India: The upcoming million mutinees
New Delhi policymakers do not need to go far to see that there is something wrong with their development model. While one part of the capital city witnesses a booming economy, there is a systematic assault on the city's poor. A pumped-up judiciary and insensitive executive together demolish 'illegal' slums; the working class is deprived of livelihood, dignity and social security, because labour laws in the unorganised sector are not enforced by the administration. If this is the pattern in New Delhi, where government planners at least have a need to make a show of working for equity, the injustice rampant in rural, semi-rural and urban India alike can only be imagined.
The inequity, economic distress and discrimination across the teeming metropolises and large swathes of rural India breed alienation, anger and violence. For long, this was dismissed by security and neoliberal hawks as too 'romantic' a vision of dissent. But this is the essence of the conclusion of a report released in late April by an expert group appointed by the Planning Commission of the Indian government, tasked with looking into the causes of discontent, unrest and extremism in the country. Perhaps for the first time, an official document pointedly states that the development model pursued since Independence has actually aggravated the restlessness among marginalised sections of India.