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You are here: Home / 2019 / Archives for April 2019

Archives for April 2019

India will be poverty free only after Congress ouster: Rajnath

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Amta/Malda (WB), Apr 18 : Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday mocked the Congress’ promise to eradicate poverty, and said India will actually be freed of poverty the day it gets rid of the Congress.

Singh said the indication after second phase of election is clear that the BJP will return to power.

Addressing election rallies at Howrah and Malda districts, Singh said since the days of Jawaharlal Nehru, the Congress has been promising eradication of poverty.

“Now, Rahul Gandhi is also pledging that. The fact is the day the country becomes free of the Congress, it will also get freedom from poverty,” the senior BJP leader said.

Lashing out at the TMC in Bengal, Singh alleged that democracy has ceased to exist under its rule in the state.

“Violence has been unleashed on opposition parties. Is it a sign of democracy? In Bengal, we will fight till we restore democracy,” he asserted.

He alleged that the TMC has replaced democracy by “goondaraj”.

Under the TMC rule, “all the three — the mother, the motherland and the people are suffering,” he said, referring to the ruling party’s slogan of ‘Ma, Maati and Manush’.

Maintaining that infiltrators will be thrown out, Singh said refugees will be given citizenship under the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill.

The Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the BJP are engaged in a bitter fight over the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill. The saffron party has also vowed to bring in National Register of Citizens (NRC) across the country and weed out infiltrators.

Referring to Bangladeshi actor Ferdous Ahmed who was ordered to leave the country after he took part in a campaign of the ruling TMC in West Bengal, Singh said people like him will not be allowed to act as per their whims and fancies.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Priyanka Chaturvedi joins Shiv Sena

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Mumbai, Apr 19 : Hours after she resigned from Congress party spokesperson Priyanka Chaturvedi on Friday formally joined the Shiv Sena in the presence of party chief Uddhav Thackeray and youth wing president Aditya Thackeray here.

Welcoming her decision to join the Shiv Sena, Mr Thackeray said, “We welcome her in our party. The party will gain strength with her experience.”
Sources in the Congress said, “Rahul Gandhi has not accepted her resignation so far.”
Citing that there was ”no respect for women” in the grand-old party as reason for resigning from all posts, Ms Chaturvedi said, “I am extending my gratitude to the Shiv Sena chief for this opportunity. I belong to Mumbai and in future, I will continue working for the Mumbaikars.”
A couple of days ago she had hit out at the Congress for reinstating UP party workers who allegedly had misbehaved with her.
In a letter to party president Rahul Gandhi, Ms Chaturvedi tendered her resignation from all posts and the primary membership of the party.
”In the last few weeks, certain things have convinced me that my services are no longer valued in the organisation and that I have reached the end of the road. At the same time, I feel that more time that I spend in the organisation will be at the cost of my own self respect and dignity.
”What saddens me is that despite the safety, dignity, empowerment of women being promoted by the party and has been your call to action, the same is not reflected in the action of some of the members if the party. I would request you to accept my resignation and relieve me of all my roles and responsibilities from the party on immediate basis and oblige,” she said in her letter to the Congress president on Thursday which was released to media on Friday.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Rahul Gandhi to address election Rally in Chikkodi in Karnataka

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Belagavi, Apr 19 : Close on the heels of the Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s addressing election rallies in Bagalkot and Chincholi yesterday, AICC President Rahul Gandhi will try to woo voters of Chikkodi, considered as the cradle of the co-operative movement in Karnataka, this evening.
According to Veerkumar Patil, a senior Congress leader in Belagavi, district, more than one lakh party workers are expected to participate. Elaborate arrangements have been made for the success of the rally. Voters from Belagavi, Dharwad and Chikkodi are expected to arrive in large numbers.
The Congress has fielded sitting MP Prakash Hukkeri for Chikkodi Loka Sabha seat, a Congress bastion for a long time.
The BJP had fielded Annasaheb Jolle, replacing the former MP Ramesh Katti, in an attempt to clinch the seat from the Congress.
In the 2014 Lok Sabha election Katti had lost the seat by a slender margin of 3000 votes.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Police nab a 28 year-old youth on charges of allegedly rape and murdering a Engineering student

