By Swapan Dasgupta
The violence in Assam’s Kokrajhar district and its
unsettling reverberations in the rest of India have ignited passions and
triggered a return of identity politics. This shift and its ominous implications have
already begun to be dissected in politics, the media and society. There is,
however, one aspect of the recent outbreak of sectarianism that has received
insufficient attention: the definite emergence of Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi
as the foremost pan-Indian Muslim leader.
Even before the troubles in Assam, the leader of the
All-India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (MIM) was a familiar figure. As an
uncompromising defender of ‘Muslim interests’ this bi-lingual, articulate,
England-educated Barrister was a great favourite of the English-language
channels. Unlike, say, Badruddin Ajmal, Azam Khan and Abu Azmi who were seen to
be authentic but limited, Owaisi defied familiar stereotypes. His belligerence
notwithstanding, he came across as someone familiar with the modern idiom of
politics.
Although he is second to G.M. Banatwala, the Mumbai
lawyer who represented the Mallapuram district of Kerala for the Muslim League
for many terms, as a parliamentarian, Owaisi has made a mark in the Lok Sabha.
His short intervention in the Lok Sabha during the adjournment motion on the
Assam troubles may have earned him some notoriety—he warned of a possible
“third wave” of Muslim militancy—but, in the process, he came across as the
most decisive voice of the Muslims in Assam. Owaisi was the only Muslim MP who
spelt out the demand for the immediate abolition of the Bodo Territorial
Council, a body viewed by the immigrants as the impediment to its ‘rights’ in
Kokrajhar and elsewhere.
Owaisi’s clear articulation of the Muslim
community’s demands in Assam, as opposed to mouthing platitudes, wasn’t
surprising. Since the troubles erupted in Assam, he personally visited the
relief camps where Muslims have been sheltered and, in addition, organised
teams of doctors and volunteers from his constituency. Increasingly, the scope
of his interventions has been growing. He may be elected from a constituency in
Hyderabad which has come to be regarded as the MIM’s pocket borough, but he
doesn’t seem to be content confining himself to the concerns of the congested
bylanes around Charminar.
True, his father Salahuddin Owaisi also attempted a
wider role during the Ayodhya years and even floated his own Babri Masjid
Coordination Committee (which rivalled the better known Babri Masjid Action
Committee) but the Salar-e-Millat, as he is now reverentially called, never
quite managed to break the dominance of the Muslim politicians from North India.
The younger Owaisi’s quantum leap forward in stature
coincides with interesting developments in the Muslim community. After 1947,
the idea of a single Muslim organisation representing the political interests
of the community stood discredited. The community either rallied behind the
Congress or, post-1996, attached itself to other mainstream parties. A separate
Muslim party remained confined to the Malabar region in Kerala and the city of
Hyderabad.
In the past few years, a new trend is emerging. In
Assam, the AIUDF led by perfume merchant Ajmal has emerged as the main
opposition party, and is at loggerheads with Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi. In
Uttar Pradesh, the Peace Party played spoiler in the Lok Sabha poll of 2009 but
won four Assembly seats in 2012. Its ability to make a more decisive
intervention in 2014 should not be underestimated. Certainly, a fresh wave of
communal incidents in UP suggests that there are stirrings that are taking
place outside the national parties. The activities of the Popular Front of
India have received some attention.
The trends are still early but it would seem that a
new sense of victimhood and the larger process of radicalisation in the wider
Islamic world are tempting Indian Muslims into experimenting with interventions
outside of the mainstream ‘secular’ parties. There is no indication, as yet, to
suggest that these disparate movements will coalesce in an all-India body.
However, it is certain that these different formations are seeking wider
linkages that could see the emergence of a loose coordinating body that maintains
the autonomy of the regional bodies and increases their electoral
manoeuvrability. It is in this context that Owaisi, with his ever-growing
connections and acceptability in the larger political class, assumes
importance.
To see Owaisi as merely a modern face is, however,
to ignore the baggage he carries. The MIM may be socio-cultural body which also
dabbles in electoral politics, but its pedigree is dubious. Those familiar with
history will recall that it acquired prominence after 1937 as the upholder of an
Islamic state in the Nizam’s territories. Its two pre-Independence leaders,
Nawab Bahadur Yar Jung and Kasim Razvi never made any secret of their desire to
keep the erstwhile Hyderabad state as an Islamic outpost outside the Indian Union.
Apart from the sinister terror launched by the MIM-led Razakars in the final
months of the Nizam’s rule, the MIM was noted for its opposition to democracy,
its contempt for non-Muslims and its belief in the innate superiority of a Moghul
court culture that was preserved in Hyderabad.
Deccan Chronicle/ Asian Age, August 24, 2012
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