A ban on the Da Vinci Code film

India - The World�s Newest Totalitarian State Masquerading as a Democracy

Mehul Kamdar 

Published on February 13, 2007

After a climbdown at the Centre over a ban on the Da Vinci Code film, we learn that three Indian states have enacted state wide bans - Nagaland, Tamilnadu and Andhra Pradesh and that more are likely to follow this devious lead. These are states where the ruling coalition in India run the show and the statewide ban on this film are little more than a fraud played on the country�s people in banning a film that has not been banned in Italy itself, leave alone in any other Catholic country in the world.


India has a long record of suppressing it�s people�s individual liberties, and the fact is that Indians have progressively (or should that be regressively?) enjoyed fewer rights year after year under Indian rule than they did even under the country�s erstwhile British colonists. From the heady days after independence was declared in 1947 to the founding of the Indian Republic in 1950, there has been a steady loss of rights as far as the common Indian has been concerned with all kinds of freedoms suppressed from the Right to Property thrown in the dustbin by the 44th Amendment Act of 1978 to the freedom of expression gradually whittled down by successive governments irrespective of their political leanings. And this is a country that touts itself as the world�s largest democracy while it arms itself to the teeth with nuclear arms and attempts to sell itself as an ally to the world�s democratic nations.


The ban in Tamilnadu, my former home state and my birthplace has been more disturbing to me personally than those elsewhere - Andhra Pradesh is, after all, ruled by a Catholic Chief Minister who has never made any secret of his fanatical beliefs, and he was bound to go by the diktats of the local church hooligans who have been threatening violent agitations though nothing of the sort has actually happened anywhere. M Karunanidhi, the Tamilnadu Chief Minister, found his own plays banned several times in the past along with those of his mentor C N Annadurai and other playwrights and writers like C P Sittarasu under the Congress government with which his party is allied in the current coalition in New Delhi. He has been a man who has been known to talk about the freedom of expression, having been a script writer for the film industry before he came into politics and a hobby script writer right through his political career. This hypocritical move by a politician who came to power claiming that he would end the fascist rule of his predecessor J Jayalalitha has been all the more telling - the entire political system has been shown to be nothing more than pitch black pots and kettles each screaming loudly that they are whiter than milk, purer than the driven snow. Jayalalitha had been responsible for the country�s only ban on the Vagina Molologues, a play that had been allowed to run even in Pakistan, a country that India is fond of denouncing as a dictatorship.


The Gujarat state government banned Amir Khan�s film Fanaa because the actor participated in a meeting for the rights of tribal people displaced by dam constructions there. The ruling coalition protested this and then it went straight on to ban the Da Vinci Code film in a more devious way than the obviously fundamentalist Narendra Modi government used in Gujarat. What does this say about the world�s most heavily touted democratic whitewash? The Indian fraud continues merrily onwards while the rest of the world seems content to go along with it. Let it not be forgotten that the Nazis denounced and destroyed art that they did not like - before they started killing people. If the world is to make sure that India does not do this to it�s own people or to it�s neighbors, it had better keep a wary eye on this huge, powerful and increasingly wealthy banana republic.


And no other political party in India is innocent in this fraud on Indians� rights or on the cooked up image of a democracy that India touts to the rest of the world - the Congress famously banned Salman Rushdie�s Satanic Verses even before Iran�s illiterate thug Ayatollah Khomeini did, the Communists have banned Taslima Nasrin�s writing in West Bengal and the BJP openly supported that ban and also refused to withdraw the Satanic Verses ban even though there was a time when they had the clout to repeal it in the country.


India is not a country that respects human rights or their freedom of expression at all. Tamilnadu is a wealthy state that has been the recipient of hundreds of million dollars in US and European investment. If the west continues to put money there it may as well invest in Iran or in the provinces in Afghanistan and Pakistan where Bin Laden is supposedly lodged. There is little difference between these state governments and their partners in the Central Government in India as far as their actions are concerned and the actions of the Taliban or Al Qaeda. The only difference is that Al Qaeda does not have nuclear weapons - the Indian state does.

 


Mehul Kamdar from Chicago is currently moderating Mukto-Mona forum. He was the editor of The Modern Rationalist under late M D Gopalakrishnan  and associated with various rationalist movements. He can be reached at [email protected]