We need to pay attention to this. Once again the solution is not obvious.
These problems will not disappear until we launch a program able to end poverty itself and to also localize what needs to be understood as nation state movements within India. these latter movements are best captured through literal national city states embedded inside India, but only to capture citizenship itself and catering to the cultural aspects of such a population. In practice, all can then have dual citizenship and continue to live anywhere in India itself as is practical.
We want to apply this system globally anyway and you can see the reason spelled out best in India.
Remember that family matters for a whole range of reasons and that the nation also matters for a whole range of reasons that needs to honored and supported properly. Global(imperial)(super national) membership also matters a great deal as well as it provides a commonality in education, in economic ownership and in security and justice. Through defense, it also enforces justice.
This is the BIG problem now facing INDIA. Soon enough, it will also be the BIG problem facing CHINA as well.
The Modi government’s new citizenship law puts India at war with itself
December 17, 2019
“It’s 1947 all over again,” wrote my aunt on the family WhatsApp group as protests erupted across India
against the Modi government’s divisive new citizenship law. She was
talking about the year India was partitioned by British colonialists to
create Pakistan, setting off a period of horrific communal strife
between Hindus and Muslims. The comment may sound hyperbolic, but it
accurately captures the sense of dread millions of Indians are feeling
today.
A bigoted new citizenship law
that privileges non-Muslims over Muslim migrants — coupled with the
government’s proposal to create a national register of citizens (NRC) —
has unleashed a set of forces over which the government may no longer
have much control. The political motive behind the law was evidently to
settle millions of Hindus who originally came into India from
Bangladesh, leaving only Muslim refugees to “prove” their Indian-ness.
In 2021, there are elections in the eastern state of West Bengal —
home to a large number of Bangladeshi migrants — and this polarization
could bring direct electoral benefit to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
there.
But with the ‘citizenship’ genie out of the bottle, the country may
be looking at a turbulent and dangerous new phase of civil strife and
social unrest. Scabs from decades ago are being picked. Prime Minister
Narendra Modi should have used a incredibly strong electoral mandate to
fix the country’s collapsing economy. (Experts are forecasting a “great slowdown.")
Instead, the government’s dangerous new experiment — a population
register to verify who is Indian is scheduled to be implemented — has
lit a fire of rage across large swaths of the country.
From Delhi in the north to Guwahati in the east, India’s university
campuses are aflame. The youth-led mass movement against the twin
citizenship projects of the BJP has pitched students against the police,
with lethal consequences. Among the four killed by police forces in the eastern state of Assam were two teenage boys.
The epicenter of the most recent turmoil is Jamia Millia Islamia
University, a Muslim minority central university and my alma mater. At
first, it seemed as though the student protest had spun out of control and slipped into the hands of arsonists. Buses were torched, stones were hurled at police officers, and metro stations had to be shut down. At least two policemen
remain hospitalized in intensive care after sustaining head injuries.
The students, however, insist that outsiders infiltrated their movement
to engineer violence.
Subsequently, the most horrific videos surfaced showing police
excesses on campus. Cops stormed the university grounds without the
consent of the administration and fired teargas shells, forcing students
to take cover inside the college library. Police have denied firing
live rounds, but eyewitnesses I met say at least two students suffered
bullet wounds. There are reports of a third, a passerby who is being treated for bullet wounds.
I have seen chilling footage of students pushed by police aggression into hiding in bathrooms. In the video,
you can see shattered glass and at least two students lying almost
lifeless on the floor just under the urinals, their bodies hunched over,
their hands outstretched for help. In another viral video, police
officers march into the driveway of a residential home, pull out a male
student named Shaheen, drag him by the collar and start beating him until two female students run out and form a protective shield around him.
When I met the two young women, Ladeeda Farzana and Ayesha Renna, who
have become symbols of the student protests against the Modi
government, I asked them whether they were afraid as the police came
lunging at them.
The young man they saved, had bandages across his nose and arm. The
girls, both 22, laughed. “I am not scared because I am fighting for what
is right,” Farzana told me. “We kept quiet when the special status was abrogated in Kashmir.
We kept quiet when the Ayodhya temple verdict came. This is about us
all. This is about our country. We want our words to travel miles.”
They seemed unaware of how iconic the images of their intervention
had become. “You know how men they tell women, 'stay inside, keep quiet,
keep your voice low'?” asked Renna with a twinkle in her eye. “We must
never do that. You have a voice, use it. No one can ever take your
voice.”
The Modi government has discovered that while it can tame the media,
co-opt big business and intimidate India’s celebrities and athletes into
syrupy submission, it cannot control the idealism or outrage of the
country’s young. After the police crackdown at Jamia, student campuses
across India have joined the protests in solidarity. What began as student demonstrations is now a nationwide movement.
Yes, the causes driving youth rage are not uniform. In the east of
India, where there are more than 200 indigenous tribes, the citizenship
law is reviled for allowing migrants in at all, whether Hindu, Muslim or
Buddhist. In the north, the student movement is calling out the law for
being blatantly tilted against Muslims. Once the NRC is implemented,
the fear is that it will be primarily Muslims, especially the poorer
among them, who will be asked to prove their citizenship. It would not
be an exaggeration to say that these twin projects of prejudice could
see only Muslims end up in deportation centers or before so-called
foreigners tribunals.
The government appears to have belatedly realized that the situation
could spiral out of control. The prime minister went on social media to
call for calm. A series of tweets by Modi sought to assure Indian
citizens that they would be unscathed by the new citizenship law. But
just days ago, speaking at an election rally, the prime minister blamed the opposition
for engineering the protests and said you could identify “arsonists by
their clothes,” in what was interpreted as a not-so-veiled reference to
Muslim migrants.
This crisis could have been avoided, but Modi and his lieutenant,
Home Minister Amit Shah, have always thrived on disruption, often for
its own sake and to prove that they can get away with counterintuitive
decisions. Remember demonetization in 2016,
when overnight 86 percent of India’s cash was taken out of circulation?
Then, too, no one knew precisely why such a risk would be taken. The
economy is still recovering from that hit.
The stakes this time are much higher. In Kashmir, the lockdown of
leaders continues, as well as the curtailment of the Internet. Two
additional border states — Assam and Tripura — have also had Internet
data lines snapped, supposedly to maintain law and order amid the mass
protests. The Internet was also shut down in the north Indian university
campus of Aligarh as students began demonstrating.
As old fault-lines widen and new fissures develop, the ruling BJP
could yet emerge the political winner. But at what cost? India is
standing at a precipice. Could her students pull her back from the
brink?
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