we mean the farmers in NOIDA, or Pune or Haryana or elsewhere in the country, resisting the takeover of the land. ‘The People’ only means the audience that has gathered to watch the spectacle of a 74-year-old man threatening to starve himself to death if his Jan Lokpal Bill is not tabled and passed by Parliament. ‘The People’ are the tens of thousands who have been miraculously multiplied into millions by our TV channels, like Christ multiplied the fishes and loaves to feed the hungry. “A billion voices have spoken,” we’re told. “India is Anna.” Who is he really, this new saint, this Voice of the People? Oddly enough we’ve heard him say nothing about things of urgent concern. Nothing about the farmer’s suicides in his neighbourhood, or about Operation Green Hunt further away. Nothing about Singur, Nandigram, Lalgarh, nothing about Posco, about farmer’s agitations or the blight of SEZs. He doesn’t seem to have a view about the Government’s plans to deploy the Indian Army in the forests of Central India. He does however support Raj Thackeray’s Marathi Manoos xenophobia and has praised the ‘development model’ of Gujarat’s Chief Minister who oversaw the 2002 pogrom against Muslims. (Anna withdrew that statement after a public outcry, but presumably not his admiration.) Despite the din, sober journalists have gone about doing what journalists do. We now have the back-story about Anna’s old relationship with the RSS. We have heard from Mukul Sharma who has studied Anna’s village community in Ralegan Siddhi, where there have been no Gram Panchayat or Co-operative society elections in the last 25 years. We know about Anna’s attitude to ‘harijans’: “It was Mahatma Gandhi’s vision that every village should have one chamar, one sunar, one kumhar and so on. They should all do their work according to their role and occupation, and in this way, a village will be self-dependant. This is what we are practicing in Ralegan Siddhi.” Is it surprising that members of Team Anna have also been associated with Youth for Equality, the anti-reservation (pro-“merit”) movement? The campaign is being handled by people who run a clutch of generously funded NGOs whose donors include Coca-Cola and the Lehman Brothers. Kabir, run by Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia, key figures in Team Anna, has received $400,000 from the Ford Foundation in the last three years. Among contributors to the India Against Corruption campaign there are Indian companies and foundations that own aluminum plants, build ports and SEZs, and run Real Estate businesses and are closely connected to politicians who run financial empires that run into thousands of crores of rupees. Some of them are currently being investigated for corruption and other crimes. Why are they all so enthusiastic? Remember the campaign for the Jan Lokpal Bill gathered steam around the same time as embarrassing revelations by Wikileaks and a series of scams, including the 2G spectrum scam, broke, in which major corporations, senior journalists, and government ministers and politicians from the Congress as well as the BJP seem to have colluded in various ways as hundreds of thousands of crores of rupees were being siphoned off from the public exchequer. For the first time in years, journalist-lobbyists were disgraced and it seemed as if some major Captains of Corporate India could actually end up in prison. Perfect timing for a people’s anti-corruption agitation. Or was it? At a time when the State is withdrawing from its traditional duties and Corporations and NGOs are taking over government functions (water supply, electricity, transport, telecommunication, mining, health, education); at a time when the terrifying power and reach of the corporate owned media is trying to control the public imagination, one would think that these institutions — the corporations, the media, and NGOs — would be included in the jurisdiction of a Lokpal bill. Instead, the proposed bill leaves them out completely. Now, by shouting louder than everyone else, by pushing a campaign that is hammering away at the theme of evil politicians and government corruption, they have very cleverly let themselves off the hook. Worse, by demonising only the Government they have built themselves a pulpit from which to call for the further withdrawal of the State from the public sphere and for a second round of reforms — more privatisation, more access to public infrastructure and India’s natural resources. It may not be long before Corporate Corruption is made legal and renamed a Lobbying Fee. Will the 830 million people living on Rs.20 a day really benefit from the strengthening