Post on 25-Feb-2021
CMYK
A ND-NDE
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
DELHI THE HINDU
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 202010EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
EDITORIAL
Punishing hateThe electorate in Delhipunished the BharatiyaJanata Party (BJP) for itshatefi��lled campaign. Onthe other hand, theresounding victory of theAam Aadmi Party (AAP)was the outcome of thesolid grassroots work doneby the Arvind KejriwalManish Sisodia duo. It isincreasingly becomingclear, even to those in aweof the BJPled Centralgovernment, that beyondthe vast numbers in the LokSabha, the dispensation hasnothing to off��er to thepeople by way of positiveeconomic agenda. Itsarrogance, haughtiness andmegalomania can barelyconceal its cerebral
emptiness (Front page,“AAP sweeps Delhi with 62seats,” Feb. 12).M.A. Siraj,
Bengaluru
The Delhi modelThe Delhi government hasindeed revolutionised thepublic school educationsystem by showing thepolitical will to spend alarge amount of money onan area that is oftenneglected in this era ofpopulist politics. First, thegovernment took steps toimprove infrastructure.Next, it instituted schoolmanagement committees,giving a sense of ownershipto parents in the learningprocess of their children.These were not novel
concepts, they were verymuch present in the Rightto Education Act; what wasneeded to put them intoaction was political will.However, the face ofeducation is not somethingthat can be changed in aspan of fi��ve years; it needssustained investment, bothfi��nancial and political (OpEd page, “The Delhi modelof education,” Feb. 12).Sandeep Kumar Meena,
New Delhi
No seat for Congress The decimation of theCongress, with a vote shareof just 4.26%, should serveas an eyeopener to therank and fi��le of the party onthe futility of continuingwith a dynastic leadership.
It is bizarre to note thatinstead of doingintrospection, the party iscelebrating the victory ofAAP, which has no love lostfor the Congress. This onlyexposes the fact that theCongress has given uphopes of being a frontlineOpposition party and iscontent to piggyback onregional outfi��ts to stayrelevant. It is a great fall foran organisation whichfought for the country’sfreedom under selfl��essleaders and is now beingstaff��ed with sycophants inthrall to a single family. TheGandhis — Sonia, Rahul andPriyanka — should keepaway from party aff��airscompletely so that theoutfi��t can be rejuvenated
authority that can stampthe seal of probity on thegovernment’s functioningthrough fearlessinvestigation. When a dejure Lokpal is in place,there is no reason thejudiciary, groaning underthe weight of a hugebacklog, should continue toact as the de factoombudsman. Acting onlyunder the compulsion of ajudicial diktat doesn’tenhance the government’simage. It mustoperationalise the offi��ce ofthe Lokpal (OpEd page,“Six years on, Lokpal is anonstarter,” Feb. 12).V.N. Mukundarajan,
Thiruvananthapuram
with new young faces whocurrently have no baggage.V. Subramanian,
Chennai
The need of a LokpalIt is unfortunate that thegovernment’s lack ofcommitment and theOpposition’s indiff��erencehave reduced a landmarklegislation like the Lokpallaw into a farcical exercise.That the anticorruptionwatchdog remains in a stateof inertness even six yearsafter the law’s enactment isan indictment of India’spolitical culture. A mereabsence of corruption isnot enough to satisfy publicperception about therulers’ integrity; there hasto be an independent
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letters emailed to letters@thehindu.co.in must carry the full postal address and the full name or the name with initials.
To read more lettersonline, scan the QR code
Jayashree B. & R. Gopinath
Afew months ago, the GlobalHunger Index, reported thatIndia suff��ers from “serious”
hunger, ranked 102 out of 117 countries, and that just a tenth of children between six to 23 months arefed a minimum acceptable diet.The urgency around nutrition wasrefl��ected in the Union Finance Minister’s Budget speech, as she referred to the “unprecedented”scale of developments under thePrime Minister’s OverarchingScheme for Holistic Nutrition, orPOSHAN Abhiyaan, the NationalNutrition Mission with eff��orts totrack the status of 10 crore households.
Plan and allocationThere are multiple dimensions ofmalnutrition that include calorifi��cdefi��ciency, protein hunger and micronutrient defi��ciency. An important approach to address nutritionis through agriculture. The Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh which waslaunched in 2019 by Minister forWomen and Child DevelopmentSmriti Irani, and Microsoft founder Bill Gates is a recent attempt tobridge this gap. Existing schemescan well address India’s malnutrition dilemma. However, where arethe gaps in addressing this concern? We analyse Budgetary allocation and the expenditure in the
previous year to understandmore.
