Friday, November 15, 2024
Home Blog Page 6856

Imam who issued fatwa against Modi now threatens Tarek Fatah of beheading

0

Recently, the Shahi Imam of Kolkata’s Tipu Sultan Mosque, Maulana Noorur Rahman Barkati was in the news for issuing a fatwa against Narendra Modi. The Imam had declared an award of Rupees 25 lakhs for shaving the head and beard of the Prime Minister. He was speaking at a joint conference by the All India Majlis-e-Sura and All India Minority Forum, in a promotional campaign for Mamata Banerjee.

Now it appears the Imam has gone quite a few steps ahead. The Imam was invited to a panel discussion on Zee News, to debate his controversial fatwa. Among the panelists, was Canadian columnist and staunch critic of radical Islam, Tarek Fatah.

In a shocking incident of gross “intolerance”, out of nowhere, the Imam declared during the debate that Fatah “would be beheaded”.

Fatah later posted the video on his Facebook page:

Here is the Kolkatta Mullah telling me on live TV, “your throat is going to be slit.”

Despite committing a criminal act by issuing a death threat, trust this man to walk free under the protection of Kolkata Police.

Remember, this criminal Jihadi is the same mullah who honoured Osama BinLaden with a funeral prayer. Earlier on, the same mullah put a ₹50,000/- bounty on the head of Taslima Nasreen

In the video, Barkati says: “tumhari gardan kategi bewakoof” (Your head will be severed you idiot) to Fatah. The other claims made by Fatah in his Facebook post above are also true.

In 2011, the same Shahi Imam Maulana Nurur Rehman Barkati, held a special Friday prayer for the ‘peace of the soul’ of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

As for the bounty on Taslima Nasreen’s head, Barkati issued his first fatwa against her in 2004, setting the price on her head at Rs 20,000. In the second fatwa issued in 2006, the price went up to Rs 50,000. In the third fatwa in 2007, Imam Barkati said the money would be unlimited. Knowing that the Imam has in the past issued bounties on critics of Islam, the latest “threat” to Fatah cannot be taken lightly.

The Imam is also a huge supporter of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Bannerjee.

Image result for shahi imam kolkata mamata

As seen above, the fatwa issued against Modi was in fact issued at a press conference taken in support of Mamata Bannerjee itself. Further, in 2015, Barkati had virtually campaigned for Bannerjee saying:

“India is a secular country and Mamata Banerjee is the most secular leader of the country. It thus becomes pertinent that all should vote for her in the 2016 assembly elections.”

Is this statement on live TV enough for a few Bengali artists to return their awards to Mamata Bannerjee? Will a rally be taken out by eminent personalities against such veiled death threats?

When Modi told Congress how to take on BJP, and got an offer to join Congress

0

An old video clip has gone viral on social media that shows Congress leader Jairam Ramesh making an offer to Narendra Modi to join the Congress party, because he appeared impressed with the political analysis offered by Modi.

The clip is from the 1998-2001 period, part of the era when India had seen a string of coalition governments and political instability. The issue being debated appears to be – if the Congress party, then in opposition, would try to topple the BJP led government and form an alternative government with the ‘third front’.

Narendra Modi, then a general secretary of the BJP, surprises the panelists by saying that Congress was being honest and truthful when it says that it will not try to topple the BJP led government.

When a surprised anchor asks him why he felt so, listen to what Narendra Modi says (in Hindi):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wY1oes0CRM

Narendra Modi says, that in his opinion, the immediate goal and strategy of Congress was to first eliminate the ‘third front’ and get back those votes in their own kitty, before they decide to take on the BJP directly.

This analysis is immediately followed by Jairam Ramesh making an offer to Narendra Modi to join the party. “If you want to leave the BJP, there is a vacancy for you in Congress,” he says.

Narendra Modi laughs off the offer saying he is from Sangh Parivar and Jairam Ramesh will have to answer (to Congress high command) for making such offers.

While it may appear to be a light-hearted interaction, this clip actually proves why Congress has been failing to take on the BJP of late.

In fact, Narendra Modi’s analysis – or should we say prognosis – about Congress’ strategy to take on BJP is far more relevant today. The fact that Jairam Ramesh quickly follows that up with an offer for Modi, even though in jest, betrays that even he understood that Modi was on the money.

Congress has become weakened not just because BJP has been growing, but because all the socio-economic classes it considers to be its traditional voters, are no longer with the grand old party. An overwhelming majority of those voters are with what was then called the ‘third front’.