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Raichur, Karnataka, Apr 19 : Police on Friday arrested a perpetrator who was allegedly behind the suspected rape and murder of a young Engineering student, whose body was found in a hanging state in the forest area in Raichur Rural Police station limits on Thursday morning.
Superintendent of Police Kishore Babu said that the arrest was made on receiving a complaint by parents of the deceased student. The arrested was identified as Sudarshan Yadav.
The decomposed body of the girl student Madhu Patar (24) was found hanging from a tree in the forest area. She was studying in fifth Semister in Engineering Degree course in a local college. She was missing from April 15 and her body was found three days later in hanging position. In her death note left behind Madhu had alleged that she was committing suicide because she could not complete backlogs, but her classmates said that she had cleared all her subjects.

Filed Under: Crime

Under Modi Govt, India Has Turned Into a ‘Designer Democracy’

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Everyone curious about the 2019 election process senses it as a radically different, even an unusual, phenomenon. However, they are uncertain what name to give it. Designer democracy is that apt name.

Like the 2014 election, the current one is also designed as a fight between friend and enemy. Enumerating the “achievements” of the government, BJP president Amit Shah wrote in its manifesto that under Narendra Modi’s leadership, we made “an India that our friends praise … and our enemies fear.”

Beyond the manifesto, the Hindus-as-friend versus Muslims-as-enemy distinction pervades recent election speeches of Modi, Shah and others.

Along with designing friends versus enemy distinction, a designer democracy has other features too. Before illustrating the Indian case, let us note that as a global phenomenon while some features of designer democracy are common across the nation-states, others are specific to each context.

Designer – the very word

The term designer is derived from design, which as a noun means a plan of a building, garment or such objects. As a verb, it means to “signify, designate, name, style”. In the field of design – in architecture, industrial design, engineering, communication, marketing, computer design and so on – it means to draft, sketch, shape and simulate.

Designers who see themselves as “scientists” maintain that design is about solving problems. However, anthropologist Tim Ingold rightly observes: “Every object of design sets a trap by presenting a problem in the form of what appears to be its solution.” One can indeed say that problem in itself rarely exists. In a democracy, something becomes a problem only when it is mobilised as one to arrest voters’ attention.

There was no specialised designer in the Indus Valley civilisation because the craftsmen who made objects were also mostly their designers. As a specialised activity, designing is typically modern, unleashed by industrialisation. So is a modern democracy. With increasing technologisation and mediatisation of lives, both design and democracy changed.

The Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier who designed Chandigarh described a house as a “machine for living.” Likewise, a society itself began to be viewed as a machine, and so were political parties. To journalist Prashant Jha, BJP is the “greatest election machine.”                     

What is designer democracy?

As we argue in The Algebra of Warfare-Welfare: A Long View of India’s 2014 Election, a designer democracy signifies “an electoral polity under a neo-liberal economy where voters are viewed as consumers and parties/contestants as salesmen, and the communication between them is mediated predominantly by modern electronic and visual media, including social media.” Structurally, it fully crystallised in the early 1990s with the privatisation of the economy and the growing influence of media, mobile phones and digital media included.

Integral to the structure of designer democracy is the datafication of politics. In 1956, Eric Da Costa, an Oxford-trained economist, established the Indian Institute of Public Opinion in Delhi. Likewise, political scientist Rajni Kothari copied American-style behaviouralism to use survey research to study election.

However, it was from the early 1990s that Prannoy Roy – a pioneer of opinion polls and psephology – and others accelerated the datafication of politics. Today, companies and institutes conducting election surveys, exit and other polls are numerous.

Replication of economic model in politics

The foremost feature of a designer democracy is the replication of the economic model in politics. In its 2019 manifesto, BJP views India primarily as an economy aspiring “to be the world’s third largest economy by 2030.” This aspiration echoes BJP’s 2014 manifesto where it resolved to “revive Brand India.” That is, India has always been a brand, what it needs is a revival.

