Is the Green Tape killing Development: a pragmatic environmentalist’s take?

I prefer to read the pink papers as I feel they address more relevant issues of the day rather than the usual general papers which are prone to cover more Bollywood and Cricket than actual news for the people.  But the pink papers are so driven by financial data that they sometimes forget that the economy is not run in silos, but is dependent upon society and natural resources to run the economic growth engine. People and Ecology hold more value than sheer balance-sheet numbers. Capitalism runs on the ideological framework of ‘QSQT’ or Quarter se Quarter Tak. The Balance Sheet counts more than the Biosphere.

Well, India has massive developmental challenges too. We are short on power generation, and the coal which is needed to fuel the furnaces to rev up the turbines of growth is often not available. In Ruchir Sharma’s book ‘Break Out Nations’ an anecdote is shared that it is easier for Indian Mining Companies to procure coal in Indonesia than in India.  It is not available due to so called delay in regulatory clearances. This is the Green Tape which is blamed for the delay.  According to Public Intellectual Pratap Bhanu Mehta this is a perception as statistics show on the contrary, that India has a pretty lenient regulatory regime.

Cases from Orissa and Goa show that regulatory clearances are politically driven by motivation. The centre uses tribal rights as a whip to crack on the opposition lead Orissa government’s developmental agenda. Judicial Activism has lead to mining being banned in Bellary and Goa, although the BJP Government banned it earlier to the Supreme Court order. Environment is inherently political in nature as different ideologies with separate normative ends, conceptualize the utility of ecosystem services in a different context.

Recently, due to the negative criticism of the Green Ministry, the perception has been created that environmental clearances have been speeded up with Hydel Power Projects in Himachal and the North East given the ‘green’ signal. A recent incident of an environmental ministry official taking a bribe, does not help the reputation of the already over stretched body. The delays in clearances are due to the under-staffed employee roster of the Green Ministry, and not due to some malicious intent to derail the progress of the nation. The Single Window Clearance National Investment Board was a good idea in retrospect as the global investment climate is competitive. POSCO and Vedanta sites in Orissa illustrate this matter really well. In a rapidly urbanizing country with increasing living standards, such debates will be perennial in nature but we have to address them with rapid pace taking in to consideration the needs of the native community and the natural environment. This is a million rupee question, but we cannot afford to die from smog as the Middle Kingdom’s Forbidden City is now suffering.

Perception Wars: embedding the ‘drones of the mind’

We live in turbo charged times of information exchanges. A hybrid of information platforms make us abreast of developments in every genre at every microsecond. Facebook, Pintrest, Twitter with the TV and the print media, has made us the most informed generation ever in human history. But information overload makes us vulnerable to ‘subconscious inception’; information influences, overwhelms and ultimately drives people to use their ‘agency’ for ends, that are not well thought enough. Information has a ‘value’ and is usually a ‘fact’ but is often embedded in a larger story which lends its  emotional potential.

Geopolitics and the discourse on the practice of power is grounded on the edifice of information.  The first TV War was Operation Desert Storm in Iraq in 1990 with CNN ushering in the element of visuals in the information war.

The post 9/11 era with its intervention in Iraq and Af-Pak brought wars to our living room. With the advent and evolution of technology shrinking in our pockets, twitter brought life to the 140 character limit into a battle for our minds. The Arab Spring was fueled with social media mediating information through dictatorial regimes of the Middle East made Google Executive Wael Ghonem in to an icon. Islamic Scholar Tariq Ramadan in his book ‘Arab Awakening’ has more pessimistic perspective as he calls such intervention, pre-meditated and manufactured as he writes that the State Department had been making the ground for such a situation years in advance by sharing training to bloggers and coders.

Patrick Meier, an expert on Social Media Technology and its impact on Geopolitics has brought out the various dimensions that information can be used for useful ends such as rapid humanitarian response. Thats a positive externality of Information, but the sheer information we share as we ‘live’ our lives online, makes us susceptible to manipulation if we are reflexive enough.

The Green Revolution, although thwarted in Iran seeded the potential of the forthcoming revolutions from Tunisia to Oman. The war is still on on the warfront of Syria with Al Jazeera, CNN, BBC battling it out for the Opposition on the airwaves. The war is played in the virtual world by bloggers and twitters.  China is known by its ‘Great Firewall’ with its extreme attempts to filter out information from its citizens. Maidan Al Tahrir to Shahbag Square in Dhaka, we can all see perception wars in action.

