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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, August 28, 2001 |
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Opinion
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No scope for "negotiations"
GIVEN THE HORRIFYING demolition of the Babri Masjid in December
1992, and its traumatic impact on the national psyche and the
blow it caused to India's cherished image as an upholder of a
plurality of cultures and faiths, any talk of a ``solution'' to
the Ayodhya tangle marks a dangerous insensitivity. In this
context, the Prime Minister's remarks on Ayodhya, in which he has
referred to `negotiations' being held by ``different people at
different levels'', reflect a sinister design, for all the
appearance of a pragmatic and reasonable option. Although the
identity and credentials of those involved in the exercise, not
to mention the basis on which it is proceeding, have been left
deliberately vague, the very circumstances attending the Ayodhya
imbroglio - their entire gamut spanning both the pre-demolition
and post-demolition phases - do not admit of negotiation as a
fair and acceptable option. Add to it the Sangh Parivar's
provocatively aggressive campaign and relentless preparation for
construction of the Ram temple and the BJP's calculated
prevarication on the issue - its stated position at a given point
of time being determined by the exigencies of coalition politics
- the negotiations route stands totally discredited. Not long
ago, Mr. Vajpayee himself had called the Ramjanmabhoomi campaign
an expression of the ``national sentiment'' and provocatively
endorsed the `temple at the disputed site' pitch; that he
subsequently retracted, more for the record and due to the
practical need to sustain his coalition regime, is a different
matter. Evidently, there can be no scope for negotiation in an
atmosphere of shrill hostility and coercion as is perceived on
the part of the Ram temple protagonists and, worse, when
artifacts for the proposed temple are vigorously being got ready.
In fact, whatever little relevance the dialogue route might have
had for settling the vexed Ayodhya dispute was lost the moment
the Babri Masjid was pulled down on December 6, 1992, a
catastrophic event that brought about a fundamental change in the
situation. The fait accompli executed by the Hindutva fanatics
that fateful day which reduced the mosque to rubble, completely
ruled out any scope for a so- called ``solution'' to what had
been forcibly rendered a non-existent dispute. No less
significant is the fact that the Supreme Court, while
discountenancing the `pre-existence' proposition, upheld the
substantive portion of the 1993 Ayodhya Land Acquisition Act and
thereby enjoined on the Centre to maintain the status quo on the
disputed site as it existed in the aftermath of the Masjid
demolition. To give credence therefore to the `pre-existence'
theory (whether or not a temple pre-existed the mosque that has
since been razed to the ground) as the basis for a solution will
be to extend an unmerited concession to the Sangh Parivar's
nationally disastrous revanchist campaign. After all, no
democratic polity rooted in secular and pluralist principles can
close its eyes to the dangerous consequences of letting rabid
communal elements get away with their attempts to avenge what
they regarded as historical `wrongs'.
Normatively speaking, any endeavour to address the Ayodhya issue
must recognise as the sole bottomline the rightful claim of the
Muslim community for reparation in the context of the terrible
injustice done to it in the destruction of the Babri Masjid.
Ideally, this should mean restoration of status quo ante. As of
now, a political consensus seems to be emerging in favour of
accepting the judicial verdict (which is awaited) as the final
word. In the immediate context, what is expected of the Centre is
not a deceptive show of sweet reasonableness, as reflected in Mr.
Vajpayee's talk of `negotiations', but decisive and deterrent
action, at the minimum, to halt the provocative and incendiary
campaign of the VHP and, more importantly, to stop forthwith the
various works (connected with the construction of Ram temple) now
apace in different places. With the temple protagonists all set
to kickstart a phased campaign in the runup to their D-Day, the
Vajpayee regime has to act fast.
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Section : Opinion Next : Unity on WTO issues | |
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