In the fashion industry, a brand means “the personality of a product.” India is thus a market product in need of a salesperson. On April 15, the Times of India did a video story titled: “Why Brand Modi Remains BJP’s Biggest USP in UP?” USP stands for unique selling point/proposition, a term in marketing.

Replicating market model into politics runs on the logic of political marketing and permanent advertising central to which is the primacy of image or simulacra over reality and truth. Modi took to marketing as no one else did before. To K.N. Govindacharya, once a key BJP leader, Modi’s “forte is political marketing” informed by “images, messages and signaling.”

The BJP-RSS combine as well as the compliant media marketed Modi’s image as the only choice to rule India. Fashioning such an image, however, entails, as in marketing the ‘Iron Lady’ image of Margaret Thatcher, use of guile, perception-building, pretension, half-truth, rumours, lies and more. Like the concept of design enunciated by Vilém Flusser, trickery, image-staging, deception and plotting characterise a designer democracy.

The sheer amount of money spent on elections demonstrates it. In 2014, BJP spent Rs 5,000 crore on advertisement alone. In 2018, when five state elections were held, BJP spent more money than Netflix, Colgate or Dettol did on television advertisements.

In a designer democracy, ordinary people have little to choose from. Often they choose from more of the same. Importantly, issues of justice, truth, civic participation, the pursuit of the common good are reduced to the ratings of politicians by polls and to the calculus of mammon. Honest, ethical people cannot even think of contesting elections, let alone win them. Clearly, this damages democracy in its original meaning of demokratia in Greek: capacity to do things – by individuals and cultures.

Structurally, a designer democracy characterises all parties, including the Congress. Here we focus on BJP because it exemplifies designer democracy at its best.

The regnant design: The algebra of warfare-welfare

With politics as a mediatised market, what is its leitmotiv? It is polarising politics of friend-enemy dualism, intensified after the Cold War and with the designing of a new enemy in the form of terrorism. The fear of terrorism – later substituted with Islam – became a hot commodity in the political market.

Australian democracy illustrates this well. Before 9/11, Australia had no anti-terror law. By 2008, it had made 45 even as no significant terrorist attack happened on its soil. Working at Australian universities between 2009 and 2017, I witnessed many elections. Though Muslims constitute 2.6% of Australia’s population, Islam/terrorism figured prominently in elections.

In India too, terrorism became the pivot of politics after 9/11 unleashing a more dangerous version of the friend-enemy dualism. In a televised debate after 9/11, Modi congratulated the media for speaking “the truth” about “Islamic terrorism.” He held that the world had witnessed terrorism “for 1,400 years” (since Prophet Muhammad’s time).

He proudly stated that “we have succeeded in dividing the country into two camps: those who are against terrorism and those who are in support of terrorism.”

This politics of enmity marked his tenure as Gujarat’s chief minister as well as the 2014 election campaign as demonstrated by sociologist Manisha Sethi.

Gujarat government’s ad on the back of Air India’s boarding pass, 2019

Politics of enmity abound in 2019 election speeches by BJP leaders. Modi is determined to teach the Congress a lesson for using the term “Hindu terror” (how is “Islamic terror” justified?). While embracing illegal Bangladeshi Hindus, Shah terms their Muslim counterparts as “termites.” Maneka Gandhi openly threatens Muslims for not supporting her.

Such politics of warfare co-exists with welfare or development. However, welfare-development itself is also largely religious-ethnic. The advertisement by the Gujarat tourism department on the back of boarding pass, issued on January 8, 2019, by Air India for Delhi-Patna flight, read:

Surely, many non-Hindus and Hindus would like to visit the Dwarka temple. However, their reason might differ from the one scripted by the government.

Like the text of the government’s advertisement, democracy too can be designed differently. And humanely.

