The Rediff Special
Has peace a chance in Punjab?
Punjab goes to the polls on Friday. It is undoubtedly a most crucial
election, coming as it does after the decade-long troubles in the state.
N V Subramaniam travelled
through the state recently for Sunday magazine --
with whose kind courtesy this report is published.
The hundreds of thousands of men and boys streaming
into Muktsar town in Faridkot
district on this mid-winter Monday morning for the
annual Maghi Mela had little apparent political purpose. Only
die-hards sat out in the cold shadows of the large pandals put
up by the Congress party, the Akali Dal (Parkash Singh Badal group),
the Akali Dal (Simranjit Singh Mann faction) and the Bharatiya
Kisan Union on the sidestreets. But by 2 pm, with the arrival
of assorted political stars of Punjab, and the sun being well
up, these rapidly filled out.
This happens year after year. During the Emergency, defied by
more than 50,000 Sikhs, the Akali Dal was forced to hold its durbar
within the famous Muktsar Sahib gurdwara. Operation Bluestar
became another rallying point. That tradition continues. The Muktsar
Mela shows up, yearly and ruggedly, therefore, just how inseparable
politics in Punjab is from culture, leave alone religion.
The excitement in the various political pandals this fortnight,
however, was occasioned by a more desirable event. Elections to
the Punjab assembly are due. Unusually, too, Punjab
goes to the polls in relative peace after more than 13 years of
terrorism. And, these promise to be truer than the one held five
years ago that the Congress party won because Badal's Akali Dal
boycotted them.
Yet, Parkash Singh Badal, twice Punjab's chief minister,
one of its richest landlords, friends with nearly every anti-Congressman
of consequence in the country and tipped for a third term of office,
was leaving nothing to chance. On the dais with him was L K Advani
with whose Bharatiya Janata Party his party will share
seats in the elections. Both had winning smiles for photographers
and for the crowds impatient for their speeches.
They spoke of corruption of the Congress nationally. They didn't
take names. It was too early in the campaign for specifics. And,
Advani's presence somehow detracted from dragging state politics
all too suddenly in. But Advani and Badal were both there at Muktsar
as at some sort of political swayamwara. Smiling contentedly,
too, was the BJP's state president, Balram Tandon, a likely deputy
chief minister and finance minister if the Akalis come to power
and a total defender of Badal's outrageous poll promise to give
free water and electricity to Punjab's farmers.
On show, meanwhile, at the Congress party's shamiana, half a kilometre
away, was Punjab's first woman chief minister, Rajinder Kaur Bhattal.
Sitaram Kesri was to come but he didn't. Speakers before her like
the irrepressible former Congress MP, Jagmeet Singh Brar, and
the state president, Santokh Singh Randhava, had set the tone
with personal attacks on Badal and such Akali colleagues as the
much-respected Surjit Singh Barnala. Bhattal carried forth.
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