New Delhi
The much publicised Christian values have failed on one front in Nagaland - the corruption.
In the words of an eminent church leader Rev Dr Zelhou Keyho, general secretary of Nagaland Baptist Church Council (NBCC), "Elections have become not the backdoor but the front door of all the Corrupt systems that are there".
He said it is true 90 percent of Government authorities-- officials and Ministers in Nagaland are Christians. "But the sadder part of the story is we have landed into a predicament wherein the Christian values are forgotten the moment people go out of churches".
"There is a dichotomy between spirituality within the church and spirituality outside church," the Reverend told 'Organiser' at his Kohima residence.
He said it is true 90 percent of Government authorities -- officials and Ministers in Nagaland are Christians.
"But the sadder part of the story is we have landed into a predicament wherein the Christian values are
forgotten the moment people go out of churches".
He admitted there is more often a critique -- "what is the church doing" in a Christian society like Nagas.
Rev Keyho says, "It could be a legitimate question but it's not that we are not preaching, we are not
teaching", he said adding, "The NBCC is struggling with that and the Clean Election movement launched by NBCC is
one way of addressing the issue from a Christian perspective to fight Corruption".
The Church leader avoids answering a question on which party or political formation would be rated as the
'most corrupt' in Nagaland.
Rev Zelhou also maintained that the corruption in Election in Nagaland did not happen or start with just 10 or
15 years back.
It perhaps started in the early or mid 1970s.
"Maybe it turned bad in the 1980s, but now in the new 21st century it has really deteriorated".
"Slowly we are gaining ground. We are preaching and we are also teaching younger lots. Children above the
age of 12 are coming...we are also circulating academic syllabus dwelling on these issues to young students
in the private schools to start with," he said.
Corruption is considered a part of life in Nagaland. In the 1980s and the 1990s, a few sociologists used to claim
that 'corruption' came to Naga life from outside.
The refrain being two Ws -- Wine and Wealth -- were used indirectly by the Government of India to break the spinal
cord of Naga insurgency.
Though a ceasefire is in existence since 1997, the solution to the Naga issue or insurgency is still far off. The talks
now stand virtually stalled after the NSCN-IM raised the demands for a separate Flag and a Naga constitution.
The Government of India has rejected the demands. Nationalists among Naga leaders like S C Jamir, a former Governor
to Maharashtra and Gujarat, told this journalist, "There is no need for another Constitution within the Indian Constitution".
The ninety-one year old Jamir, who has personally met PM Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah, says,
"All issues have been discussed and finalised since 2019 and now we are only waiting for a solution".
On the issue of corruption, he has expressed concerns in quite an eloquent manner.
"We have a scenario where the constitutional government is inefficient and corrupt while the extra-constitutional
elements are many whose sole objective is to establish their supremacy through inter-group conflicts and
illegal extortion which has brought upon the people of the state unmitigated miseries," veteran Jamir, wrote in a newspaper
article.
On the political front, the BJP is a partner of the ruling NDPP led by chief minister Neiphiu Rio.
The state of Nagaland is now heading fast towards assembly polls by Feb-March 2023.
The BJP and the NDPP of Rio have inked seat sharing deal of 20:40 ratio in favour of the regional
party.
Many in the saffron party are unhappy about it and a few of them have been pressing the central leadership
to review the seat share deal.
Some of them say, "The BJP should not go to polls as a smaller partner to the regional party. Moreover, the corruption
charges and other issues of governance have created anti-incumbency mood against Rio regime as well as the BJP".
The saffron party is in alliance with Rio since 2018 with half-a-dozen ministers in the state cabinet. Deputy CM Y Patton
is BJP floor leader in the assembly.
However, as of now the central leaders have urged the state unit to follow the coalition dharma.
BJP organisational general secretary B L Santhosh, who visited Nagaland last month, has urged the party
leaders and workers to put up their best show and focus on winning maximum -- even 19-20 seats the BJP will
contest.
In 2018 also, the BJP strike rate of 12 out of 20 seats was much better than NDPP's 18 out of 40 seats it contested.
Even in August-September 2022, there are numerous ticket aspirants willing to contest on BJP ticket.
One such aspirant said on the condition of anonymity that - "The BJP has overwhelming acceptance among
Naga voters now. People are for development and they are impressed by Prime Minister Modi's developmental
politics and good governance".
Some of ticket aspirants in the BJP have also demanded immediate replacement of state unit BJP president.
Among others, the NPF is a vital political force. But it has been marginalised recently after as many as 21 MLAs
defected to join Rio-led NDPP.
Other parties such as the Congress and JD(U) are considered weak players, so is a regional party NPP of Meghalaya
Chief Minister Conrad Sangma.
ends
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