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Political Diary
New Delhi, 4 November
2025
India’s
Criminal Escape Artists
WILL
OUR BAHUBALI-NETAS BITE DUST?
By
Poonam I Kaushish
Taint is the flavour this
political season. Wherein, hundreds of our criminal-politicos flaunt their
“bullet-proof jackets” in the ongoing electoral circus in Bihar. This chilling
reality hit bull’s eye with the arrest of Mokam’s bahubali five-time MLA JD(U)s Anant Singh nee ‘Chhote Sarkar’ for murder of ex-RJD strongman Dular Chand Yadav.
Heart wrenchingly encapsulated by a poor voter: “Try and understand. We are
poor people. This is a fight among bahubalis.
We will just go and cast our vote.”
Alas, known for
complex caste arithmetic, Bihar has for decades voted for several bahubalis who possess dhanbal, janbal and buddhibal in addition to spectacular strongman violent acts who with
assertion of power beyond law get peoples’ support and win polls with ease generating
a muscular, masculine idiom of leadership over the State and impunity from law.
From Lalu’s RJD don Shahabuddin
in the nineties who was MP for three terms, down Rajput Anand Mohan Singh to
over 20 bahubalis in 2000: Munna
Shukla, Rajan Tiwari, Dadan Pehalwan, Suraj Bhan
Singh, etc. While some
strongmen contest, others demonstrate their political influence by fielding wives or relatives.
Both in Bihar and UP
those who rose from the crime world to corridors of power were even made Ministers
by Governments despite serious allegations. From Atiq
Ahmed, his brother Ashraf, Raju Pal, Ansari brothers to Kunda’s Raja
Bhaiya who burned houses and MLA Vijay
Mishra who spent more time in jail than in his constituency who won elections
regardless of his Party affiliation.
Think. Mafia dons
have been elected from prisons, some continue to hold durbars in jail, with all home comforts, instruct chamchas by cellphone and rule their
empire, issuing diktats that few dare disobey. Not a few take anticipatory bail
to avoid arrest, others simply abscond only to “surrender” when ready.
The rise of “money
and muscle” enabled bāhubalis to secure
legitimacy by aligning with Parties, invoking cross-cutting identities such as gareeb and,mazloom by helping people in their day-to-day needs and disputes,
activating caste networks in the State Administration thereby demonstrating their
social popularity. Making clear any action against them would be costly.
In this free-for-all khichri what is disturbing and
distressing is all Parties are openly recognizing and nominating criminals as
candidates. Wherein the rogues' gallery of bandits, racketeers and murderers
have filled halls of power and fame.
Why? With power
translating into a number game, Parties field mafia dons as they convert muscle
power into votes, often at gun point, to emerge victorious. This arrangement
works on quid-pro-quo: Parties get unlimited funds to fight elections and
criminals protection from law and respectability in society.
Why do mafia dons
invest large sums in getting a neta’s tag?
It’s a ticket to continue extortions using political power, gain influence and
ensure cases against them are dropped. Thanks to legal delays, often abetted by
political pressures, make convictions of resourceful crooks rather rare.
Besides, returns on political investments are so high and profitable that
criminals are disinclined to invest in anything else. Adding salt to wounds
people have to suffer the discomfiture of criminal MP/MLAs legislating on their
behalf. Sic.
Thus, our system has
unwittingly created huge incentives for criminals to enter politics.
Immortalised by renowned Mumbai mafia don-turned MLA Arun Gawli: “Ab kis ka dam hai ki mujhe encounter me
maare. Now no politician can give supari to any police officer or gangster to
kill me. Ab mere paas bullet proof jacket hai --- and MLA tag”.
Shockingly, a
whopping 2,556 MLAs in 22 States stand accused of heinous crimes. One Congress
MLA has 204 cases including culpable homicide, robbery/ criminal intimidation. Over
5,000 criminal cases against MLAs are pending despite Courts directions to
facilitate speedy disposal.
Undoubtedly, India’s
downslide has been rapid. Distressingly, it doesn’t strike any cord anywhere.
Parties are openly recognizing and nominating criminals as candidates. Why?
Because there is no rule of law and
the State has lost its Iqbal to
govern and arrest those who break the law.
Resulting in our jan sevaks dancing to their underworld
benefactors tunes at people’s cost. Thus, in apradhi-banne-netas democracy is boxed in three ---- mafia box,
cartridge box and ballot box! It is this mutual benefit and camaraderie between
criminal-Party nexus which is the cause
célèbre for our netagan.
One could dismiss
politicization of crime as an evolving phase of our democratic process. But
with our democratic system being usurped by petty thugs, dus numeriyas, criminals and mafia dons the only thing that matters
is on whose side the criminal is: His or ours? All are same. Only degrees
differ.
Whereby criminal-politicos
get away like escape artists. Hence,
the number of mafiaso-netas are
rapidly multiplying in legislatures ushering in a new ‘don’ (dawn) wherein
yesterday’s dons are today’s Right Honourables: a law unto themselves and
all-powerful. With an MP-MLA tag, a bullet-proof jacket from police, encounters
and rivals.
Scandalously,
criminal are crowding out honest candidates at national and State level.
According to a recent report 45.5% ‘criminal’ candidates win against 24.7% with
clean backgrounds. So in this self perpetuating system the growing Indian
middle class is not averse to electing criminals if they become their patrons,
flex muscle, terrorise constituents, keep them in check, provide protection,
ration-Government jobs and deliver goods.
Thanks to a weak
police and legal system which ensures that mafia-turned netagan get away with murder. They are the law and rule by law: use force with impunity, collect
protection money, settle disputes unlike the State bogged down in legal
wrangles and use loads of money to muscle out honest candidates. A milieu of jo jeeta woh sikander, a vicious circle
of you scratch-my-back, I scratch-yours!
Besides, when it
comes to criminal cases, the lines are blurred. What to speak of the marathon
legal process. Our law only bars persons from running for office once they are
indicted by a court, which often happens years, even decades, after an arrest.
It's even harder to dislodge someone actually holding office. What is the
yardstick that can be applied to them?
Recently, a rueful
Court accentuated that crime continues regardless of it ordering Parties to not
field candidates with criminal antecedents in Assembly polls. “We have been
telling legislature to take action against candidates against whom charges have
been framed but nothing has been done. Nothing is done and nothing will ever be
done by any Party to prevent criminals from entering politics and standing for
elections. Unfortunately, we can’t legislate.”
In a milieu wherein
our Parliamentary system has now been hijacked by the criminalisation of
politics, the aam aadmi is naturally cynical. No one wants to vote for a
criminal. And yet for years criminals have been using the electoral system to
enter politics, with the janata
hopelessly looking on.
Clearly, no longer
will technical or legalistic response suffice. The answer lies in Parties raising
the bar and ridding itself of this rot gorging on our body political. Remember,
a democracy is only as good as the refinement of its people’s democratic
sensibility. Instead of rooting for criminals our polity must compete to
enhance sensibility.
How many murder
charges are required before one is considered unfit to represent people? Are
there no honest and capable netas?
When will we stop hanging petty thieves and electing criminals to public
office? ---- INFA
(Copyright, India News & Feature Alliance)
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