Even now Rahul Gandhi keeps talking about Dalits, backwards, minorities, farmers, etc. but do these groups really consider Congress as their own party? Parties like Samajwadi Party, RJD, BSP, and other regional parties have a better hold on them. In Delhi, Congress lost their vote bank to the rookie Aam Aadmi Party.

Can and should Congress really take on BJP – now under the same Narendra Modi who told them at least 15 years back what their problem was – without getting back these votes?

Congress at best can take on BJP using ‘mahagathbandhan’ like strategy in Bihar, but the party that ruled the country like fiefdom for decades was relegated to playing a minor supporting role. That can’t be the strategy to revive the party.

Maybe Jairam Ramesh knows this truth even today, but that will mean telling Rahul Gandhi – whenever he returns from his holiday in Europe – that the party needs to focus on some vital issues before thinking of taking on the BJP directly.

However, telling the truth to Rahul Gandhi will require more chutzpa than offering Narendra Modi to join Congress.

Kejriwal makes one more U-turn as political predictions show AAP downslide

0

When the going gets tough, the tough gets going. But Kejriwal does a U-turn.

Kejriwal’s AAP has been trying its level best to gain a foothold in at least two more states beyond Delhi: Punjab and Goa. For some time, it seemed the party had gained good traction in both states, with surveys showing AAP as a massive gainer in Punjab, and also enjoying decent support in Goa.

But of late, the tables seem to have turned, at least if surveys are to be believed. An India-Today Axis poll conducted recently showed that Congress had the lead in Punjab, while a poll by Lokniti-CSDS-ABP showed BJP ahead. The common thread in both the polls was AAP, which was once touted by some polls to win almost 100 seats out of 117, was now nowhere near the finish line.

Even in Goa, a mid-year poll by a little known survey agency gave AAP 35% vote share and 14 seats out of 40. AAP Goa had proceeded to put up lakhs of posters advertising this survey. But recent polls by India-Today Axis and other local Goan media houses peg AAP’s influence to earn them a maximum of 4 seats, which could even go down to one seat.

Such lacklustre performance in surveys prompted Kejriwal to slam media houses and such agencies. In a sparsely attended election meeting in Goa, Kejriwal asked AAP voters in Goa not to trust pre-poll surveys on TV news channels:

Yesterday, I was watching a TV channel which said, in Goa, we will win two seats, which means how many seats will we really get? 28. Tell your friends and neighbours not to trust TV channels. They show lies and ‘bakwas’ (nonsense)

Kejriwal might have forgotten, but this is a massive U-turn from the AAP supremo. Kejriwal has been a big fan of such “lies and bakwas” by media houses. When the surveys were in favour of AAP, Kejriwal had enthusiastically shared and quoted the same on social media:



Kejriwal’s blow-hot-blow-cold relationship with media is well-known. Even before this, Kejriwal has slammed opinion polls when they have not been in his favour. While AAP and Kejriwal have benefited largely from media’s disproportionate coverage of AAP, Kejriwal has been ready to slam mediapersons whenever they speak against him.

His latest U-turn on the issue of opinion polls and surveys shows that Kejriwal can take practically any position, irrespective of his past choices in order to save his face. In remains to be seen if Kejriwal makes yet another U-turn if some new survey comes which shows AAP ahead in Punjab or Goa.

There is crisis in media, and both the Left and the Right should worry about it

0

The mail announcing the closing down of seven editions and bureaus of the Hindustan Times landed suddenly on January 5th afternoon. The editions will print their last copies today. Not even the editors of these editions had the faintest clue on January 4 that by January 10, less than a week later, they would be jobless.

A lot of people from India to USA have lost faith in big media and journalists, calling us “presstitutes” and “paid media”. Yet it was only a very small percent of journalists who sold out. Most continued to do their jobs as honestly as they could, for modest or meagre salaries, with zero job security.

It was the managements that sold out. It was owners, who exploited their workers to maximise their profits, who sold out.

It was the powerful network of big money and political power that turned journalism into “paid media” and forced journalists into “presstitution”. To do this, they increased the power of Human Resource and Marketing departments, and killed the institution of Editor.

Over a period of time, strong, independent-minded journalists largely disappeared from the journalistic scene. They were replaced by agents of corporate or political entities. These forces often called the owners of newspapers to place their chosen people in positions of authority. Alternatively, yes-men or women handpicked by newspaper managements to protect their own private interests got key positions.