What is exactly ‘home’

Yesterday, i was watching a fabulous program on NDTV with Barkha Dutt interviewing an Egyptian-British Author and Dr. Shashi Tharoor and the discussion was on the notion of home.  It did stir a hornets nest of emotions as i have lived in three cities in culturally varied parts of the world and never totally totally felt ‘Home’ anywhere. A large part of my life i have lived in Mumbai but never could make it home emotionally.  There has been always a chasm between the physical environment and the ‘man inside my head’. I never could relate to the ethos here. The identity based cultural fabric of Suburban Mumbai has been quite discomforting, as a Bengali  Speaking Half Bengali; it was difficult fitting in.

Muscat is another city where i lived as much time as I have lived in Mumbai. The quiet laziness of Muscat was more affable, but living as an expat without citizenship rights meant that there was always a gulf between the aspiration of creating a ‘home’ away from home and a place i could relate. The Arab/Islamic Culture was something i got immersed in and i truly liked being in that mould.  A Shatti Al Qurum was more my place than Marine Drive although the latter is more majestic.

Singapore is where i found myself, was more accepted as i explored myself. My ethnicity did not matter in this ‘Rojak’ Culture lah! A Mustafa Centre was as Home as the Heartland of Serangoon.  Singapore is truly global, and that provided the canvas to create an emotional home as i found friends, a Church and finally my identity.

I am back to Mumbai, working here and can sense that home is less about a geography and more about feeling an ’emotional connect’ about a place.  The people matter around you and not the structures.

Ultimately, Home is where the soul is.

 

Diaspora Experiences and Narratives of the State: a personal story

 I am a Diaspora-ic boy next door who grew up in the beautiful country of the Sultanate of Oman in its picturesque capital of Muscat.  Muscat is indeed adopted home for me and Yallah Oman- as its Paradise compared to the hustle and bustle of a third world metropolis.  As a normal teacher expat family we came to the gulf as economic migrants, with my parents dream to give me a good education by saving up which they were eventually successfully by giving me a good engineering education in Oman and Singapore. This is just a drop in the ocean in terms of personal stories of migrants to the Gulf who have made careers and livelihoods building up other adopted countries in lieu of a living. My parents have contributed towards educating the first generation of home grown tertiary educated Omani citizens. I did my undergrad degree in Engineering from an Indo-Omani Collaborative School too and can vouch for the multi-faceted character that economic migrants play in creating bridges between societies beyond remittances which have created post office economies in many districts of Kerala and Southern Tamil Nadu. The cultural immersion which I had as result of studying alongside Omani colleagues was an invaluable experience towards understanding Islamic values.

In this post, I am narrating a thin vertical slice of multi layered cultural lasagna of a Gulf Story, which is often tarnished in the media with instances of over exploitation of menial workers. Whenever there is impoverishment and a power differential there is common to have such sad incidents. It is ultimately the person’s call to work in such a context or not. But the Gulf Story is textured and layered as any other story. Gulf workers unlike peer in other regions do not have citizenship or permanent residency rights and are ‘Indian Citizens’. My parents would have got citizenship in any other non Gulf country, if they would have spent that such time in may be say Singapore. It is a different matter altogether that they are very rooted and visit India every three months.

The Gulf NRI Community in the eyes of the political elite in India is portrayed as either very poor or being recent first generation rich. They influence politics in Kerala atleast in a few constituencies and have control over the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs as usually a politico from ‘Mallu-land’ helms over the portfolio.  This minimal recognition was long overdue for a constituency often treated as a piggy bank unlike other applauded NRI cousins from the West. Deira is not as cool as Downtown, I guess.

The Indian Connection with the Gulf is ancient, as Gujaratis from Saurashtra and the Coast have traded with Oman, Yemen and the Gulf over the centuries. The Khimji family in Oman has leaded a diversified business conglomerate over 100 years and many such businesses are found all over the Gulf.  Areas such as Muttrah in Old ‘Masqat’ or Meena Bazar in Bur Dubai are the old commercial hubs of the respective cities controlled by Sindhis and Gujaratis. The unique feature of these two geographies is they have Hindu Temples, a rarity in the Gulf. Commerce has the power to bend Conservatism.

His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said of Oman studied in India, and relations between most of the GCC and India are positive because of people and not because of the lazy consular officers who treat gulf postings as a punishment. It is time that the Indian State takes pro active measures in leveraging our good will and transform into becoming a ‘Hard Power’ in the Middle East. The Jet-Etihad deal is a good sign for the future. 

