(This article first appeared on DailyO)
It’s 2019 and India is in the slog overs of its crucial
General Elections. With just a week left, you would think that the poll pitch
would now be on the wane when Prime Minister Narendra Modi — who has been the
single focus point of this election — says “Rajiv Gandhi was corrupt number 1”
and all hell breaks loose.
Why, 28 years after his death, was Rajiv Gandhi invoked? How
is he relevant to the contemporary political debate?
This election, as has often been reiterated, is a face-off
between two distinct styles of politics that have taken shape in India. These
two, today, are manifested in the form of the Narendra Modi-led BJP, on the one
hand, and the Rahul Gandhi-led Congress on the other.
These two leaders represent two different narratives of
Indian politics.
Prime Minister Modi, over the last five years, has come to
stand for development, nationalism and security. However, the Congress still
functions as a fiefdom of the Nehru-Gandhi family with the party president,
Rahul Gandhi, flaunting the legacy of his father, the late Rajiv Gandhi. To
many, it continues to represent the narrative of dynasty, appeasement and
corruption and, without a doubt, to my mind and several others, Rajiv Gandhi
was the epitome of this brand of politics.
Rajiv Gandhi, who was implicated in the infamous Bofors
scam, was the first Prime Minister to have been accused of major corruption —
his own defence minister resigned after levelling charges against him. He was
assassinated on May 21, 1991, and the Congress has since then used this
unfortunate incident to duck all debate surrounding Bofors. But the fact
remains that Rajiv Gandhi’s name was never fully and satisfactorily cleared.
Rajiv Gandhi’s ascension to the PM’s position was also a
classic case of dynastic politics.
Though his mother (and former Prime Minister) Indira Gandhi
too was the daughter of another Prime Minister, her rise had been steady and
over years. It can be argued that she had a reasonable political journey before
she wrested party control and became Prime Minister — however, Rajiv Gandhi and
his wife Sonia were known to be averse to politics while Indira Gandhi’s
younger son, Sanjay, was groomed to be the successor.
But with Sanjay Gandhi’s sudden death in 1980, Rajiv Gandhi
was forced to enter politics for the first time. Four years later, on October
31, 1984, Indira Gandhi was assassinated and on the next day, without following
due procedure, Rajiv Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister — a classic case of
brazen dynastic succession.
This finds an echo even today, many say, in Priyanka
Gandhi’s sudden entry into politics and direct ascension to the post of the
party’s National General Secretary.
Rajiv Gandhi’s tenure as the sixth Prime Minister of the
country from 1984-1989 is also known for its appeasement politics — the ripples
of which are felt even three decades later.
First came the Shah Bano case, when the court ruled that the
Constitution of the country was above Muslim Personal Law and ordered that Shah
Bano, a divorced and poorly-off Muslim woman, be paid maintenance. But to
please fundamentalist mullahs, Rajiv Gandhi changed the law and diluted the
court judgment. It triggered the still unresolved debate about different civil
codes for different religions in India. To pacify the majority Hindus, Rajiv
Gandhi's moves led to opening the locks of the disputed Ram Temple in 1986 and
he allowed religious rites to take place inside the structure. Thus began the unending
saga of the Ram temple, again unresolved till date.
In matters of corruption, Rajiv himself admitted that out of
every rupee spent, 85 paise were lost to corruption.
His implication in defence deal scams was extensive with
nasty links leading to Italy and Sweden. US diplomatic cables obtained by
WikiLeaks reportedly named Rajiv Gandhi as an ‘entrepreneur’ for Swedish firm
Saab-Scania when it was attempting to sell Viggen fighter aircraft to India in
the 1970s. His famed coastal holidays replete with extended family were widely
reported even then.
Today, his son and party president Rahul Gandhi too is known
for his vanishing acts and rumoured vacations in unnamed locations.
The ‘unwilling’ Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi, was untimely
plucked from life — but that can no more be a ruse to cover up his troubled
legacy that includes the Sikh riots, Bhagalpur riots, Hashimpura massacre, the
Sri Lanka fiasco, Warren Anderson’s escape and the Farooq-Rajiv accord, besides
the Shah Bano case, the Ram temple and allegations of defence corruption.
A country that is still struggling to come to terms with
these blunders, and is looking to build a new future, cannot afford to forget
these pieces of its tumultuous past.
As Rahul Gandhi tries to repackage his old family slogans in
a new and resurgent India, we must remember that this has happened before.
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