These ‘dalals’ sold their souls at high prices. Their salaries ran into crores of rupees per annum. They lived the lifestyles of the rich and famous. To justify their salaries, they had to kill stories inconvenient to the owners or their friends, push stories beneficial to the owners or their friends, and – regardless of the political party in power – implement a strictly neoliberal agenda in journalism.

People see Left and Right in every situation. Since conspiracy theories are the flavour of the times, let me suggest that this division of honest folks into Left and Right on every issue is the greatest conspiracy of our times. It prevents people from seeing basic realities that surround them every day in their own lives.

Take any issue in the news… say rape, assault and molestation of women, for instance. People across the political spectrum broadly agree that these are crimes that must be ended, though they may differ on how. The most extreme opposing voices are carefully curated and the entire debate is focused around these voices to generate a spectacle for TRPs, and prevent any real, thoughtful discussion.

What no one mentions is that every day in every major city in India there are many instances of rapes, molestations and assaults that do not find any mention in print or on television. They do not become news.

When is rape not news? When it happens to poor people. In such cases, it becomes news only if it can be turned into a political issue, with caste or communal angles. The exception is the visual story. Dramatic footage that can be played on loop, will be played on loop, because it gets eyeballs.

Why are rapes of poor people not reported? The logic for this is that poor people are not our readers or viewers, so we do not cover them.

The obvious question then is, who are our readers and viewers?

Well, they are people who can afford to buy the products advertised in our newspapers and on our TV channels.

The reason the newspaper or TV channel exists, from the perspective of the owners, is to make money for them. In order for it to do that, it has to make money from ad revenues. Advertisers want to reach people who can buy their products. They look at society in terms of purchasing power – more the better.

So, coverage is designed to appeal to the people with the most purchasing power.

When I first came to Delhi from North-East India, I used to be furious at the neglect of the North-East in the supposedly national media. Then I gradually realised that forget North East, even North Delhi was relatively neglected compared to South Delhi. Slums and villages around Delhi simply did not exist in the imagination of the Delhi English media.

The map of India according to the Indian English language media is mainly South and Central Delhi and Mayur Vihar in East Delhi (many journalists live there), South Mumbai and the suburbs up to Andheri, Bangalore Cantonment and the new areas where the I.T. folks stay, and a few pockets from here and there. Other places appear sporadically when truly horrible things happen there.

This map happens to coincide with the map of areas where concentrations of ‘good consumers’ live and work. It is the map of places where maximum products may profitably be sold.

All my Leftist friends, with pain in their hearts for the poor and oppressed, seem not to notice the structural skew built into this neoliberal media of which so many of them are a part. It is a media that denies equal humanity to people who, for want of money, are unable to consume more.

All my Right-wing friends, with pain in their hearts for the nation, seem not to notice that around 90 percent of the nation is missing from the national news. I wonder what could be more anti-national than that. Erasing 90 percent of the nation from the national imagination is not very different from wiping off 90 percent of the country from the map.

Profit and power may be the sole objectives of the ‘seths’ who own and run these businesses. They are not the sole reasons that the media exists.

The state extends many benefits to media houses because they are supposed to constitute the fourth pillar of democracy. A lot of idealistic young people come into the journalism profession because they want to contribute to making a better world for all.

It is safe to say that at present, the profit and power of a few individuals is the raison d’etre of the bulk of Indian media companies. Media is no longer the fourth pillar of democracy; it is the central pillar of crony capitalism. It exists to sell products and influence to the highest bidder.

This is a crying shame.

(by Samrat.
The writer is a journalist and author.)

Men aren’t good enough, good aren’t men enough – the problem with women’s safety

0

Life in a sleepy industrial township is mellow. With a multicultural population comprising mostly of educated employees sourced from across India, one would expect a degree of maturity in the township’s culture; and so it was in Bokaro, at least as much as I can remember from my early childhood.

The politics of a life as a child is also simple, your siblings double up as your best friends and worst enemies. Parents play the role of super-national bodies dictating peace and threatening economic blockades and military action if ever there is a breach. Such was my life too. As the youngest of four, I was closest to my sister who is 6 years elder to me.

This little simple world, in the ideal town, changed for us as we grew up. In the same locality was a gang of boys who had grown in age and size but were fast depreciating in character. Cat-calling, eve teasing were increasingly becoming commonplace. I had seen bloody brawls with bare knuckles, sticks, stones by the time I was 8-9. Everyone was generally scared of these guys and they were getting emboldened day-by-day feasting on this fear.