Agencies

Filed Under: News & Politics

Sitting Congress MP Ugrappa did not exercises his voting right

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman


Bengaluru, Apr 19 : Sitting Congress MP Ugrappa, who is making effort to retain the Bellari LS seat in Karnataka did not cast his vote in yesterday’s General elections held for 14 LS seats in the first phase of polling.
The news of Ugrappa, a strong votary of the constitutional matters, did not participated in exercising his constitutional rights, went viral in the Social media.
Ugrappa, who is representing the Ballari in the Lok Sabha, is a resident of Bengaluru was busy in campaigning in Ballari where he is fighting against BJP’s Devendrappa.
Reacting over his failure to take part in polling, he said that “I regret for not casting my vote, but since I was engrossed in the electoral battlefield, could not able to go and vote”.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Man slaps Hardik Patel during election rally in Gujarat

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Surendranagar, Apr 19 : Congress leader and former Patidar Anamat Aandolan Samiti (PAAS) convener Hardik Patel on Friday was slapped by a man, while he was addressing a rally here.

The incident took place in Baldana under Wadhwan taluka of Surendranagar district where Patel was delivering a speech in Jan Akrosh rally

The man suddenly walked up to the stage and slapped him.
Police sources said that the accused has been identified as Tarun resident of Jesalpur in Kadi area of Mahesena district.
It is reported that the man who slapped Hardik was unhappy over his joining the Congress.
He alleged that Hardik was responsible for the deaths of 14 Patidar youths.

Later, people present at the venue got hold of the man and was beaten up. Police had a tough time trying to rescue him. He was later taken to a local hospital.

After the attack, Hardik told the reporters, “I did not hear what allegations the man levelled but even if he had some grudges he could have talked to me.”

Filed Under: News & Politics

Customs officials seize 2.8 kg gold from passenger at Kannur airport

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman


Kannur, Apr 19 :The customs sleuths seized 24 gold biscuits weighing about 2.802 kilograms and valued about Rs 91.3 lakh, from a passenger who arrived at Kannur International Airport from Muscat, on Friday.

Customs Assistant Commissioner O Pradeepan told UNI that they seized the gold and arrested the passenger Muhammed Sadhik hailing from Kallachi near Nadapuram in Kozhikode district and arrived at the Airport in an Air India flight this morning.

The contraband gold was kept hidden in a mixie after removing its motor.

He would be produced before a court later in the evening, customs officials said.

Filed Under: Crime

EC efforts to increase poll per cent in the IT hub Bengaluru goes in vain

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Bengaluru, Apr 19 : The Election Commission efforts to give a boost to increase of voting per cent in the IT hub Bengaluru went in vain as the so called learned voters in the State Capital failed to turn up at booths in the first phase of polling held yesterday for 14 seats in Karnataka.


The polling reported in the four LS seats including Bangalore rural, Bangalore North, Bangalore Central and Bangalore South was in down trend, according to reports available in the EC office.
The per centage has gone to minus as compared to 2014 MP election and minus 5.27 per cent was reported in Bengaluru North where 51.26 per cent polling reported as against 56.53 per cent (2014) in the polling held yesterday and the downward trend was reported also in Bengaluru Central (50.84 per cent in 2019, 55.64 per cent in 2014–minus 4.80 per cent), Bengaluru Rural (64.09 per cent and 66.45 per cent- minus 2.36 per cent) and Bengaluru South 54.2 and 55.75 per cent, minus 1.55 per cent).
The overall percentage of voting in the 14 segments, there is slight increase in polling that touched 68.05 as against 67.76 per cent in 2014 elections.

Filed Under: India

Long-time Bengaluru voters’ names deleted: People protest, EC denies responsibility

April 19, 2019 by Nasheman

Several residents showed up to vote on Thursday only to find that their names were not on the electoral roll.

Bengaluru is not only infamous for its terrible traffic jams but also for its abysmal voter turnout. But can Bengaluru’s low voting percentages be blamed only on voter apathy? On Thursday, many Bengalureans found that their names had been deleted from the electoral rolls. Many took to social media to vent their frustration, others spoke to the media and a handful staged protests. But the question each one of them had was, “Where did my vote go?”

At around 10 am on Thursday, around 30 residents of the city’s Nagarbhavi area, who had gone to the polling booth opposite the BDA Complex found that their names were deleted. Many of them had voted in May 2018 Assembly elections.

Speaking to media, Manjunath, a resident of Nagarbhavi said that his name was not on the electoral roll. “I had voted in the 2018 Assembly elections and now my name was not on the electoral roll. My wife is also a voter and her name is also missing,” Manjunath said.