of a set of policies that is impoverishing them and driving this country to civil war? This awful crisis has been forged out of the utter failure of India’s representative democracy, in which the legislatures are made up of criminals and millionaire politicians who have ceased to represent its people. In which not a single democratic institution is accessible to ordinary people. Do not be fooled by the flag waving. We’re watching India being carved up in war for suzerainty that is as deadly as any battle being waged by the warlords of Afghanistan, only with much, much more at stake. [This opinion was originally published in The Hindu] Gandhi is not Anna FacebookX Related Related posts: City Memo – In Which Anna Gives it Those Ones Delhi’s Bandaged Heart – Anna Akhmatova, Tihar Jail City Special – Arundhati Roy in Bombay City Special – Arundhati Roy in New York City Our Self-Written Obituaries – Anna Shipilova , Small Town in South Karnataka
Mayank, detractors of Mr Hazare is in minority at tye moment when the mob frenzy has taken over the common sense and democratic thinking. Mr Hazare and his bunch of so called upright crusaders are now talking about toppling the government. They are foolish to even think on these lines. This is a democratically elected government by the people and they can only be toppled when they loose the majority in the parliament. Do we need to teach this to the so called legal hawks of Mr Hazare? Mr Hazare is truly a ‘cunning’ person and must be taken to the court for trampling on the rights of citizens whose fundamental rights are being deprived by the mob that is on the streets. What rights do these people have to talk about corruption – The Chartered accountants who plan out tax evasion for their clients; The Lawyers who squeeze out money from their clients and prolong hearings and verdict; The Rickshawwallahs who never ever take you on the basis of the meter? ; the young men and women who perefr to bribe police rayher than paying the fine for breaking the traffic rules; The businessmen who may be running glitzy stores at GK, Southex, Def-Col Khan Market, but hardly pay any tax.The list is endless. This mindless engineered unrest will olead to chaos in the country and weakening of the Indian democracy. Alas, we are minority voice and there is no one to listen to us.
And it was funny to read in news the other day that Auto walas are calling a day-long strike in support of Anna Hazare. Somebody tweeted on the same saying: “Lol@autorickshawunion. Those who take people for a ride daily are now riding on anti-corruption bandwagon.”
Let Ms Roy understand that it is people’s satyagraha,The democracy in 65 years created more thugs and goondas. The election is fought with money power and not on value basis. Then people don’t have any means to fight or vent their feelings but to go behind Anna who is honest and a Gandhian.
thanx for sharing, a very good analysis … wish u also offered a solution … easier to find fault and never offer solutions. Arundhati is good at it. We live in a real world, using idealist ideas easy to just crib abt cons and never look at pros. In a real and pragmatic world each approach will have pros and cons. So one must adopt an approach with more pros than cons, an approach that does more good for wider number of people. Thats about it. Otherwise each approach can be criticized, just by focusing on cons by ignoring overwhelming amount of pros. lend more credibility to your analysis by balancing it, by offering solutions. When one starts offering solutions they then realize that pros and cons will always be there and it makes them less of noise makers and more of real solution-oriented doers.
Thanks for sharing Arundhati Roy’s article. She is right on many counts. She may be forceful, but one has to mull over her point of view. In all the drama that is happening, sane voices need to be heard. BTW, I heard of Anna Hazare campaign being an excellent PR exercise from AK.( as per Nikhl wagle’s tweets). It is not without its media management.
I agree, dissident voices have to be heard. I was all for Team Anna until I read about Arundhati’s remarks and now, Mayank’s posting. Step back, take a deep breath, observe, listen and come to your own conclusions. Mayank, you might want to put Arundhati’s comments in quotes: “the Jan Lokpal Bill is a draconian, anti-corruption law, in which a panel of carefully chosen people will administer a giant bureaucracy, with thousands of employees, with the power to police everybody from the Prime Minister, the judiciary, members of Parliament, and all of the bureaucracy, down to the lowest government official.”