I am writing this in the backdrop of the mass molestation in Bangalore on the first day of 2017. Enough intellectual jiggling has happened over what women should do to be safe and what society should do to keep women safe. Useful theories like “All men are potentially rapists” have been propounded, which effectively drives us towards leveraging technologies like in-vitro spermatogenesis and eventual eradication of human male species. Less radical and ideas like “Change all men’s mentality” have also been brought forward. However mentality change might take time on a generational scale and until that happens, and before facing eventual annihilation for being a man, I wish to explore why the bad men stand at the front of representing manhood and why the good men are not men enough (with due advance apologies to the feminists).

The next few incidents are real anecdotes from my life, with some men who were sexual predators, some “good” men, who were not men enough, and why.

***

I was 8-9 years old. My sister was 14-15. We are from a conservative North Indian family. It was the 90s, fashion as it is now, had not picked up. It was a township, far removed from metro culture. My sister would wear frocks, t-shirts and trousers at home but would always change into salwar-kameez if she had to step out.

My mother once told my sister to get sooji (semolina) to make halwa (porridge) as we were expecting some guests. She tagged me along. The shop was about 400 meters away. It was dusk, the night was claiming the skies fast. I was walking, holding her hand when a voice called from behind – “O madam, time kya ho raha hai?” (O madam, what is the time?).

My sister’s pace hastened. Holding her hand and walking along I looked up and saw her looking down, fixated on the road beneath, walking very fast to the point where I had to gallop a little to keep up.

I was a kid but I was not stupid. I knew what was going on. I asked, “Wapas ghar chalein?” (Should we go back home). But she was in a battle with herself. She was reacting to the cat-calling but did not want to be seen doing it. She said, “Jaldi chalo nahi toh mummy daantegi” (Let’s make it fast or mother will be angry).

We took a longer roundabout route back home to avoid them. She never told our parents about this incident, neither did I. I don’t know if she was trying to be brave and assure herself that she can deal with it, or if she was afraid that our parents would interrogate her first as to why she attracted such attention. Thereon she seldom left home for the extended neighborhood. She would always prod me to go to the shop. But I had my own fears…

***

Few days after this incident, we had come to know that another girl was being harassed by the same gang of guys. She had once replied back to them. In revenge for the “insult”, they got hold of her younger brother when he was playing in the ground. He was in my age group. They tore his clothes off and had him run back home almost naked. I, in turn, had given up going to the ground. So I believe, had others who had sisters.

But I had to follow orders and go to the shop. On one of such visits, I was called by one of the guys in the gang. He was called “Mantu”. “Aye babu… idhar aao…” (Hey kid.. come here). I was too scared to not obey. I was already imagining myself naked and looking around for bushes where I could hide until it became dark, also fearing if a snake would bite me at a place where I can’t tie a rope or make a cut. But that didn’t happen.

There was a long inconsequential talk for about 15-20 mins about things like “Kya naam hai… Bada badhiya naam hai… Shankar ji ka naam hai ee toh… Koun iskool me padhte ho… Bada badhiya iskool hai…” (What is your name… What a nice name… It is Lord Shankar’s name… In which school do you study… It’s a very good school…) This was repeated on more occasions when I went to the shop.

I had started to develop gradual fascination for the power those guys wielded, of how they could stop and talk to anyone, how shopkeepers, doodh-walas crossing by, would greet them, how they could have samosas and not pay and yet the samosa-wala would say, “Phir aaiyega bhaiya” (Please come again bhaiya).

My mother was getting suspicious as to why I always get back late from the shop. She followed me once, saw me talking to them happily, called me back from afar, took me home and gave me a mighty thrashing for talking to the already infamous bunch! My mother’s fear prevailed and I always avoided them thereafter, taking the longer route, changing my path when I saw them.

In retrospect, the beating was God’s hand correcting my path and the fear of my mother’s beating was a divine shield protecting my character!

***

On another occasion, they rounded up another guy in the colony. He was a handicapped guy. He had a sister who too had dared to talk back at them for their advances. They were beating him up in the middle of the road. It was a weekend when all the “good men”, fathers, brothers, were at home. At once, many men came out from all around, in balconies, outside their buildings, on the street.

