The arrest of civil rights activists earlier this week was to “divert and rule”, writer-activist Arundhati Roy alleged yesterday and expressed fear that in the run-up to the 2019 general elections, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will “try to derail everything” with “some surprise attack.”
Launching a series of attacks on the Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s- government, the Man Booker Prize-winning novelist and activist at the forefront of many social and environmental struggles, urged people to hold the government accountable for its actions.
“The Modi government is following divert and rule. We will not know from where and how and when and what kind of fireball is going to fall on us. They are trying to distract us,” Roy said at a press conference here to condemn the arrests, before firing a series of salvos that targeted the government on its “anti-Dalit” “anti-poor” “anti-minority” policies such as demonetisation and the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST).
“While the poor have suffered enormously, several companies close to the BJP have multiplied their wealth several times over. Businessmen like Nirav Modi and Vijay Mallya have run away with thousands of crores of public money while the government looked away,” Roy alleged.
“He (Modi) said that every man and woman will get Rs15 lakh in his account if the BJP comes to power in 2014. On the contrary, the poor of this country have been robbed. What kind of accountability can we expect from this government,” she asked.
Roy pointed to the investigation by the Karnataka police into the assassination of firebrand journalist-activist Gauri Lankesh and said that it has “unveiled several Hindu rightwing organisations like the Sanatan Sansthan”.
“This has shown the existence of a full blown terror network with hit-lists, hideouts, safehouses, arms, ammunition and plans to bomb, kill and poison people... As it prepares for the 2019 general elections, the BJP has emerged by far the wealthiest political party in India. Outrageously, the electoral bonds ensure that the source of the donations to political parties can remain anonymous.
“How many of these groups do we know about? How many of these are still working in secret? They have the assurance and blessing of the powerful and even the police. With the elections coming what plans do they have in store for us? What surprise attack, where will they be, in Kashmir, in Kumbh mela, or in Ayodhya. They will attempt to derail everything with some minor or major attack,” Roy alleged.
Referring to the “manner in which education institutions were being dismantled”, she said the government waqs carrying out “re-brahmanisation of education” by rapid privatisation.
“Even the poorest beneficiaries of reservation are now being denied and pushed out at an alarming rate. This turning over of the educational institutions to the corporates is going to create a level of patronisation that we cannot recover from,” she said.
Roy termed the arrest of the five activists as “illegal” and asked people not to forget that “by arresting public interest lawyers and human rights activists, the government is actually isolating lakhs of people because these are their representatives, the helpers of the poorest of the poor.”
“You are arresting and silencing those who work for the poor, you are stripping away the constitutional rights of whole population. When they arrested these people, it was their way of discrediting the dalit aspiration,” she said.
Pune police on Tuesday arrested lawyer-activist Sudhar Bharadwaj and civil liberties activists Gautam Navlakha, Vernon Gonsalves, Arun Fereira and P Varavara Rao from different parts of India, triggering a massive outcry.
Meanwhile, the Pune police brought back revolutionary writer to Hyderabad yesterday, a day after the Supreme Court ordered the police to keep the activists arrested for alleged links with Maoists confined to their homes till September 6.