Commentary/T V R Shenoy
Kesri is just as vulnerable as Rao, and for precisely the same
reason -- he can be tangled up in legal red-tape just as easily
There is a photograph of Aravinda De Silva at the crease on that
historic day in Calcutta when his dogged defiance denied India
a spot in the World Cup final. His eyesblaze off the printed
page -- a graphic display of gritty determination to let nothing
come between his goal and himself.
I notice a little of that same fire in some Congressmen's eyes
today. They aren't prepared to tolerate anything that comes between
them and control of the Central Secretariat. But what if the speed-breaker
on the path to power is their own president?
There has been a reversal of roles in the last five months. In
March, Sitaram Kesri was "an old man in a hurry." Well, age has
caught up with him. He speaks now of permitting Inder
Kumar Gujral to walk up the Red Fort on August 15, 1998!
But if Chacha Kesri is prepared to wait, his bhatijas
(nephews) are not. Slow and steady may win the race, but that isn't a policy
designed to appeal to hare-brained Congressmen. They want power
as soon as possible -- preferably in the life of this Lok Sabha.
But, and this is the important point, they aren't shying away
at the very thought of a general election.
The root of that confidence is the United Front government's performance.
(Or rather the lack of it!) Congressmen reckon they will win more
than the 142 seats that they have today. Or, at worst, they won't
lose too many.
From their perspective, the last months of the Rao regime were
a dead loss. Narasimha Rao was more concerned with the cases against
him than with the Congress. The result was that the "unconditional
support" offered to the United Front seemed to be more like
unconditional surrender!
"The Congress," Home Minister Indrajit Gupta declared
pompously, "is giving us support because it doesn't have
a choice!" Rao swallowed the insult even as his party writhed.
There was a simple reason for this meekness -- Rao wanted 'protection'
for himself in the various cases.
That situation was supposed to be rectified when Sitaram Kesri
replaced Narasimha Rao. Unhappily for the ambitions of the Congress,
I am afraid it was a case of replacing Mr Jaffer with Mir Qasim!
Kesri is just as vulnerable as Rao, and for precisely the same
reason -- he can be tangled up in legal red-tape just as easily.
There are four cases in the pipeline that could assume a more
serious dimension. And if an unfriendly government wants, it can
dig up more dirt.
The first case concerns Sitaram Kesri's allegedly disproportionate
assets. The CBI told a disbelieving bench that the Congress president
makes do on a monthly income of Rs 1,432. (They were told to go
back and do their sums again!) But even the CBI were forced to
concede that Kesri's son possessed wealth that simply couldn't
be explained away.
Does that sound like an echo of Narasimha Rao's embarrassment
at his son Prabhakar's activities? Here is another coincidence.
It is said certain MLAs from Bihar deposited huge amounts in cash
in their accounts just before Sitaram Kesri won a contest to the
Rajya Sabha.
Shades of the JMM bribery case? Not necessarily, but Kesri's foes
are already sniggering. And you can imagine their delight when
a hawala case pops up to plague the former Congress treasurer...
This concerns 'donations' received by the Congress from tax-havens
abroad. Moreover, the identities of the 'donors' have been carefully
concealed. The whole murky episode has led to the taxmen scrutinising
Congress accounts with greater care than ever before.
Finally, the fourth case addresses concerns suspicions about Sitaram
Kesri's role in the murder of his physician, Dr Tanwar. Incidentally,
the Deve Gowda government reopened the case after a Congressman
-- Rajesh Pilot -- took it up.
Every action, Newtonian physics states, meets with an equal and
opposite reaction. If Kesri beats too noisily on the doors of
power, United Front hardliners will do some shouting of their
own. The best way to whip the bhatijas into line is to control
the Chacha!
Where does this leave frustrated Congress MPs? Looking to Sonia
Gandhi perhaps? But then there will be amazing progress on the
Bofors case!
Congressmen may well have imbibed some of Aravinda De Silva's
defiant spirit after visiting Calcutta. But surely they haven't
forgotten that even a De Silva performs best under the shrewd
captaincy of an Arjuna Ranatunga. So who is going to be the Congress's
captain?
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