Ab bahut hua… Ab hadh ho gaya… Ab ee lanth log ko sabak sikhana hoga…” (It’s enough… They have crossed the limit… These goons must be taught a lesson…) It looked like the end of the reign of terror!! But the goon-in-chief, “Mantu” was calm. He stopped the beating and calmly went back up the street. In two minutes, he was back raging like a mad bull and with a pistol in his hand!! “Koun bola re… kisko himmat hua re… koun aayega… aao sala…” (Who was yelling at us… How has the guts… who will face us… come now..) he yelled, and fired two rounds in the air!

All the good men were silenced in the middle of valiant war-cries! I saw two things for the first time that day – a pistol in action and a mass-freezing event with all the good men frozen in their snarls!

Out came the aunties and pulled the men inside, many willingly went in. Some good men tried to resist to give credence to future claims of “Sala bandook nahi hota toh maar dete usko…” (I would have killed them if they were not carrying a gun), but they eventually agreed and went inside homes. The neighborhood was desolate again and the reign of terror was re-established after 15 mins of freedom.

***

This reign of terror, molestation, eve teasing, cat calling continued for a couple of years. For a couple of years, my sister, just as other girls, didn’t go out in the neighborhood. For a couple of years, boys with sisters didn’t go out to play in the playgrounds. For a couple of years, the good men told their families to be careful and not venture out when they left for work.

In those couple of years, I saw how papas are not powerful, how puny, insignificant and scared (for explicable reasons) the mighty men in the homes are. It stands to reason that this loss of awe and respect for the patriarch of the family and other families around and the feeling of powerlessness, would aggravate youngsters’ issues during their teenage rebel days, and drive them on a quest of immediate power, rather than morality, and give them  a sense of perceived impunity.

***

The terror ended when a new SP (IPS) came to town. I don’t quite remember if it was Mr. Dinesh Singh Bisht or Mr. Sunil Palta, but he was very strict and always had his way. The gang suddenly disappeared. Every few days one of them would be seen with bandages, limping, twisted, scarred, swollen. We stopped seeing them after a while. Youngsters who had begun to flock to them and were learning “skills” under their tutelage were also not to be seen at their marked spots. It was this simple. Peace had returned!

All higher ideals aside, I believe it was plain simple fear that worked for them, when they silenced the good men into submission and against them when the police reoriented their consciences with their batons. This, I guess, is the language that men who didn’t learn enough as boys, understand.

***

The higher ideals, family values, education, sensitization etc. work during the formative years, with boys who are yet to be cast into a mould. As with us, when our testosterones introduced themselves and ran amok, we started looking differently at the same girls, many of whom we had known since kindergarten. But we were driven to win hearts and we vaguely knew how to go about it and molesting was certainly not the way to do it.

These ideals, mostly bred in the family and at school, stop you from taking the wrong path and give you the good fear of dishonorable conduct and of law. Sensitization, co-education give you empathy with the girls who are victims of sexist crimes. More importantly, they give insights, suggest acceptable ways in which you can creatively address your attraction, so you are not driven to desperation.

The perplexing question however is, why are the good men who wouldn’t indulge in crimes themselves, not man up and stand against these crimes as men should. How could predators be emboldened enough to molest at such a large scale, with an air of impunity, in Bangalore? Where were all the good men? Where are the good men when a lone girl is molested in a crowd of hundreds by 4-5 predators?

Violence is the crude dynamics of power. Molestation is an act of accessing and abusing without consent, the body, which is a very private possession of the individual. Through molestation, the criminal says, “I am so brave and powerful, I can take what you have claims over, whether you like it or not”.

The good man, on the contrary, is one who is ready to relinquish all claims and buy a quiet way out.

Perhaps, our definition of “good” is flawed. We identify the good man as a passive being who does not fall into trouble, who is shrunk in himself and is benign to the world, who may not help but also does not harm others. In effect, we identify those men as good who honor every fear around and postpone every fight for later, when risks are minimized.

The “good man” is afraid of physical harm to himself, harm to his family. His family and he find dishonor in a policeman visiting his home. A good man is worried about tomorrow before attending to his today. And ironically, even the fear and awe of law seems to bother only the good man, not the criminal!

Our socio-legal systems and institutions, and our value systems are giving us a goodness that is not good enough, and good men, who are not men enough.

There is more to this which I wish to share, of what it took to stand up and resist, but that is perhaps for another time.