First calorifi��c defi��ciency. The Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) scheme provides apackage of services including supplementary nutrition, nutritionand health education, healthcheckups and referral services addressing children, pregnant andlactating mothers and adolescentgirls, key groups to address community malnutrition, and whichalso tackle calorifi��c defi��ciency andbeyond. For 201920, the allotment was ₹��27,584.37 crore but revised estimates are ₹��24,954.50crore, which points to an underutilisation of resources. The allocation this year is marginally higher,but clearly, the emphasis needs tobe on implementation.
Another pathway to addresshunger is the MidDay MealScheme, to enhance nutrition ofschoolchildren. Here too, the issueis not with allocation but with expenditure. The 201920 Budget allocation was ₹��11,000 crore and revised estimates are only ₹��9,912crore.
The second is protein hunger:Pulses are a major contributor toaddress protein hunger. However,a scheme for State and Union Territories aims to reach pulses intowelfare schemes (MidDay Meal,Public Distribution System, ICDS)has revised estimates standing atjust ₹��370 crore against ₹��800 croreallocation in the 201920 Budget.
Next is micronutrient defi��ciency. The Horticulture Mission canbe one of the ways to address micronutrient defi��ciency eff��ectively,but here too implementation is
low. Revised estimates for 201920stand at ₹��1,583.50 crore against anallocation of ₹��2,225 crore. In 201819, the Government of Indialaunched a national millet missionwhich included renaming milletsas “nutricereals” also launching aYear of Millets in 201819 to promote nutritious cereals in a campaign mode across the country.This could have been further emphasised in the Budget as well as inthe National Food Security Mission (NFSM) which includes millets. However, the NFSM strains toimplement allocation of ₹��2,000crore during 201920, as revisedexpenditures stand at ₹��1,776.90crore. As millets have the potentialto address micronutrient defi��ciencies, the momentum given tothese cereals needs to be sustained.
Moving to POSHAN Abhiyaan,the National Nutrition Missionwhich is a major initiative to address malnutrition, had 72% of total expenditure going into “Information and CommunicationTechnology enabled Real TimeMonitoring for development andsetting up Common ApplicationSoftware and expenditure on components under behaviouralchange” according to Accountability Initiative. The focus of the bulkof the funding has been on tech
nology, whereas, actually, it is convergence that is crucial to addressnutrition. The Initiative also foundon average that only 34% of fundsreleased by the Government of India were spent from FY 201718 toFY 201920 till November 30, 2019.
Impact of linkage schemesWith underspending, allocationsfor subsequent years will also beaff��ected, limiting the possibility ofincreasing budgets and the focuson nutrition schemes.
Next is the agriculturenutritionlink, which is another piece of thepuzzle. While agriculture dominated the initial Budget speech,the link between agriculture andnutrition was not explicit. Thislink is important because aboutthreefi��fths of rural households areagricultural in India (NationalSample Survey Offi��ce, 70th round)and malnutrition rates, particularly in rural areas are high (NationalFamily Health Survey4). Therefore, agriculturenutrition linkageschemes have potential for greaterimpact and need greateremphasis.
So how can we bring about better nutrition in India? With the largest number of undernourishedpeople in the world, India needs tohasten to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 2 of ‘Zero Hunger’by 2030. The Economic Surveynotes that India should give special attention although the Budgethas not explicitly spelt out nutrition in greater detail in manyways.
The following are suggestions tomove forward: Focus on nutritionrelated interventions, beyond digi
tisation; intensify the convergencecomponent of POSHAN Abhiyaan,using the platform to bring all departments in one place to addressnutrition; direct the announcement to form 10,000 farmer producer organisations with an allocation of ₹��500 crore tonutritionbased activities; promotion of youth schemes to be directed to nutritionagriculture link activities in rural areas; give explicitemphasis and fund allocation toagriculturenutrition linkedschemes; and ensure early disbursement of funds and an optimumutilisation of schemes linked to nutrition.
Nutrition goes beyond just food,with economic, health, water sanitation, gender perspectives andsocial norms contributing to better nutrition. This is why implementation of multiple schemescan contribute to better nutrition.The Economic Survey notes that“Food is not just an end in itselfbut also an essential ingredient inthe growth of human capital andtherefore important for nationalwealth creation”. Malnutrition affects cognitive ability, workforcedays and health, impacting asmuch as 16% of GDP (World FoodProgramme and World Bank). Inthat sense, while Budget 202021looks toward an ‘Aspirational India’, fi��xing the missing pieces onthe plate, can make a diff��erencenot just to better nutrition but tobuild a wealthier nation too.
