Communal politics goes viral in Kerala
Tuesday April 10, 2012 01:50:53 PM,
B.R.P.Bhaskar,
IANS
|
|
|
The communal genii whose support the
Congress invoked to oust Kerala's first Communist government more
than 50 years ago are still around and turning the state's
politics viral.
Across the fractured polity there is animated discussion on how
the decision of the Indian Union Muslim League, the second largest
constituent of the Congress-led United Democratic Front, to press
its year-old demand for an additional ministerial berth will
affect the communal balance.
The third largest UDF constituent, the Kerala Congress (Mani), a
camouflaged Christian formation with a Nair sprinkle, supports the
League demand. However, several prominent Congressmen as well as
leaders of the Communist Party of India-Marxist, the Bharatiya
Janata Party, the Nair Service Society of the forward Nair
community and Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam of the
backward Ezhava community have said raising League representation
in the government will upset the communal balance.
While forming the government after the UDF scraped through with a
72-68 majority in the 140-member assembly in last year's
elections, Chief Minister Oommen Chandy offered the League four
ministerial berths, as in his previous government. However, League
president Hyderali Shihab Thangal named Manjalamkuzhi Ali as the
party's fifth minister. Last week he demanded that Ali must be
sworn in along with Anoop Jacob of the Kerala Congress (Jacob),
who won the Piravam by-election and is waiting to take his late
father's place in the council of ministers.
Unable to resist the League's pressure, the chief minister has
tossed the problem into the high command's lap. He has also
reportedly proposed that the League be offered assembly
speakership, now held by a Congressman, in lieu of fifth
ministership.
The League's stubbornness and the Kerala Congress's support to it
are manifestations of growing communal assertiveness, origins of
which can be traced to the 'liberation struggle' of 1959 which
gave the Centre the pretext to dismiss the Communist ministry.
The prime movers behind the agitation were the Church, which was
infuriated by the government's attempt to curb exploitation of
teachers by private managements, a majority of which are under
different Christian denominations, and the NSS, which resented
dismantling of the feudal system of land ownership dominated by
Hindu forward castes.
The Praja Socialist Party and the Indian Union Muslim League,
which had influence among Muslims of the Malabar region, made
common cause with the Congress. In the elections that followed the
government's ouster the three parties together worsted the
Communists. Averse to accommodating the successor of the
pre-Partition Muslim League in the Cabinet, the Congress placated
it with the Speakership.
After the Congress ended its ties with the League, the CPI-M
stepped in. As its ally, the League got two Cabinet berths. That
helped it earn political respectability. Playing his cards well in
the days of political uncertainty, C.H. Mohammed Koya, leader of
the 13-member League legislature party, became chief minister in
1979. However, the government lasted only 50 days.
The Kerala Congress was formed by a group of Christian and Nair
legislators who revolted against backward class chief minister R.
Sankar and walked out of the Congress in 1964. It has undergone
many splits and mergers, but its caste/religious composition
remains unchanged.
The League is now a part of the state's political establishment.
For the past several decades it has been with the Congress. Since
2009 it is also represented in the Congress-led government at the
Centre.
The cry of communal imbalance is a response to the perceived
over-representation of the minority communities in the present
government. Of the 21 ministers sworn in last year, six, including
the chief minister, were Christians and five Muslims. That made
the minorities, which together account for 44 per cent of the
population, a majority in the government. A fifth League minister
will distort the picture further.
However, this is not the first skewed government in the state's
history. In the last Left Democratic Front government the
minorities were heavily under-represented. Of the 21 ministers,
only two were Muslims, although the community accounts for nearly
a quarter of the population. Christians who constitute 19 per cent
were better off with four ministers.
Gross imbalance between the forward and backward castes has also
been a feature of successive governments. In the present Cabinet
there are only two ministers from the backward Ezhava community,
which is said to account for 22 per cent of the population. In the
last LDF government, it had six members, including the chief
minister. All four ministers of the CPI were from that community.
The cause of the persistent communal imbalance is the narrow
social base of the political parties. While Hindus constitute only
56 percent of the population they form 80 percent of the CPI-M
membership. The caste/religious breakup of Congress membership is
not known, but its leadership is widely perceived as a combine of
Savarna elements of the Christian and Hindu religions. The formula
the state leadership has placed before the Congress high command
reinforces this perception. It envisages increased Cabinet
representation to the Hindu forward caste to contain fallout
resulting from gift of Speakership to the Muslim League.
The narrow religious base of the League and the Kerala Congress is
just one of the problems. Their geographical base and gender base
too are narrow. More representation for them in the Cabinet means
more men from the same religions and same regions.
B.R.P.Bhaskar is a
veteran journalist and commentator. He can be contacted at
brpbhaskar@gmail.com
|
Home |
Top of the Page
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
23 convicted, 23 acquitted for Gujarat riots
massacre
A special
trial court here Monday acquitted 23 people, but also convicted 23
for the massacre of 23 people in Ode village of Anand district
during the 2002 Gujarat riots. »
Authorities in Gujarat protecting perpetrators of 2002 riots: HRW
Politics of hatred has triumphed in Gujarat: Harsh Mander
|
|
Most Read |
India, Qatar sign oil pact, discuss Indians'
welfare
India and energy-rich Qatar, home to half a million Indians,
Monday sealed six agreements in diverse areas, including an
overarching pact on cooperation in oil and gas exploration.
»
|
Apex court grants bail to Chisti,
appreciates India-Pakistan bonhomie
"Let there be more such good news", the apex court
commented Monday on the bonhomie between India and Pakistan during
the visit of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari to India, while
granting bail to Pakistani
»
Now India-China model for India-Pakistan
ties?
|
|
News Pick |
Baby girl tortured by father, this
time in Bangalore
She has a severe head injury, bite marks all over
her body and is on life support in a Bangalore hospital. The
shocking case of three-month-old Afreen - allegedly battered by
her own father as he wanted a male child - came to light
»
|
AMU faculty honoured with Best Scientist
Award
Dr. G. G. Hammad
Ahmad Shadab, Asst. Professor, Section of Genetics,
Department of Zoology, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh has been
honoured with Har Gobind Khorana Best Scientist Award For
Biological Sciences »
|
Akhilesh transfers 1,000 bureaucrats in 24 days
With more
than 1,011 transfers in 24 days, the once powerful bureaucracy in
Uttar Pradesh is running for cover these days.
And so while the babudom was rife of a "complete overhaul" of the
state police and bureaucracy
»
|
|
Picture of the Day |
 |
Emir of the State of Qatar His Highness Sheikh Hamad Bin
Khalifa Al –Thani and Her Highness Sheikha Moza Bint Nasser
being received by Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural
Gas and Corporate Affairs R.P.N. Singh, on their arrival, at
Air Force Palam Airport, in New Delhi on April 08, 2012.
|
|
|
|