A conversation on urban politics with an ‘Autowalla’

Mumbai is a melting pot of cultures and i happen to meet a great diversity of folks every single day among the invisible spine of the transportation network of this megapolis; the three tire Autorickshaw driver and of course cabbies. I have written a couple of posts on my interesting conversations with cabbies earlier; one with a UP migrant and another Son of the Soil individual with differing takes on Maharashtra and UP Politics . They are more the eyes of the city and they keep a pulse of the developments on the ground. More real time than Mumbai Mirror anyday. I would suggest any urban transportation planner to speak to this real community of practitioners rather than exclusively refer to planning formulae that fail to be real more often than not. Cabbies and Autowallas are quite a cool repository of oral social history of a city and they give you a sense of where the wheels of a society’s wagon are heading towards.

I took an auto ride from Saki Naka Junction, which is of the busiest intersections of the city to Powai recently and the auto was driven by a gentleman called as Mr. ‘Bappa’ . He is a former Shiv Sena Political Activist from rural Pune area who started the conversation with a mouthful of colorful expletives regarding migrants due to whom congestion in the City is increasing. Our short 30 minute conversation cum ride was sprinkled with the genesis of the anti congress movement in Mumbai in the late 1970’s with the Janata Party to its transition with a saffron color with the Sena. The thing which really caught my attention was his zest for development and good governance. ‘Bappa’ Saheb spoke with the fire of an evangelist about the need for a new leader to lead the opposition in the State. His Faith in Raj Saheb was unshakable and spoke like a true Sena Man when he wanted to know about my origins. He also dissected the irrigation scam by understanding of masonry and poor construction of dams and how much money is siphoned off infrastructure projects which are meant for the poor. He said ” In Maharashtra, development takes place with a price and that price is the corruption, and that development often occurs with the relevance of the project long gone”.

This is surely a man who understands developmental politics better than many an academic.

His experience with Anna Hazare’s model village concept was interesting to hear as well. His nationalistic sentiment was palpable in every statement he uttered while navigating the  chaotic traffic. We need more folks like him who think about functioning of the City and the Nation.

The conversation was abruptly cut short while I arrived at my destination at Powai to have a drink to celebrate V Day eve with my loneliness. I handed over the fare to him with a ‘Jai Maharashtra’ Bhau (Brother), i took leave.

Mumbai certainly has many untold stories to unravel.

I really like p…

I really like pico iyers writing as it is like gourmet cuisine vis-a-vis fast food. Each piece authored has nutrition in every bite of a read. The FMCG-ization of writing (read Chetan Bhagat) along with a tweet a min generation has created an information addicted readership with scant regard for meaning, nuance and style. Good Writing is priceless.

Confessions of the Obsessed

Obsessed is a trait which I have been attributed to many a time. Obsession is a characteristic which i feel is a compliment. Every creative person has idiosyncratic tendencies. This post is one among them. Obsessive is being single minded passion towards a cause. People do not present their best selves if they are not lost in their art. I get lost in my work, in my relationships which make it suffocating for others and also for myself. But thats the person that I am. Respect me or not. Love me or hate me. This is the person i am.  

A synonym for the obsessive is caring but the media has misrepresented my tribe. From Darr to Ghajni obsessive has been painted with an incorrect brush.  

I love my best side as well as i am ashamed of my worst. I am just well, Moni for the folks who love me.

The Necessity of a Hindu Right: A Liberal Pragmatist’s petition

India has a rich cultural and historical heritage, and this plank is often a refuge for both the scandalous and the sacred. The Hindu Right appropriates the ‘symbols’ of our Hindu heritage to form the canvas for its political picture. It is not a lone example in the world. Embedding religious symbols in the political narrative has been seen to be used often to heckle emotions in the political discourse. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt has used the idea of a Political Islam since its inception in 1928 to further its ideology of reinstating the Caliphate. This had ceased to exist with the fall of the Ottoman Empire as the First World War came to an end. The Muslim Brotherhood finally came to power in 2012 in a democratic election after the Arab Spring currents swept the Middle East.