Jayashree B. and Dr. R. Gopinath work
with the M.S. Swaminathan Research
Foundation. The views expressed are
personal
Nutrition and the Budget’s fi��ne printWhile there are wellequipped schemes to address malnutrition, funding and policy gaps are problem areas
K.R
. D
EE
PA
K
For approximately half theU.S. electorate, a nightmarethat began with the unlikely
election of Donald Trump to thepresidency, is beginning to look asif it may continue into a secondterm. The U.S. President’s currentapproval rating (at 49%, in onepoll) is the highest it has beensince the day he took offi��ce. Initialhopes that his evident venalityand incompetence may lead to anearly termination of his presidency have gradually given way to ashocked realisation that no matterwhat he does, says, or tweets,there is no diminution in his support among those who voted forhim in the 2016 election or in theRepublican party. Indeed, as theabortive attempt to impeach himunderlined, his command over theparty is stronger than ever today.
Nothing stunsThe eruption of each outrageousscandal followed by Mr. Trump’sbrazen strategy of a scorchedearth counterattack has led theU.S. to a point where it is now impossible to conceive of any scenario that could lead his supportersto rethink their allegiance. A seemingly hyperbolic comment madeby Mr. Trump way back in January2016, when he was a complete outsider among the aspirants for theRepublican nomination (“I couldstand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and Iwouldn’t lose any voters”) is reality today.
This presidency and the scandals of the last three years, on bothdomestic and foreign policyfronts, have given new meaning tothe term “American exceptional
ism”. Where it once stood for theidea, at least among the patrioticfaithful, that the United States wasa beacon for democracy and human rights, a land of opportunityfor all comers, and unvested in thesocial hierarchies of Europe, todayit signifi��es a country that elected,and may reelect, a bigoted, climatechangedenying carnivalbarker incapable of distinguishingpublic offi��ce from private pelf.
Sanders and the DemocratsIf Mr. Trump and his supporterspresent a united bloc imperviousto selfdoubt, the opposite is trueof the Democrats. A crowded fi��eldof contenders caught in a seemingly endless series of primaries andcaucuses with arcane rules hasmeant no candidate has reallypulled clear of the pack. More importantly, Democrats are deeplydivided in terms of a strategy todefeat Mr. Trump. One of the frontrunners, Bernie Sanders, is running on an explicitly socialist platform that clearly energises racialminorities, youth, poorer sectionsof society, women, and liberalslooking for an alternative to a twoparty system bereft of ideas in theface of global warming, endlesswar, and unprecedented polarisation of wealth.
Yet, socialism or anythingvaguely associated with the termhas long been anathema for manyin the U.S. Mr. Sanders’s ideas onsocialised medical care, free college education for everyone, and amore progressive tax structureevoke incredulity. Similar incredulity, however, is never expressed about the irrationality of atrillion dollar defence budget yearafter year; nor is there much recognition that in other industrialised democracies, variants on “socialized” medicine vastlyoutperform the U.S., or that college education is highly subsidisedand incomparably cheaper in suchcountries.
The mainstream media’s conviction that the candidacy of Mr.Sanders will ensure Mr. Trump’svictory — one evidently shared bymany in the Democratic Party leadership — is perplexing. He is theone candidate who seems to genuinely energise those groups thatwere central to Obama’s victoriesin 2008 and 2012: racial minorities, youth, and fi��rsttime voters.The selfconfi��dent pundits whoprematurely dismiss Mr. Sandersprospects may do well to remember that even as late as the eveningof November 9, 2016, as the fi��rstresults were coming in, none ofthem gave Donald Trump anychance of defeating Hillary Clinton.
Carceral stateIn a form of slow violence that hasescaped the attention of manyboth domestically and abroad, theU.S., with just 5% of the world’spopulation is now home to about25% of the world’s prison population (2015 data), the overwhelming majority of whom are black orbrown minorities. A criminal justice system thoroughly vitiated byracism has interacted with a prisonindustrial complex to producea situation in which a young blackman has a higher chance of endingup in prison than he does in college. In deindustrialising Statesacross much of the U.S., one of thefew growth industries is prisonsstaff��ed by poor whites guardingpoorer blacks and Hispanics.
Recent scholarship and quality
investigative journalism have established beyond doubt that theemergence of the carceral state inthe alleged “land of the free” was abipartisan eff��ort. Since the early1980s, fi��rst Republicans and thenDemocrats competed fi��ercely tobe seen as the party of “law and order”, of being “tough on crime”,and backing the relentless pursuitof the “war on drugs” — all euphemisms for appealing to the worstinstincts, fears, and racism ofwhites seen as key to winning elections. At least three important remaining Democratic aspirants aretainted by their role in the creationand maintenance of this carceralstate: Joe Biden, Mike Bloombergand Pete Buttigieg.
