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Plus&Minus
"A weekly column: Plus&Minus will
be published in Hindustan Times, Jaipur Live. This will
speak to the ordinary reader on contemporary economic issues in a
simple format".
Of Statues and political Controversies
Hindustan Times, Jaipur Live, July 06, 2009
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By Pradeep S Mehta I was
invited to speak at a seminar on WTO in the Foreign & Commonwealth
Office of the UK Government in the second week of June this year. The
event was held in the India Office of the hallowed portals of the
British Foreign Ministry. The imposing room had huge oil portraits of
all possible Viceroys and Governor Generals of British India, glaring
down upon all.
I could not resist commenting
that the UK government should recognise the current scenario and add
portraits of Gandhi, among other great Indian freedom fighters, to
these walls in their India Office. It brought about both mirth as well
as scorn.
Perhaps the powers have heard
what I said and the India Office will soon be adorned with portraits
of Indian freedom fighters, as a befitting sequel.
Be that as it may, a second
statue of Gandhi is now proposed to be erected in UK, at Leicester.
The other one is in London.
This has had its fair share of
controversy, as locals have launched an online campaign that statues
of local heroes, such as footballer Gary Linecker or cricketer David
Gower, should be put up rather than an Indian freedom fighter. The
statue will cost about Rs10-16 lakhs and be put up in what is called
Little India in the town of Leicester, where a large number of Indians
live. In fact a local NGO floated by citizens of Indian origin,
Samanwaya Parivar, has collected the money and procured the statue
from an Indian sculptor in Kolkata. The area is represented by Keith
Vaz, also of Indian origin and a former Labour minister.
Speaking about statues and
money, Uttar Pradesh under Mayawati’s rule is creating history of
sorts.
Between 2007 and 2009,
Mayawati has erected 40 statutes of Dalit icons, including that of her
late mentor, Kanshi Ram, and herself too. It has cost the taxpayers Rs
6.68 crores. This is not the end of the extravaganza. She has also
splurged Rs 52 crores to erect 60 statutes of elephants, her party’s
election symbol.
These facts were uncovered in
by one Ravi Kant using the Right to Information Act, who then filed a
public interest litigation.
Mayawati was so annoyed that
she ordained that appointment of ministers will not be covered under
the RTI Act. Furthermore, another occasion, she even insulted Gandhi
as a ‘naatakbaaz’. This brought all round condemnation from all right
thinking people in the state, including Murli Manohar Joshi, a BJP
leader.
Not so long ago, our former
BJP CM, Vasundhara Raje had unveiled a statue of Rajiv Gandhi in
Udaipur which drew criticism from all the ‘wrong’ thinking people. Her
response was straight forward and something which is sadly missing in
today’s decadent political scenario, that Rajiv was a national leader.
That he belonged to the Congress Party does not matter.
At home, Vasundhara’s
successor, the Gandhian CM, Ashok Gehlot has ensured that more of
Gandhi’s portraits are hung up in all offices, so as to remind people
of the great son of India. Whether it will have the effect or not, at
least the effort is commendable.
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