“I have made a study of
men’s faces when they have lost something of material value. The greedy man
shows panic, the rich man shows anger, the poor man shows fear….
(Extracts from a short story by Ruskin Bond)
The above lines strong in philosophical values have more than mere metaphysical meaning for the date, October 27/2013 and the city of Patna .
On that day, Patna, the capital of politically and communally sensitive state of Bihar, escaped disaster largely due to a singular that the party (BJP) which had organized such a huge rally had felt ‘responsible’ and the big leader in question, Narendra Modi showed calmness. The calm and composed manner he conducted that day despite the provocation and the excitement in it deserves kudos.
Narendra Modi is no
longer just the man with political momentum. By his calm composed behaviour at
the Patna rally
where 10 lakhs braved bombs to listen to him, BJP’s Prime Ministerial candidate
has perhaps overshadowed Atal Behari Vajpayee’s popularity. There is so far no
stopping of Namo juggernaut.
Many of his admirers
went viral on social networking site that as a true statesman that day, Modi
neither panicked nor displayed anger. Rather at the fag end of his speech, he
exhorted the large gathering, a record turnout of nearly 10 lakhs, to go home
peacefully and in calm.
“Aap log yehan se jab
jayenge, shanti se apne gaon jaeyenge…koi accident nahi honi chahiye (when you
all walkout from the venue, please return home in good health and peace, there
should not be any mishap),” : these words from BJP’s PM-nominee almost brought
tears in the eyes of few other BJP leaders who knew about the terror strikes
targeting Modi.
With the kind of
security preparedness as if jungle-raj or rather the ‘Indian Mujahedden’ raj
had taken over the state capital, mere announcement of canceling of the rally
would have put the streets in chaos and large scale devastation was inevitable.
In contrast, the less
said about the role of the state government and the police under Nitish Kumar,
who till the other day tried to offer himself in the political citadel as an
administrative messiah.
“Clearly, Bihar chief
minister Nitish Kumar had done his best to throw Modi to the beasts….However,
the beasts contended themselves setting off low intensity blasts,” wrote
blogger Manish Anand, a journalist later.
None other than Patna ’s senior superintendent of police, Manu Maharaj said
that the bombings at the Gandhi Maidan planned at Ranchi were “intended to cause a stampede
leading to maximum casualties”.
Security analysts in
Delhi later concurred to the BJP leaders’ and Patna police contentions that the
explosions sought to achieve multiple goals – eliminate Modi if possible,
sabotage the rally itself, stampede for one reason or the other could have only
escalated casualty, cancellation of the rally would have suggested that “Modi
has panicked”.
Much to the frustration
of Modi and BJP detractors nothing like that happened.
While BJP leaders like
Arun Jaitley or Sushil Modi who were at the rally were predictably anguished,
even others had little explanation to make on how and why the two states
Jharkhand and Bihar were callous to the ever expanding base of the terror
module of Indian Mujahideen.
Thus many found logic
when a day after the rally, BJP’s Arun Jaitley, who once shared a good rapport
with Nitish Kumar, charged the Nitish
Kumar
government with being "callous and casual" about its responsibility
for security of people and VIPs visiting his state and also accused it of being "soft" on terror.
government with being "callous and casual" about its responsibility
for security of people and VIPs visiting his state and also accused it of being "soft" on terror.
"There were lapses....negligence...the attitude was casual and callous,"
the Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha said adding rather with a sense
of hurt, "If the bigger casualty was averted, it was sheer our good
fortune".
"We had no idea of what to do when the blasts were happening as there was
no senior officer to help us," he said.
Dismissing Nitish Kumar’s claim that there was
intelligence alert about such terror strike, Jaitley said, "a general
alert was sounded by the Intelligence Bureau on October 1 in a letter to
various states including DGP of Bihar with regard to the Indian Mujahideen
planning to organize strikes in different cities.
A specific alert was sent to
the Bihar police by the Central Intelligence
Bureau on 23rd October. This alert was specific
enough to mention that the IM modules could organize strikes during Modi’sPatna visit”.
enough to mention that the IM modules could organize strikes during Modi’s
But the Congress and the JD(U) reactions to the blasts
were too casual and at times even irresponsible. Senior Congress leader
Digvijay Singh twitted in funny manner while JD(U) MP, Sabir Ali initially even
suggested that the explosions could be handy work of the BJP cadres.