Mr. Biden was a highrankingSenator and Chair of the SenateJudiciary committee during the1980s and 1990s, and instrumental in passing legislation that produced the carceral state. The billionaire Bloomberg is formerRepublican Mayor of New York City and architect of the city police’snotorious “stopandfrisk program”, which racially profi��ledblacks and Latin Americans leading to disproportionate levels ofarrests, often for trivial degrees ofdrug possession or petty crimes, ifeven that. Mr. Bloomberg has veryrecently, and unconvincingly,apologised for the disastrous results of “stopandfrisk”. Mr. Buttigieg pursued similarly “tough”(read racialised) policies duringhis tenure as Mayor of South Bend,Indiana, from 201220, and hasbeen unrepentant, even proud, ofthis aspect of his record.
It is hard to see any of thesethree candidates energising minorities or the young given thistrack record. Meanwhile conservative whites susceptible to suchdogwhistle politics may well staywith Mr. Trump and his unapologetically white supremacist views:why opt for the ersatz when youalready have the real thing? (Mr.
Trump’s faithful often cite the factthat he “says it like it is” as theirreason for supporting him.)
Besides Mr. Sanders, at this moment the other seemingly strongand viable candidate in terms ofappealing to the constituenciesthat could help the Democrats defeat Mr. Trump is Sen. ElizabethWarren. Her impressive track record as economic manager (shewas part of the committee thatoversaw the post2008 fi��nancialcrisis recovery programme, andpushed for greater regulations over banking and fi��nance, and forconsumer protection) and thecalm competence she radiates onmatters of public policy could bean ideal complement to Mr. Sanders.
Trump’s cardsBesides the advantages of incumbency, Mr. Trump has a huge reelection war chest, the largest inU.S. history as a matter of fact; Republicans (like rightwing partiesall across the world) have a pronounced advantage over Democrats in manipulating social mediain their favour and against opponents; and polls indicate that asmuch as 63% of the electorate approves of the way Mr. Trump ishandling the economy.
Those are dispiriting facts. Yet,if the long and unpredictableprimary season ends with Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren (or Ms. Warren and Mr. Sanders) as the Democratic ticket, they are likely tobring energy, the newest voters,and alienated minorities into theDemocratic fold in a way that noneof the other candidates is likely todo. All that may not be enough tounseat the current occupant — butat this point in time, it would appear to be the Democrats’ bestbet.
Sankaran Krishna teaches politics at the
University of Hawaii at Manoa in
Honolulu, U.S.
Trump’s march and the Sanders factorThe U.S. President’s tenure and its baggage have given a new meaning to the term ‘American exceptionalism’
Sankaran Krishna
AF
P
Ireland’s general elections on Saturday have thrown
up many paradoxes, off��ering few clues about the
next government, or the future of the country’s
three largest parties. Fianna Fáil, which has been out of
power since 2011, has topped the tally. However, its 38
seats leaves it far short of the requisite 80 for a clear ma
jority in the 160strong Irish Parliament. Sinn Féin, the
country’s Republican party has, perhaps with good rea
son, proclaimed itself the real winner: 37 seats, up 14
over the 2016 polls, and its best result. Yet, such a per
formance does not guarantee the party, with past links
to the IRA, an automatic path to government in the cur
rent electoral arithmetic, notwithstanding the protesta
tions of its leader, Mary Lou McDonald. The obverse is
the position of the governing centreright Fine Gael of
Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, now relegated to third
place with 35 seats, down 15 from the previous election.
To be sure, Mr. Varadkar earned international recogni
tion for steering Dublin’s negotiations with London to
protect the soft border with Belfast, and in turn the
peace on either side of the island’s political divide. The
country is also forecast to emerge among the fastest
growing economies in the European Union in 2020. But
this putative achievement may only have brought into
sharp focus voter disenchantment with Fine Gael’s
domestic record.
Ireland has experienced severe shortfalls in aff��orda
ble housing and healthcare delivery, potentially ren
dering the party’s return to government politically
more delicate. All the same, it would be premature to
rule it out of contention for power in any coalition. Sinn
Féin is said to have benefi��ted from the prevailing dis
content. In the runup to the polls on Saturday, both
Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil had ruled out an alliance with
the leftwing Sinn Féin. But Micheál Martin, Fianna Fáil
leader, has not dismissed working with Ms. McDonald
even while emphasising diff��erences over taxation poli
cy and her party’s IRA past. She is believed to have sent
out feelers to Labour, the Greens and independents to
explore forming a coalition. Sinn Féin has in any case al
ready set out its priorities, to work for the country’s un
ifi��cation with Northern Ireland. This stance will boost
nationalist sentiment across the border, where Sinn
Féin has consistently opposed Brexit. Under Britain’s
EU withdrawal deal, Belfast is de facto member of the
bloc’s single market. Sinn Féin’s participation in a new
government would almost inevitably alter Ireland’s pol
itical confi��guration. But going by the 70day stalemate
in 2016, negotiations among the main parties could
prove protracted. As deliberations commence, the tra
ditional two parties must note that it is a democratic im
perative now to engage Sinn Féin with an open mind.