Kumar Vishwas in legal trouble for yet another ‘joke’

0

In order to win the upcoming state assembly elections, Aam Aadmi Party has been working for long to create a base for itself in Punjab. Kejriwal had begun wooing Sikhs right from December 2015. A news report from that time claimed that  Kejriwal had even supported a move to ban jokes on Sikhs.

A petition on change.org seeking a ban ‘Sikh jokes’ was started by a person named RPS Kohli. A hard copy of the same was circulated in Gurudwaras and apparently Kejriwal even signed on one such copy, and said that people ‘should not be making jokes on religious and caste lines’. Among other things, the petition states:

While we are a fun loving community, and love our culture, the Bhangra, the language, we DO NOT like when “12 Baje Jokes” or “Santa Banta Jokes” are cracked at our expense. It is not about Sikhs not being able to take a joke, it’s about hurting our religious sentiments.

The petition raised specific objection to the “12 Baj Gaye” wisecrack which is often used to mock and rile up Sikhs, and Kejriwal by signing the petition, has endorsed the view that such a line is derogatory.

While on one hand Kejriwal has taken this stand, it appears his deputy Kumar Vishwas wasn’t taken into confidence before signing such a declaration. Vishwas is well known for his cheap “comedy”, an example of which was when he made comments on skin colour of nurses from Kerala.

Now, with less than a month to go for Punjab elections, a video has emerged wherein Vishwas is seen cracking the exact same “joke” which the petition endorsed by Kejriwal objected to:


In the video, Vishwas uses the “12 Baj Gaye” line to mock Sikhs.

Reacting to the above video, President of the Bhagat Singh Kranti Sena, Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga announced that he was going to file a police complaint against Kumar Vishwas for his “joke”:


This could come as a setback to AAP, which had on Friday announced that Kumar Vishwas would be one of Aam Aadmi Party’s “star campaigners” in Punjab.

It will be interesting to see what would be Kejriwal’s reaction to this issue since he himself had signed the petition to ban jokes on Sikhs, especially the “12 baj gaye” joke. Further, with the upcoming Punjab assembly elections, Kejriwal may be forced to isolate loose-cannon Vishwas. It is also worth noting that to please hardliners among Sikhs in Punjab, Vishwas was forced to apologise for his comments on Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale earlier.

We may also get to see a repeat of the time when Vishal Dadlani, mocked esteemed Digambar Jain guru Tarun Sagar and after social media outrage, ended up quitting politics. So will Vishwas go the Dadlani way?

UPDATE (10 January 2017): Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga informed on Twitter that he had filed a police complaint as he had announced:


Demonetisation and Elections : 2017 the year of reckoning

0

While many discussions and op-eds have been written about the economic aspect of demonetisation, not much has been written on its effect on the political spectrum of the country. Political pundits have mostly viewed this as a grave mistake on the part of PM Modi. It is being viewed as digging the grave for BJP in electoral politics as the percentage of these higher notes was 86% of the total notes in circulation meaning everyone was affected by this and was made to stand in long queues in front of ATMs and Banks. Add to that traders – considered to be among core supporters of the BJP – being forced to go cashless and to follow proper accounting.

2017 is going to be a crucial year for BJP as 7 states – Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Manipur, Goa, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh – go to elections. Out of these seven, BJP has government in 2 states – Goa and Gujarat – while in Punjab, they are part of the government with SAD being the major party. After defeat in Delhi and Bihar in 2015, winning these elections is very crucial for BJP.

So why would PM take such a step at this juncture where another loss could be seen as the government losing popular support, and eventually appearing to lose in 2019. Although PM said in his address that this wasn’t about politics but about cleaning up the economy, there is hardly any decision of any government that doesn’t involve politics.

So even here one has to see what gains Modi hopes to make via this decision politically, although the central idea behind demonetisation may or may not have been political.

Let’s remember that elections in India see big usage of black money, and every party is believed to be guilty of spending unaccounted money. The meltdown of many politicians with some of them hallucinating things out of the air, proves that demonetisation has hurt some in the opposition and has upset their plans.

Every political party would have hoarded vast amounts of cash to be distributed as election dates approach. BJP on the other hand would be at an advantage here as they rely mostly on the RSS for ground work when. This could prove to be a crucial difference. With most of the cash being made redundant, it will be difficult to buy votes. Also, BJP being the largest party in India at the moment in terms of registered members will have an advantage over others.

