Republic Day should be an occasion to resolve to fight for political, social and economic rights of citizens

It is imperative to carryforward the political struggle to defeat those propagating the Hindutva ideology and wrecking the Constitution in the process

Representative Image (Photo Courtesy: Social Media)
Representative Image (Photo Courtesy: Social Media)
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Prakash Karat

When the pogrom against minorities in Gujarat was raging in 2002, the then President of India K R Narayanan had remarked to a delegation which met him seeking intervention, that “The Constitution is not working in Gujarat”. Narendra Modi was the chief minister of Gujarat at that time.

Now, nearly two decades later and nearly seven years of the prime ministership of Modi, it can be said that the Constitution is not working in large parts of the country and in various sections of the polity.

As we observe the 71st Republic Day, it would be instructive to see what has happened to the fundamental rights of citizens – the right of personal liberty, the right of freedom of speech, association and assembly among others.

At present, there are hundreds of people in jail with no prospect of bail because they are charged under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and other pernicious laws like sedition. They are not criminals or terrorists but political and social activists, journalists and even standup comedians. They include 16 intellectuals, lawyers and academics who have been jailed under the UAPA in the Bhima Koregaon case, 19 students, research scholars and activists under the UAPA falsely implicated in the north-east Delhi communal violence, 49 in jail under the ‘Love Jihad’ ordinance in Uttar Pradesh and journalists like Kappan in Mathura jail and three other senior journalists in Manipur also charged under the UAPA. It also includes a comedian, Munawar Faruqui, who is in Indore jail.

The right to personal liberty provided in the Constitution has been trampled upon. The UAPA is a monstrous law which makes getting bail extremely difficult. The Modi government has made both the UAPA and the NIA Acts more stringent and violative of the fundamental rights of citizens through amendments.

In BJP-ruled states like Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, the tenets of the Constitution don’t seem to apply at all, especially for Muslims. If a Muslim boy walks with a Hindu girl on a public road, he can be hauled up and put in jail if a complaint is lodged by any of the Hindutva outfits. Munawar Faruqui has been in jail in Indore for three weeks even though the police have gone on record that there is no evidence that he insulted Hindu deities or “hurt religious sentiments”. But then, the complaint had been lodged by the son of a local BJP MLA and that is the writ that runs.

This assault on the rights of citizens extends to areas other than life and liberty. The right to food, the right to work and equal access to health and education are all under ferocious attack. The pandemic and the way the Modi government had dealt with it have only exacerbated the inequalities, hunger and unemployment.


India has slipped to the 94th position among 107 countries in the Global Hunger Index of 2020. According to the CMIE, compared with December 2019, over 1.7 crore less persons were employed in the country in December 2020, with the unemployment rate rising to 9.1 per cent.

The Modi government has unashamedly promoted the interests of a handful of big business houses in this period when illness and misery have stalked the land.

The year 2020 saw the list of billionaires (in dollar terms) reach a new high of 90 billionaires. The corporate sector made a bonanza in the quarter ending September 2020. The financial statements of 4,234 companies showed an extraordinary rise in profits in the midst of a lockdown; net profits increased by 569 per cent.

Fifty per cent of the companies cut their wage bill in the September quarter, compared to their levels a year ago. Seventy per cent of listed companies recorded a fall in wages, in real, inflation-adjusted terms. Huge profits, along with wage cuts: that is the ugly face of intensifying class exploitation.

It is to enforce this Hindutva-neo-liberal order that every constitutional right of the citizen is being suppressed. Dr. Ambedkar had warned: “However good a Constitution may be, it is sure to turn out bad because those who are called to work it, happen to be a bad lot”. The “bad lot” are ruining the Constitution.

Republic Day should be the occasion to resolve to fight relentlessly for the political, social and economic rights of citizens - the tractor parade of the kisans will exemplify this fight.

It is imperative to carry forward the political struggle to defeat those propagating the Hindutva ideology and wrecking the Constitution in the process

(IPA Service)

(Views expressed are personal)

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