Waiting for the winnerIreland’s election results threw up no defi��nite
winner, opening up the possibility of a churn
When he visits India for the fi��rst time later this
month, U.S. President Donald Trump can ex
pect thronging crowds in Gujarat and per
haps a substantive discussion on trade policy in New
Delhi, but more than anything, it is his growing bonho
mie with Prime Minister Narendra Modi that is expect
ed to steal the limelight. Indeed, this chemistry was evi
dent during the four times that they met in 2019. The
pinnacle of those encounters for Mr. Modi was un
doubtedly the public relations victory that he won
when Mr. Trump graced the ‘Howdy Modi!’ event in
Houston before some 50,000 IndianAmericans. Now
Mr. Modi is returning the favour perhaps, as he has, in
Mr. Trump’s words, promised an attendance of fi��ve to
seven million, from the airport to the new Sardar Val
labhbhai Patel cricket stadium, the world’s largest;
here, they will address the “Kem chho Trump!” event
before an expected 1.25 lakh people. While there will al
ways be areas of untapped potential in bilateral cooper
ation, things could hardly be better between the two
nations at this time of global turbulence, in trade and
security. On the former issue, despite skirmishes sur
rounding tariff��s in specifi��c sectors, such as medical dev
ices, and countertariff��s following the U.S.’s termination
of its Generalised System of Preferences toward India
last year, there is hope for at least a limited trade deal —
pegged at $10billion — that could take a measure of
stress out of the protracted closeddoor negotiations.
Prospects look brighter still on defence cooperation. In
dia is reportedly moving toward approving a $2.6bil
lion deal for 24 Lockheed Martinbuilt MH60 Seahawk
helicopters. An agreement to buy a $1.867billion inte
grated air defence weapons system is also on the cards.
Notwithstanding this slew of positive, if incremental,
cooperative advances, it is the deeper fault lines across
the two countries’ domestic polities that could, in the
longerterm, impact the prospects for smooth coopera
tion in the bilateral space. For instance, the Indian go
vernment’s recent policy shifts regarding special status
for Kashmir as well as the Citizenship (Amendment)
Act, the National Register of Citizens and the National
Population Register have spooked some U.S. Demo
crats, including Senators and lawmakers in the House
of Representatives. Some have explicitly voiced con
cerns about the impact in terms of India’s commitment
to remaining a tolerant, pluralist democracy. In this
context, if the November 2020 presidential election
puts a Democrat in the White House, it could potential
ly impact some of India’s plans. Even if Mr. Trump wins
a second term, deepening Congressional opposition to
Indiafriendly White House policies could endanger bi
lateral prospects. In this sense, there are limits to how
much India can peg its strategic plans on the personal
chemistry between its leader and the U.S. President.
Birds of a featherIndia cannot peg its strategic plans on
the chemistry between Trump and Modi
CMYK
A ND-NDE
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
THE HINDU DELHI
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2020 11EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
OPED
The Syndicate of the Punjab University hadappointed a committee to consider Lala Durga Das’s proposal regarding the framing ofrules prohibiting students from taking part,active or passive, in politics. The Tribune understands that this committee has rejectedthe retrograde suggestion, although, as wasto be expected, it has expressed itself againstthe active participation of students in political movements. The committee has also proposed the formation of students’ unionsmore or less on the lines of those at Oxfordand Cambridge. The repeated attempts tocoerce the student population to avoid politics as though it were poison can only havethe eff��ect, not always wholesome, of drivingthem to the other extreme, and it is only byallowing them to discuss political questions,conduct debates on the problems of thehour and utilise facilities for training them incitizenship that their minds could be directed in healthy channels and genuine publicspirit among them created.
A HUNDRED YEARS AGO FEB. 13, 1920.
Syndicate of the Punjab University(From an Editorial)
Three months ago, Home MinisterAmit Shah assured the Rajya Sabhathat “normalcy” had been restoredin Jammu and Kashmir. Yet, the leaders of the two main parties in J&K —Omar Abdullah of the National Conference (NC) and Mehbooba Mufti ofthe Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)— have not only been under detention for more than 200 days, buthave also been slapped with the Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act.
As Minister of State for ExternalAff��airs in Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s government, Mr. Abdullah defendedIndia’s position on Kashmir to theworld, hurled diplomatic epithets atPakistan in international fora, andwore the national fl��ag on his heart asit were. But now, according to the Public Safety Act dossier prepared bythe J&K administration, he stands accused of coddling militants and mobilising the people of Kashmir to defyPakistanbacked militants and votein elections. Like Mr. Abdullah, Ms.Mufti has also been deemed “antinational”. Given that she ran J&K asChief Minister with her party in alliance with the BJP for three years, itis very strange that the same BJPoverlooked her leanings then.