Another aspect that can further help is the shifting of the Union Budget date from 28th February to 1st of February and doing away with the separate Railway Budget. Now the Railway budget would be part of the main Union budget. The main reason behind this move was to make sure GST rolls out on the 1st of April as no time is wasted between March and April as the budget on 28th Feb would have delayed the GST.

Politically it will help the Government, as with the elections being held in Feb-March, the surplus money coming into the government treasury via IDS and demonetisation can be used to announce schemes for the economically backward class. A bit of that was already done on 31st December 2016 as PM announced various goodies for such classes. This is the reason opposition is demanding that the date of the budget be shifted from the 1st of Feb to after 8th of March when the final phase of voting will be done with.

Currently BJP has the momentum on its side with the party winning the recently concluded by-polls and civic body elections in Gujarat and Maharashtra. With the new elections poll surveys showing BJP doing much better in all the states compared to the last time, one can not say that the idea behind demonetisation was not thought through politically.

If BJP wins the assembly elections in coming Feb-March, it could also force the likes of Nitish Kumar (CM of Bihar) and Naveen Patnaik (CM of Odisha) to realign themselves before the 2019 elections. 2017 will also be the make or break year for Aam Aadmi Party and Arvind Kejriwal’s dreams of being the Prime Minister in 2019 as they aim to win in Punjab and Goa, and later in Gujarat. But with AAP’s Goa leader supporting demonetisation and no money to fight Punjab elections, things are not looking rosy for the party.

In a nutshell, 2017 will be an interesting year as political landscape could see tectonic shifts and realignments before 2019 – and demonetisation will play a crucial role in this.

Lutyens media fails to hide its hate as Arnab’s venture makes Twitter debut

2016 was the year when Arnab Goswami forced the Indian media to show its true colours. The media – which pretended to be the voice of the people – was all out to attack Arnab because he presented and supported a voice that resonated with large sections of the society.

The hate and lobbying against Arnab proved that the media was not comfortable with certain ideas and points of views – that their claim of being neutral was a sham, intended to fool people to consume their content. Arnab said many times that he didn’t believe in this fake neutrality, and he openly took sides on various issues.

Essentially, Arnab wore his bias on his sleeves, while the rest of the media had been wearing it under their pants.

This rest of the media is usually termed the “Lutyens media” referring to the Lutyens zone in Delhi where the traditional powers-to-be and power brokers reside and roam around. The media slowly became a part of that. Arnab has referred to such journalists by this term on multiple occasions during debates, and especially after he left Times Now to start his own venture.

He has claimed that this Lutyens media was status-quoist while pretending to be anti-establishment, and that it worked only in the interests of a few, including theirs own. He claimed that his new venture – which is named Republic – will be truly independent and disruptive.

Reiterating the same message, Arnab’s new venture made its debut on the social media last night. And predictably, the Lutyens media hated it.

Here are some sample reactions from some samples:

This journalist, who was moved by Rahul Gandhi’s speech, had issues with Twitter welcoming Arnab’s venture (fact is, it was not something Twitter had done specially for Arnab):

Pallavi Ghosh being silly as ever
VVIP racism by Twitter, that was not.

This journalist, who has been exposed just too many times, thought Arnab had exposed himself:

Mihir S Sharma's silly tweet on Arab
Arnab is truthful, but when will you be truthful about your hate?

This journalist, who sent abusive direct messages to Twitter users and threw punches at a Modi supporter, thought Arnab’s new venture was all about fear and hate:

Rajdeep Sardesai deleted his tweet later

This journalist, who has occult powers to solve criminal cases, called Arnab’s new venture a cult:

Rana Ayyub's hatred
Who is the real follower of a real cult here?

These were just a few within hours of just a Twitter account being launched. Wait for the meltdown when Arnab finally launches his venture.

Shahi Imam of Kolkata announces reward for shaving head and beard of PM Modi

0

Modi is hated for his suit, Modi is hated for his watches and pens, Modi is hated for his #SelfieWithDaughter campaign, Modi is hated for his international trips, and now, Modi is getting communal hatred for keeping a beard too.

In a promotional campaign for Mamata Banerjee, the Shahi Imam of Kolkata’s Tipu Sultan Mosque, Maulana Noorur Rahman Barkati declared an award of Rupees 25 lakhs for shaving the head and beard of PM Narendra Modi. The Imam was speaking at a joint conference by the All India Majlis-e-Sura and All India Minority Forum.

As per the Imam, Modi’s beard is insulting religious sentiments of people.

