Looking back at Indira Gandhi
Writing in Indian Express, Pratap Bhanu Mehta looks back at Indira Gandhi. He offers five lessons for today's Congress:
- Leaders are more effective when they work through institutions rather than attempting to subvert them.
- Sound economic policies are not a matter of simply projecting good
intentions; they require a concerted understanding of the causal
conditions that make for successful intervention.
- Being personally secular is neither here nor there. The important
thing is to fish in the treacherous waters of communal identification,
from wherever it comes.
- As the Punjab crisis demonstrated, when the state does not act
impartially and in time, it sows the seeds of greater violence in the
future.
- Democracy is not just about the practice of popular authorisation.
It is about a whole gamut of constitutional values that have to be
zealously guarded.
India had a bad period from 1962 to 1977, of which the worst part was the Emergency. This period preceded Pakistan's worst years (Zia ul Haq's period, 1978-1988). Kamal A. Munir has an article in Financial Express about Pakistan where we see the sustained impact of those years.
India seems to have come out better from the dark period, partly
because that period ended a long time ago and there has been more time
for healing. In addition, in Pakistan's case, the Afghan wars and
islamisation which began in Zia ul Haq's period have not yet ended. In
some sense, Pakistan is not yet into the post-authoritarian
post-conflict period of reconstruction of institutions, which began in
India in 1977.
Originally published at
Ajay Shah's Blog and reproduced here with the author's permission.
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