Another responsible Congress leader and the External
Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid talking out of turn said Modi should have
cancelled the rally.
On the other hand, it took some hours for the Bihar
chief minister to come before camera and only two days later when he addressed
a JD(U) convention, a ‘smiling Nitish Kumar’s’ repeated potshots at Modi for
‘sweating and drinking water’ left many puzzled.
“Any normal human being would like to drink some water
in such situations,” says Bihar watcher Manish referring to the
tension BJP leaders were in the wake of blasts and as they were also hardly
assured or briefed properly by the Bihar
police.
No wonder at his Delhi
press conference a day after the rally Arun Jaitley lost his cool when a journo
quizzed him on why the private security guards deployed by BJP at the rally
venue were not doing any frisking. Jaitley only pointed out the obvious that
private guards are not empowered to do so.
“Even the mandatory frisking of the crowd was not
done. There were also no
anti-sabotage checks or a full dress rehearsal for security," he said.
anti-sabotage checks or a full dress rehearsal for security," he said.
The government callousness could be also measured from
the fact that the day such glaring terror strike took place; the country’s Home
Minister Sushilkumar Shinde was found posing with Bollywood diva for a music
release function in Mumbai.
The episode only added insult to BJP’s injuries which
has been attacking the UPA government of going soft on terror for political
motives.
BJP leader Kirti
Azad was furious.
"You find the Home Minister dancing and releasing
music cassettes when innocent Indians died. I would say, we should not be
asking for his resignation because they have to go anyway within 200 days
now," he said.
Even some Patna
police officials later admitted that matured handling of the situation saved
the day. “The spin being given that blasts were planned to avenge Muzaffarnagar
riots is unfounded as Modi, BJP or the people of Patna had nothing to do with that. It’s very
simple eliminating Modi and sabotaging the rally itself were the primary
targets,” one of them said.
An ambitious Nitish Kumar:
Nevertheless on his part, the beleaguered chief
minister Nitish Kumar, whom BJP leader Ravishankar Prasad accuses of having
‘pathological hatred towards Modi’, remains an ambitious and crafy neta quite
oblivious of the serious administrative lapses. Only a few days later, Nitish shared dais with the left parties and the third front leaders in Delhi at an
anti-communalism convention signaling about his national ambition.
But the damage done to his image is much bigger back
home.
But Nitish too has fan following and admirers and some
of them already feel that among the anti-BJP and non-NDA leaders with Rahul
Gandhi really fading out, Nitish is the only man who can possibly somehow puncture
the Modi juggernaut.
This school of thought argues that at the Talkotara
stadium in Delhi
sharing dais with the likes of big-time national players like Prakash Karat and
Mulayam Singh Yadav, Nitish “gave” some glimpses of his ability to engage Modi in
public discourse.
Though not quite convincing, Nitish, according to them has
proved a better bet vis-à-vis Rahul Gandhi, who is now even being heckled at
public meetings.
But even diehard JD(U) supporters know that Nitish is
only trying to put up a fight putting his back on the wall.
“It’s only a case
of better than the worse. Nitish has multiple problems. The caste equation he
worked out has been decimated with Narendra Modi’s popularity in Bihar nearing that of Jai Prakash Narayan,” confessed one
JD(U) insider.
Disgruntlement is growing as several sitting Lok Sabha MPs are
unhappy at the manner Nitish imposed the divorce with BJP and thereby
marginalizing themselves in key constituencies.
It’s any body’s guess in JD(U) these days that even
Sharad Yadav is felling insecured about contesting from Madhepura yet again.
Nitish
loyalist Shivanand Tiwari is angry about Nitish Kumar’s style of
functioning.
“The genuine JD(U) workers are being snubbed by
bureaucrats in Bihar . I was removed as party
spokesperson. Nitish wants everybody attend his durbar,” says Rajya Sabha MP
and a prominent Rajput leader from Jamui region. His shrill voice could be just
the tip of the ice-berg for Nitish.
ends