Extending the shelf of normalcy To show the world that the people ofJ&K participated in elections used tobe the Indian government’s primarygoal. The government used to go outof its way to obtain diplomatic certifi��cation for turnouts in elections as ameasure of the genuineness of theexercise. The usually abysmal turnouts made it all the more necessaryfor such measures to be taken. Anelection in J&K is not going to takeplace any time soon, but proving thatsuch an election is genuine, when itis held, will still be the main aim ofthis government. The steady chaperoning of foreign diplomats into thenew Union Territory is an indicationof this. With every lot of them thatenters the territory, the shelf of “normalcy” in J&K is extended. Since thesituation is “normal”, the question
then is, when will an election takeplace?
The Public Safety Act dossierstates that the capacity of Mr. Abdullah “to infl��uence people for anycause can be gauged from the factthat he was able to convince his electorate to come out and vote in hugenumbers even during peak of militancy and poll boycotts”. Does thismean that it is now normal for a District Magistrate to complain that apolitician is able to persuade his constituents to come out and vote? InKashmir, schools and colleges wereopen for months after the dilution ofArticle 370 on August 5, 2019, but nobody attended them. Is that also nownormal? Every now and then, U.S.President Donald Trump reminds India that he is ready to mediate between India and Pakistan, eventhough New Delhi insists that Kashmir is an internal matter. For theAmerican President to repeatedlymake that off��er was the norm in theworst of times in Kashmir; now it hasbecome a routine in the best of timesas well. Is this too the new normal?
ImpressionsThe government has been conducting focused, narrowly guided toursin batches for foreign diplomats toassess and make a broad certifi��cationof the normalcy that prevails in J&Kto their home constituencies. Thesediplomats go to Srinagar and nodoubt send rosy, impressionistic cables back to their capitals: ‘Shops areopen; there are no barbed wires on
the main streets; and no menacingsoldiers either. There are upwardlymobile politicians and green shootsof political activity. There is an upward tick in developmental trends.No one is complaining of the absenceof the sham that was Article 370.There are myriad plans with timelines and bar charts and plenty ofprojects in the pipeline. Comparisons with the situation in West Bankare defi��nitely farfetched. And no onegot killed’.
On the other hand, Indian politicians who cannot go to Kashmir anddetermine for themselves just hownormal the situation is probably haveto request the foreign missions to putout regular updates, in the form ofnewsletters or health bulletins, to geta better sense of the situation. Thepromotion of regular diplomatic tourism to Kashmir is apparently verydiff��erent from the internationalisation of Kashmir, which happens, forexample, when China intercedes onbehalf of Pakistan at the UN and Indian diplomats exert themselves totemporarily dissolve that crisis.
The challenge aheadIf making “unacceptable statements”can merit invocation of the Public Safety Act, especially when electionsare nowhere in view, how much hasthe crisis in J&K really dissolved? Thegovernment can probably take heartthat there have been no major instances of violence since August 5,2019, and no major upheavals or killings. Terrorists have not run ram
pant. Meanwhile, six months of NewDelhi’s charm off��ensive notwithstanding, alienation is omnipresent,as is the keen sense of hurt, betrayal,anger and resignation.
To hold an election, the delimitation hurdle fi��rst needs to be crossed.With new political mapmaking inthe region, there will be seven moreAssembly constituencies in J&K.These have to be artfully identifi��edand demarcated, which will be doneon the basis of the 2011 Census. A delimitation commission is yet to beconstituted. Even the panchayatpolls, which the Prime Minister declared a resounding success, left halfthe seats empty because of the absence of candidates and boycottcalls.
The challenge for the governmentthen is how to balance the semblance of peace, which is a result ofdetentions, deployments and restrictions, and provide a platform of verymodest political activity that is sanctifi��ed by New Delhi, in a manner thatcan give the seething resentmentcontrollable political vent over whathas been done to J&K. This alone explains the calibrated release of minorpolitical leaders. It is presumablethat they have been set free on theimplicit understanding that they willnot be crossing any red lines drawnby New Delhi. The diplomatic tourists hear and see exactly what NewDelhi wants them to hear and see.New Delhi’s hope is that the localleaders of the PDP and NC come forward, give heft to the process, andgrow into major politicians. The expulsion of PDP politicians can onlybe a marker for the inroads government agencies are making in signingon new political recruits. It is probably easier to alienate PDP politiciansgiven the divisions already extant inthat conglomeration, although it isodd that politicians associated withan “antinational” like Ms. Muftishould escape that taint. The continued detention of Ms. Mufti and Mr.Abdullah is being done with the intention of starving them of the oxygen of a following, forcing uponthem political atrophy, and robbingthem of the opportunity to queer thenormalcy pitch. In Kashmir, it couldsoon be argued that the more thingsare normal, the more abnormal theyreally are.