The angry voters staged a protest outside the polling station and demanded that the officials allow them to vote.

After waiting for two hours, Manjunath was informed that he could not vote as he had not filed Form 6 requesting the EC to add his name into the roll. “They finally blamed me. I have been voting for so long in this constituency. Why would a common man assume his name will be deleted? This is not my mistake,” he said.

This, however, was not the only incident reported in the city. Several residents of Ejipura, Malleshwaram, Shivajinagar, Jayanagar and Banashankari faced similar situations.

According to reports 50-60 names disappeared/deleted from each booth in about 150 booths in Malleshwaram assembly seat in Bengaluru North. They voted in 2018 Assembly elections.

My Voter id is deleted from list Pulakeshinagar, Bangalore North with no reason, thereby denying my right to vote. This is a conspiracy.

Residents unaware of absentee, shifted and dead list

Nupur, a resident of Bengaluru’s Ramagondanahalli, went to the government school in the area to cast her vote along with her husband. Nupur had shifted from her home in Whitefield to  Ramagondanahalli only three months ago. She and her husband had applied for a change of address on the Election Commission website so they could voter in Ramagondanahalli. To Nupur’s surprise, her name was not on the electoral roll but her husband’s name had appeared.

“When we checked on the EC website it kept saying that our request was still under process. We decided to give it a shot and went to the booth. My husband’s name was there and mine was not,” Nupur said.

She then went back to her old constituency of Whitefield and when she checked the electoral roll, her name was on it. However, it was struck down with a ‘deleted’ stamp.

“The electoral rolls were not updated. But the polling officials said that I could go and vote in the Whitefield polling booth itself and I finally voted,” Nupur added.

Several residents of Jayanagar, who had come to vote near National College also faced similar issues where their names had not been updated on the voter rolls. However, many voters were unaware that they could have gone back and voted in their old constituencies.

According to Additional Chief Electoral Officer KN Ramesh, the absentee, shifted and dead list is not made public but is privy only to election officials. He says that a lot of voters don’t know the difference between “ordinary resident” and “permanent resident”, which leads to their names disappearing from rolls.

“A person may have registered his/her permanent residence in Bengaluru but may live in other parts of the country. Their names will be deleted during the revision process as they will have to vote from the area they are residing in. The process takes time and that’s why we publish electoral rolls way ahead of elections so errors can be rectified,” he added.

Why were the voter names deleted?

Despite the discontent and anger from eligible voters who could not find their names in the voter list, the Election Commission has shifted the blame onto the voters.

“The draft rolls were first published in October 2018. Since then, we have been telling voters to check their names. Final rolls were published on January 15, even then we told people, ‘please check your name’. Then we had given time till March 16. We have solved a lot of complaints that have come to our knowledge. Our officials go from house to house. During these visits, they may find that the person is not living at the said address. Deletions are not made suo motu, there is always some documentation,” Ramesh told media.

‘Faulty electoral rolls’

While the Election Commission claims that it has done its duty in informing voters, PG Bhat, a retired Naval officer, who has been studying this elaborately, is not convinced. He says the rolls are filled with bogus entries and that erroneous deletions continue to plague Bengaluru. 

Speaking to TNM earlier, he had said that the current voter rolls are inflated. Bhat argues that since 60% of Bengaluru’s population is eligible to vote and if everyone was registered to vote, the number of voters should come to 78 lakh approximately. But the final rolls have more than 90 lakh voters, and it does not add up.

He also says, “There is the issue of photo voter slips. It is supposed to be given by the Election Commission to each voter but it is done by political parties. So if a voter does not have the slip, the booth officers often ask voters to get it from the political parties who may not have the updated voter rolls. And then sometimes they are told that they do not have a vote, simply because they do not have the slip.”

This is not the first major election where legitimate voters have felt that they have lost out.

TNM had earlier reported that in February 2018, residents’ collective Whitefield Rising moved the Karnataka High Court after many of its members were rejected voter ID cards, allegedly without any explanation.

Agencies

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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