The End of Secular India -Modi's Quest to Entrench Hindu Nationalism
By Hartosh Singh Bal
April 12, 2024
On April 19, India will kick off the largest election in history. Over 44 days, more than 500 million peopleor 65 percent of the countrys nearly one billion eligible votersare expected to participate. The exercise will be spectacular, with ballots printed in over a dozen languages and distributed from islands to remote mountain communities. But the result is not really in doubt. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party are expected to return to power for a third term.
The BJPs margin is likely to be sizable. Modis approval ratings are high, and the party leads in every poll. And yet the BJP has gone into overdrive, using any means possible to subdue an already weak opposition. It has, most notably, turned the Enforcement Directorate, a body designed to investigate financial crimes, into a vehicle for prosecuting opposition politicians. Its latest and perhaps highest-profile target is Arvind Kejriwal, the chief minister of Delhi, who rose to public prominence leading an anticorruption movement. He was arrested in March on graft charges and is now running his government from jail.
At first, these measures may seem surprising. To win reelection, the BJP does not need to imprison Kejriwal or any other opponent. Such steps, which have created many controversies, seem gratuitous at best and risky at worstneedless gambles for a party cruising to victory.
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/india/end-secular-india