sudarshan.v@thehindu.co.in
Placing senior leaders under detention robs them of the opportunity of queering the normalcy pitch
“With every lot of foreign diplomats entering J&K, the shelf of ‘normalcy’ inthe UT is extended.” Envoys of diff��erent countries enjoy shikara rides on DalLake in Srinagar on February 12. * NISSAR AHMAD
In Kashmir, abnormal is the new normal
V. Sudarshan
The digital revolution has made interactionsbetween humans and machines, and amongcitizens, governments and businesses, seamless and effi��cient. Today, egovernance enables and empowers citizens to directly engage with the state, thereby eliminatingbarriers in the delivery of public services.The next wave of transformation in digitalgovernance is at the intersection of data andpublic good. The key to this transformationlies in incorporating data as a strategic assetin all aspects of policy, planning, service delivery and operations of the government.
Transportation is one such critical area,where databased governance is expected toprovide a solution to the evergrowing threatof congestion to urban economies. Congestion caused an estimated loss of $87 billion tothe U.S. economy and $24 billion to the fourmetro cities in India in 2018. Given the limited land resources available, the key to solving congestion lies in improving the effi��ciency of existing transportation systems.
Multiple sourcesAn effi��cient transportation system wouldhelp ease congestion, reduce travel time andcost, and provide greater convenience. Forthis, data from multiple sources such asCCTV cameras, automatic traffi��c counters,map services, and transportation serviceproviders could be used.
A study by Transport for London, the local body responsible for transport in andaround the U.K. capital, estimates that itsopen data initiative on sharing of realtimetransit data has helped add £130 million ayear to London’s economy by improvingproductivity and effi��ciency. In China, an artifi��cial intelligencebased traffi��c management platform developed by Alibaba hashelped improve average speeds by 15%.
Closer home, the Hyderabad Open TransitData, launched by Open Data Telangana, isthe country’s fi��rst data portal publishing datasets on bus stops, bus routes, metroroutes, metro stations, schedules, fares, andfrequency of public transit services.
The objective is to empower startups anddevelopers to create useful mobility applications. The datasets were built after an intensive exercise carried out by the Open DataTeam and Telangana State Road Transport
Corporation to collect, verify and digitise thedata.
Hyderabad has also begun collaboratingwith the private sector to improve traffi��c infrastructure. One such partnership followeda Memorandum of Understanding signedbetween the Telangana government and OlaMobility Institute. Under this collaboration,Ola has developed a tool, Ola City Sense, toprovide databased insights that can monitorthe quality of Hyderabad’s roads and identifybad quality patches.
The data is provided to city offi��cials on adashboard, and updated every 23 weeks tocapture the nature of potholes/roads. The information thus given is useful not only forcarrying out road repairs, it also helps offi��cials take initiatives to improve road safety,monitor quality of construction, and studythe role of bad roads in causing congestion.
Planning road repair workA pilot was implemented in a municipal zoneto gauge the effi��cacy of the data in supporting road monitoring and prioritisation of repairs. The early results of this pilot projectwere encouraging. The dashboard helped city offi��cials plan the premonsoon repairwork and budget for repairs last year.
The pilot also demonstrated the willingness of government departments to applydatabased insights for better decision making. This tool is now being adopted across allmunicipal zones under the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation. This could alsoserve as a model for other cities to emulate.
The Hyderabad example shows that governments can make their departments datacentric by institutionalising data collection, building technology platforms andhelping the departments develop capacity tohandle the insights generated from the data.Command and control centres under the‘smart cities’ initiative can be an ideal starting point. Such interventions, however, alsoneed to address genuine concerns arounddata security and privacy.
The Telangana government has declaredthat the year 2020 will be the Year of Artifi��cial Intelligence. It aims to run hackathonsand masterclasses with AI as the theme. Discussions are on to include AI for Traffi��c Management. At the core of AIbased algorithmsis good data, and partnership with key stakeholders can only help build such algorithms.Insightful data will be the key to transformHyderabad into a ‘worldclass city’ in termsof mobility.
Dileep Konatham is Director, Digital Media, Telangana
government, and heads the ‘Open Data Initiative’ . K.
Yeshwanth Reddy is Lead-Urban Mobility at the Ola
Mobility Institute
Riding on data for mobilityDatabased governance can assist in reducing traffi��ccongestion, as illustrated by a pilot study in Hyderabad
Dileep Konatham
& K. Yeshwanth Reddy
CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC
DATA POINT
One of the fi��rst things that strikes youabout Parasite, the brilliant SouthKorean social satire that swept upfour Academy Awards this week, ishow familiar it feels to Indian viewers. Bong Joonho directs it like a perfectly timed highwire act, butgrounds it deeply in his understanding of the class divide.
