Kyun ki Saas bhi Kabhi Dictator Hoti thi
Article first published in +DailyO India Today (click here to read)
Sonia Gandhi’s
words – “I’m Indira Gandhi’s daughter-in-law” – are ominous. We all know what
the nation had to go through when a single judge of the Allahabad High Court
had indicted Indira. Then, as the Lutyens’ folklore goes, she went by the
personal advise of Siddhartha Shankar Ray, more a friend and confidante than a
lawyer – waking up the President late at night to sign on the dotted line of
the Emergency ordinance. Though the Congress wasn’t short of legal luminaries
even then – none came out pouncing on the Allahabad High Court judgment nor did
MPs create pandemonium in Parliament.
But, now a mere
order for personal appearance in court – has all the legal eagles of Congress
hyperventilating in public – making insinuations of political vendetta – that borders
precariously on the edge of contempt of court. One also doesn’t recall either
of Indira Gandhi’s two sons holding out threats akin to “I shall reply in the
Parliament” – though the younger one, Sanjay, did emerge from behind the
curtains much later when the Emergency was well under way (so, there may be
some merit in the view that Rahul is cast more in the mould of his uncle than
the father).
Congress MP’s, loyal
subjects of the Queen as they are, brought both houses of Parliament to a halt –
with cries of political conspiracy and witch-hunt - putting at stake the already
fragile fate of the Winter Session.
One shudders to
think – if this is happening when the Congress is out of power and down with 44
MPs in the Lok Sabha – what would the worthy “Bahu” have done following her revered
Sasu-Ma’s footsteps if the UPA were ruling today.
Yet, this is the
same Congress that swears by the independence of the judiciary and asserts
authorship rights over the Constitution. “Let the law take its own course” and
“the guilty be punished” are pet phrases of Congress leaders – when it comes to
people other than their own royalty. Thus even the redoubtable Lalu Prasad
Yadav had to spend a few days tending to the gardens of Ranchi Jail – not to
forget lesser allies like A Raja and Kanimozhi who were long-stay house-guests
at Tihar. Of course, Narendra Modi is considered convicted without any court
having pronounced him so and Amit Shah’s sentence – only reinforced people’s faith
in the country’s judicial system.
It can be argued
that – such exaggerated reaction of the Congress and its first family – only
points towards guilt and real fear of exposure. If the Gandhis and the many
star lawyers in the Congress’ fold are so supremely confident of their case –
why should they be afraid of going through the due process of law? But, that is
going into the realms of speculation of a matter that is still sub-judice.
Similarly, It would
be disingenuous to suggest that this entire development is a ploy by Narendra
Modi’s detractors in and outside the BJP to derail his “truce” efforts for getting
the GST Bill passed and make his position even more vulnerable post the Bihar
election set-back.
What is most
worrying, however, is how easily the anti-BJP political spectrum and a large
section of the media have bought into the “vendetta” theory – totally ignoring the
implication on the stature of the judiciary. They don’t seem to be a wee-bit
worried that it reveals an imperialist mindset of a dynasty that considers
itself to be the natural rulers of this country and, therefore, by definition
above the law. So, anything from allegations of land-grab against the
son-in-law or bending state government laws for construction of summer retreats
in the hills to misappropriation of trust funds are turned on its head by a
single-point counter-accusation of political vengeance.
People who are
constantly crying wolf about the spectre of Emergency being imposed again,
would do well to pause and reflect – for all his perceived flaws Narendra Modi
has never run away from the law. He has faced trials – albeit with the best of legal
defence as anyone is entitled to – and come out acquitted. Nor has Modi – tried
to bypass the judiciary to get even with his political adversaries. Even
assuming – the BJP (like many other
governments before him) has used investigating agencies for political ends it
has always deferred to the courts (Teesta Setalvad being a case in point).
Therefore, those
concerned about the fate of democracy in India need to seriously ponder –
whether the nation is safer in the hands of a democratically elected homegrown
chai-wallah who may have graduated to wearing monogrammed suits or a lady who
has devolved from Sable Coats to Cotton Sarees
– but whose natural upbringing makes her genetically coded to fiercely
protecting the family’s existence – perhaps, the very same quality she so admired
in her Mother-in-Law.
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