Dear Mayank, We read your blog for your views not of Ms. Arundhati. We have already read her in Hindu yesterday, I don’t think there was any need for you to copy and paste here. I am not commenting on her views here because if I wish I can do that on the original article. If you are a fan of her, you can’t force us to read here views.
I agree. However, looking over the blog as a whole, one notices that the only views the Delhi Walla offers are from his camera, not his keyboard. Even his keyboard views are at best, a more in-depth, background description of his camera views. So I don’t expect him to express his views on the Anna movement explicitly. BUT… by putting up Mrs. Krishen’s article verbatim here, and based on his own admiration (obsession?) with her, I think we can guess his views…
Oops, I spoke too soon. My apologies to the Delhi Walla. I hadn’t read your comment over on the other Anna posting yet. THAT was explicit enough.
Read a response to the article. http://clearvisor.wordpress.com/2011/08/23/why-i%E2%80%99d-rather-be-anna-than-arundhati/
Ms. Roy, you truly amaze us each time – you seem to have mastered the art of “Armchair Intellectual Masturbation”. Please stick to schmoozing with your own kind in the comfort of air-conditioned “elitist social clubs” and spare us – the common junta.
well, here is another, quite nicely articulated confutation to Ms. Arundhati’s blinkered ratiocination: http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Mindboggling/entry/arundhati-roy-s-anti-anna-tirade-high-on-anger-short-on-rigour And yeah,guys, I am not on the ‘Anna Bandwagon'(yet). I just believe one must inform oneself of the entire range of rebuttals, criticisms and refutations available along with the usual, anodyne vindications whilst considering any cause/movement. This is in order to free oneself of insular prejudice. Only in the clear light of analytic philosophy may one make a correct and rational decision.
One old man (hero) is fighting we r all just giving comments come on young India let all join anna come on
And what if by chance, someone doesn’t join Anna? Would you force him to join? What if he still doesn’t? Would you kill him? I’m reminded of Mao’s tactics in China. This has become a cult of personality. The so-called anti-corruption movement is more frightening to me than corruption. Let me illustrate with an example. Today, August 25, was a trade bandh. A shop in market decided to open at about 1 PM. It was surrounded by a mob chanting “Bharat Mata ki Jai” and “Vande Mataram.” Two customers happened to wander inside while it was open. They were Muslims. Now tell me, what would two Muslims think when a mob of about 30 people suddenly cornered them with no escape? I know what they’d probably think. They would support Anna Hazare, no questions asked.
Corruption is exists in our mentality.It’s the psychology associated with power to get corrupted..and for all tese years we ere the reason for it..because our things were getting done! People are angry and now Anna has provided them with a platform to vent it out..on government.Now why does it remind me of the Roman mob? It hurts mee to see an old man starving himself to death..even though his ways are not right.Corruption can’t be removed like this.In the country where hardly anyone gives any importance to moral values people are actually talking about uprooting corruption..?..I gues it’s a much slower process..people need to think over the person they’re supporting first and ponder over why they’re supporting him and learn to see the other side of the story aswell. Today i opened this site just to know your views about the whole situation..after what Arundhati Roy said..all i got was the facts i have already read before.
This is no revolution as arundathi roy has expressed so clarly in her booker style. Revolution is when at last 2.5 million should be killed as was executed by the shy electronics engineer in cambodia.
Open letter to Ford Foundation and Arvind Kejriwal on charge of US bankrolling anti-corruption agitation Business Standard published this morning an interview with Arvind Kejriwal and Steven Solnick, India country Rep of Ford Foundation in an article titled Claims that Hazare’s movement is US-funded baseless: Arvind. They confirmed Arundhati Roy’s charge that Kabir, a Kerjiwal NGO received $ 400,000 during the last 3 years as funding from Ford Foundation. On the broader allegations whether the US steamrolled the Anna Hazare anti-corruption agitation, they drove themselves further to a corner. We send them an open letter as a reaction to their interview. Read more: http://exitopinionpollsindia.blogspot.com/2011/08/open-letter-to-ford-foundation-and.html