The Imam justified his fatwa by saying, “People who keep beard are mostly religious like maulanas, sadhus, sufis, sikh gurus. But Modi keeping beard is ‘bhondami’ (bluffing). I have no hesitation in saying that he (Modi) is bluffing the country. He (Modi) has lost all his credentials as the Prime Minister.”

The Imam also declared Modi as “communal” and praised West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee as the figure of “communal harmony”.

This “communal harmony” of Bengal is very ironical. Only few days back, the figure of “communal harmony” Mamata Banerjee dismissed reports about communal trouble at Dhulagarh, after which many reports came out confirming the riots. This was a welcome change from earlier occasions when the media closed its eyes that when Bengal burned, which arguably gave the courage to likes of Shahi Imam to claim there was communal harmony in the state under the leadership of Mamata Banerjee.

When the Imam declared the award for shaving head and beard of Modi, people present in the room clapped, echoing the idea of communal harmony in the state.

While the ruling TMC has not reacted to the statement, BJP has demanded the arrest of the Imam.

It will be interesting to know what step the state government takes in this case. BJP MP Sakshi Maharaj was booked and declared communal for his population control remarks, it will be noteworthy to see how media and administration treat Shashi Imam for giving a religious and communal angle to beard.

Om Puri was murdered and we know who killed him – Pakistani media

0

On 6th of January, veteran actor Om Puri passed away and was found dead at his Mumbai house on Friday morning. He was 66. It was reported that his friends from the film fraternity confirmed that the actor succumbed to a major heart attack. Although the actor was recently criticised for his anti-army statements, people from all walks of life condoled the death of the legendary actor.

On Saturday however, the police registered an ‘Accidental Death Report’ (ADR) in connection with the actor’s death. Puri had sustained an injury, caused apparently when he collapsed to the floor after the heart attack.  A senior police officer said that since he was alone at his house at the time of death and sustained an injury, Oshiwara police registered an ADR as per routine procedure and that as of now there was nothing suspicious about the actor’s death.

However, Pakistani media had other ideas. Pakistanis have multiple reasons to feel a connect with Puri, owing to him playing many Pakistani characters and having visited the country several times to participate in film festivals and other events.

While Puri is loved in Pakistan, there is an Indian who is hated by Pakistanis: Indian NSA Ajit Doval. Anything bad happening is quickly blamed on Doval. In 2015, Pakistanis trended a hashtag “#DovalRunningISIS” and even blamed the emergence of ISIS flags in Kashmir on Doval.

Combine their love for Puri and hate for Doval and you get an amazing story. Picking up from the police investigation into Om Puri’s death, Pakistani media went full retard and came up with an amazing theory:

Two Raw agents named Rajesh and Kalveer, under the instructions of RAW and Ajit Doval, with the coordination of Shiv Sena, RSS and Defence Minister Parrikar, entered Puri’s house in the wee hours of the morning at around 3.30 am and killed him by smothering him with a pillow and strangling his neck.

The same anchor, who in the upper clip has also claimed that Arnab Goswami was earlier a singer who became a journalist, in another show made further startling “revelations”:

One week before the murder, Ajit Doval had called Om Puri to Delhi, where Doval proceeded to profusely abuse Puri. Doval then instructed Puri to go to the village of a martyred BSF soldier in Uttar Pradesh. Puri was told to fake a “crying scene” here to mourn the death of this soldier, to repent for his sins of abusing the army.

He was probably referring to the time when Om Puri visited the Etawah residence of BSF jawan Nitin Yadav, who was martyred in the Baramulla attack, and took part in a ‘hawan’ ceremony organised for the departed soul. That incident though happened on 19 October 2016, more than 2 months before Puri’s death, and not “one week” as claimed by the Pakistani anchor.

This “breaking news” was covered by a Pakistani politician and broadcaster Aamir Liaquat Hussain who was once considered as Musharraf’s blue-eyed boy. Hussain is a semi-disgraced figure in Pakistan, with reports suggesting that Hussain had purchased fake University degrees to contest the 2002 general election. Even Pakistan’s own Dawn.com had mocked this “Islamic evangelist” Hussain for once propagating a theory that the Pakistani cricket team was floundering because their shoes had “green” soles, because green is the colour of Islam and also of Pakistan’s national flag.

We wish Hussain all the best in his fantastic conspiracy theories which we are sure, will provide plenty of laughs to people from all over the world for years to come. Move over Zaid Hamid, you have competition.

Waah bhai waah