Firebrand Thackeray let off the hook
By Ranjit Devraj
NEW DELHI - Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was breathing easy
Tuesday evening after a court in the western metropolis of Mumbai ordered
the dropping of criminal charges against a key ally accused of inciting
violence against Muslims in the city seven years ago.
As a sequel to the Tuesday morning ruling, three members of the Vajpayee
government who had resigned over the affair announced they were rejoining
the federal cabinet. They had quit last week in protest against Vajpayee's
reluctance to help their chief, Balasaheb Thackeray.
A firebrand radical Hindu leader, Thackeray, whose Shiv Sena party has
been a long-time associate of Vajpayee's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), was
arrested Tuesday morning after days of suspense and produced before the
court. The sulking Shiv Sena party had earlier ordered three ministers to
resign from the cabinet and said it was staying away from a meeting of
ruling coalition lawmakers called by Vajpayee to discuss parliamentary
strategy in the on-going monsoon session of the house. ''The government
has to run with the support of the alliance partners and if they did not
support each other in times of crisis, then what is the point,'' a Shiv
Sena leader was quoted as saying.
Vajpayee's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was meanwhile warning former law
minister Ram Jethmalani, elected to the upper house of parliament with
Shiv Sena backing, of dire consequences for his public criticism of the
prime minister. Vajpayee had asked Jethmalani to resign after Jethmalani
embarrassed the government with his verbal attacks on the country's
highest court that had earlier rapped the government for speaking in
different voices on the Thackeray affair.
The BJP's troubles arose after the government of western Maharashtra state
of which Mumbai is the capital, ordered Thackeray's prosecution for his
role in the anti-Muslim violence in the city seven years ago after the
demolition by Hindu zealots of the medieval Babri mosque in Ayodhya. A
judicial probe into the Mumbai riots, in which thousands of people, mostly
Muslims, died, blamed Shiv Sena cadres for the violence and indicted
Thackeray for writing ''communally inciting propaganda'' in Shiv Sena
publications.
When the result of the probe was announced in 1998, Mahahrashtra was ruled
by a BJP-Shiv Sena coalition and Thackeray then contemptuously dismissed
the inquiry report and its author, judge B Srikrishna as ''pro-Muslim''.
But the Srikrishna report was revived when the BJP-Shiv Sena combine lost
to arch-foe Congress party and its ally in the Maharashtra legislature
polls last year. Thackeray warned that his arrest would result in a
serious law and order situation in Maharashtra. This would, in turn, lead
to the federal government using special constitutional powers to sack the
Maharashtra government led by Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh, he said.
Even as the former law minister embarrassed Vajpayee by his advice to
intervene in Thackeray's favor, the Vajpayee government was involved in
another controversy by refusing Maharashtra's request for federal forces
to tackle expected violence if Thackeray were arrested. Deshmukh, who was
denied the federal forces by Indian Home Minister L Advani, however, said
he was ready to meet the challenge.
Thackeray, a former cartoonist, has built up a reputation of being
invincible in his home state during a 35-year controversial political
career. It began with a 'sons-of-the-soil' campaign favoring the local
Maratha ethnic community over outsiders for jobs in India's business and
industrial capital of Bombay that was renamed Mumbai a few years ago by
the then BJP-Shiv Sena state government. But over time, the Shiv Sena
began to target Muslims in Mumbai.
India's Supreme Court has also found Thackeray guilty of inciting
''communal hatred'' against Muslims. He has been barred for six years by
the national Election Commission from contesting polls and exercising the
right to vote.
''This is the man who has needlessly challenged the entire Indian legal
and democratic system,'' wrote leading political analyst Prem Shankar Jha
in the latest issue of the Outlook news magazine. ''If Vajpayee backs down
and puts pressure on Maharashtra to abandon the case the police has
constructed against Thackeray, he may as well hold up a sign to advertise
that India is no longer under the rule of law.''