One of the original proponents of a religious-ethnicity based political franchises is the the United Malay’s National Organization (UMNO). UMNO managed to create a non alcoholic mocktail (pun intended) of race and religion to fuel its political ambitions since ‘Merdeka Day’ on 30th May 1957. This was partly a reaction to the racial riots of 1969, which deepened the roots of the biased Bumiputera policy. This is still being pursued at the cost of alienating  an overwhelming majority of non Malay ethnicities from the economic mainstream, apart from a few Nanyang Chinese Business Families.  Moving barat or westwards in Bahasa Melayu, our discussion steers back to the Indian context, the focus of this post.  .

The Author of this article believes in the Idea of an Inclusive and Plural India. But the ‘Secular Fundamentalism’ of Ataturk’s Turkey or Manishanker Aiyer’s 2004 ideological diatribe ‘The Confessions of a Secular Fundamentalist’ is certainly playing with fire. It may be scripture for staunch secularists, but it is flawed in its fundamental argument, as it calls for the complete censure of the majority (religious or ethnic) and its fundamental concerns in the poitical discourse of the nation, which leads to dangerous consequences. The genesis of success of the political right is more serendipitous than calculated as my case is expatiated in the following paragraph. History is witness to momentous events and economic depressions that have often been the seed germinating   the political right, propelling them into the corridors of power. A Tahrir Square was catalytic for the Brotherhood in Cairo, as was the Ram Janmabhoomi Movement in the 1980’s, both of which transformed a fringe force to a potent political movement with a majoritarian domestic view.  

 

The presence of a right wing dispensation also brings in many positives. The deeply entrenched sense of a cultural history drives the movement to work towards a ‘national’ cause, often reflected in times of cross-territorial conflict. This understanding of a belonging to a culture is often amiss in the left leaning liberal, for whom a foreigner Marx is dearer and more conceptually correct than a nationalist icon such as Swami Vivekananda. His call for the resurrection of the ‘Hindu Identity’ as a reformer and nationalist made him  one of the earliest Hindu icons  who inspired millions of ‘suppressed’, ‘culturally wounded’ Indians to look beyond drudgery and self pity, and reclaim their glorious identity of the ancient past.  A recent trip to Vadodara was quite revealing, with banners of Swamiji at every corner, creating a sense of pride in the Hindus, who saw in the appropriation of an Icon attempts to evoke pride in our culture. I also passed through Naroda Patiya on my way to Amdavad Airport, where the one of the most gruesome episodes of the 2002 violence occurred. A decade has passed, and the recent Gujarat mandate clearly showed that the populace of a State preferred the Hindu Right. That this choice has remained constant for most part of the past quarter of a century is something which our media fails to grasp. Justice and Reconciliation takes time, as the South African episode has shown, and we cannot afford to mortgage our future for the sake of our past.

It is within this socio-cultural context that the right wing political groupings often are able to push forward economic reforms. For them, it fits perfectly into the picture of reclaiming the glory of the ancient past of the nation, under the auspices of the ‘spiritual and cultural’ guidance of the times of yore. A perfect example of this has been the tenure of NDA between 1998 and 2004. The NDA regime had a terrific track record on Infrastructure, whether bit is the Golden Quadrilateral Project or opening up the Telecom Sector, these are the foundational elements of our economic growth.  The disinvestment agenda under the NDA regime was aggressive and economy was certainly on a growth trajectory during Atalji’s era. On the National Security agenda, any border deal which is sealed by a Right Wing dispensation will be far more acceptable by the majority community in opposition to a sell-out to the enemy as a hypothetical Bangladesh Nationalist Party Government deal with the Indian Government on the Teesta river sharing accord, albeit highly unlikely.

 The Hindu Right has been absent from the seat of power at the Federal level since a decade, although it has been in control of major states such as Madhya Pradesh , Chattisgarh and Karnataka with relative success. Governance has been a trump card in the arsenal of the Right. Congress’s trump card of an Inclusive governance platform has fallen much short of the initial euphoria of its overvelming mandate in 2009. The dynastic politics of the Congress does not buy any favors from the electorate any more given the demographic transitions in the nation. The constellation of leadership alternatives offered by the BJP and the NDA is a strength that can be leveraged thirteen months from now.

Thus, secularism as an ideology is spent force as far as the 2014 polls or even earlier is concerned, as it is equated with crony capitalism, corruption and casteism.  Liberalism as a political project has to grow muscles of economic rationale to attract a rapidly urbanizing electorate. And conversely The Hindu Right has to tone down the volume of marginalization of the religious minorities. The Modi-esque Hindutva + Development model for the nation, perhaps?

Special Thanks for inputs to Mr. Rohit Pathania