The untouchability of classThe deep diff��erences between thePark and the Kim family that Parasitefocuses on mirrors the enormous income gap in India and, interestingly,takes the shape of what is essentiallyuntouchability; only, it’s the untouchability of class. The wealthy Mr.Park’s one abiding fearis that his chauff��eurKim Kitaek might“cross the line”. Theline is left undefi��ned —but it needs no defi��nition for Indians, intowhose homes chauffeurs and gardenersmight enter, but might not sit on thesofa. We might foot the driver’s billwhen we go out, but seldom will heshare our table.
If the upperclass Indian justifi��esthis by talking about ‘hygiene’, theyoung son of the Kim family has fewer inhibitions — he simply points outthat all four members of the Kim family smell the same. There’s a poignant scene where Kitaek’s daughtersays this smell can never be scrubbedout because it’s the smell of the basement they live in. What’s left eloquently unsaid is that this is the distinctive odour of poverty. It sharplyrecalls the scenes from the Tamil playManjal, where manual scavengers lament that the smell of sewage neverleaves their skin. And it seems entirely apposite that it is the sight of Mr.Park recoiling from Geunsae, handcovering nose, that fi��nally pushes Kitaek over the edge.
Bong extends the implicit untouchability of poverty with the metaphor of the toilet, that familiar forbidden ground. Two vivid scenesdemonstrate how close to that reviled toilet the poor lead their lives.First, when searching desperately foran Internet signal to tap, it’s by sitting
on the WC and holding phones abovetheir heads that the Kim siblings areable to read their WhatsApp messages. Then, when their basement homegets fl��ooded, Kijeong runs to slamdown the lid of the WC to keep therising sewage from spewing out, butlater she’s forced to crouch on thesame lid, smoking a cigarette, oblivious to the slime around her.
Secluded toilets, privacy and personal space are unaff��ordable luxuriesfor the poor. In fact, not long ago, India’s Attorney General had arguedthat “it’s not right to talk about theright to privacy for poor people”.Although the court ruled that privacyis a fundamental right, real life seldom off��ers it to people whose homesare pavements and cardboardwalled
shanties.This awareness
makes the contrastbetween the Kims’squalid basement andthe Parks’ soaring, airyhome even more stark.In one signifi��cantscene, the Kims,
caught unawares by the Park familyreturning home early, hide under thedrawing room table, unable to escape even as the Parks make love onthe couch. Jammed there, they areforced to listen to an act of intimacythat mocks the lack of privacy for intimate acts in their own life. It reminds us inexorably of Indian chawlsand slums — of people who mustcarefully time their return home toavoid interrupting others; of tinyrooms divided by saris to create theillusion of space; of couples whocrowd beaches and parks desperatefor solitude.
Universal themeParasite’s bottomup, unromantic,searing take on poverty couldn’thave come from anywhere but theglobal South. But its triumph lies inhow fl��uidly it universalises thetheme, making it impossible for privileged juries to look away. The fi��lm’sfantasy and caprice give it a surrealair, but the mortifi��cations it portraysare only too familiar not just to us,but to audiences everywhere in thedeveloping world.
vaishna.r@thehindu.co.in
Parasites, poverty and privacyThe themes of the Oscarwinning fi��lm are all toofamiliar to the global South
Vaishna Roy
The Union Cabinet tonight [February 12,New Delhi] decided to issue an ordinance torestore the status quo ante in regard to thenationalisation of the 14 banks, following theSupreme Court judgment last Tuesday invalidating the Bank Nationalisation Act of 1969.The ordinance will be issued tomorrow.The ordinance will meet the “twin” objections of the Supreme Court to the Act thatwas struck down, namely, hostile discrimination against the 14 major banks and payment of compensation. There is expected tobe another Cabinet meeting tomorrow priorto the issue of the ordinance which is beingdrafted. It is reliably learnt that the ordinance will provide for the acquisition of theshares in the 14 banks nationalised in Julylast. It is also learnt that no further extensionof nationalisation to other banks, Indian andforeign, is being contemplated. The Law Ministry is understood to be studying the bearing of the Supreme Court’s judgment on other matters – the reference is clearly togeneral insurance. The Cabinet discussionon the bank issue lasted for over two hours.The Cabinet met after the Prime Minister,Mrs. Indira Gandhi had talks with leaders ofOpposition groups. The Cabinet discussedthe proposal for an ordinance mooted by theMinistry of Law in consultation with the Finance Ministry.
FIFTY YEARS AGO FEBRUARY 13, 1970
Protecting bank nationalisation
CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC
FROM THE ARCHIVES
CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC