Aditya Nigam on Thu, 30 Mar 2000 16:07:51 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] Paper on globalization. |
Dear friend/s, I am sending this article which Ravi Sundaram may have spoken to you about. Hope it is relevant to the discussion there. regards' Aditya Nigam RADICAL POLITICS IN THE TIMES OF GLOBALIZATION: Notes on Recent Indian Experience Aditya Nigam CSDS, Delhi Introduction Once upon a time, radicalism meant the politics of transformation, the desire to change the present in what could be broadly called a 'pro-people' direction. Whatever its political shade, radicalism was profoundly anti-systemic and anti-status quo. Things have changed beyond recognition now. One look at the major movements that can be considered radical in some way, will reveal that they are now primarily concerned with saving what exists, rather than changing. So we have a range of movements which describe themselves as the Save Narmada Movement (NBA), Save Independence Movement (Azadi Bachao Andolan), Save Childhood Movement (Bachpan Bachao Andolan) and so on. Those that have not self-consciously described themselves as such too, are really involved in nothing more than saving jobs, saving the public sector, saving industry, saving the ecology, saving traditional livelihoods, even saving 'Indian culture' from pollution...the list is endless. Radicalism, in other words, has been reduced to the fight for status quo. It is suddenly as if all the gain of past struggles spanning decades, even centuries, stands the threat of being lost. Some are seen as threatened directly by the globalization process, while others like ecology and traditional livelihoods, more generally by the development paradigm. If globalization is seen as the acceleration of the general logic of capital accumulation and the development paradigm that goes with it, then it can be argued that both the categories of movements really address two sides of the same process of disempowerment and dispossession of large sectors of the population. The problem however, is that this is not so. Those fighting to save the public sector and job security in the labour market and those resisting displacement to save their traditional livelihoods, occupy two different terrains. In the past, the sharp divergences between the trade unions and the Narmada Bachao Andolan have come out in the open in Gujarat and Maharashtra occasionally, with the former arguing that the NBA is resisting the creation of more jobs. There has been considerable hostility in the past from the Left parties who have accused the NBA of stalling India’s development and thus playing into the hands of Western powers who want to keep India backward. In their self-perception the Left parties stood for the India’s progress and development and movements epitomized by the NBA represented the ‘backward looking’ forces opposed to modern development. By introducing an entirely new regime of time, accelerated to breathtaking dimensions, what globalization has done is to reduce the left-wing proponents of development and progress to a kind of obsolescence - to defensive battles much of the type that many ecological movements like the NBA have been fighting. What was progress and development even ten years ago is irretrievably the past now; the present of course, is not that yet exists but one that is to be - it exists 'elsewhere', in the West. There is therefore, a sense in which progress and development have overtaken the Left which continues to be temporally located in that past. In relation to the new situation then, there has also arisen a basis for the thawing of relations between such diverse and often mutually antagonistic movements as the ones mentioned above. The re-appearance of imperialism as the ‘main enemy’ on the scene has provided the possibility of united resistance of all ‘nationalist and patriotic forces’. The theory of the 'lesser evil' also comes in handy in this new demonology. There has to be a hierarchy of evils and, so goes common wisdom, you often have to make common cause with the less dangerous one in order to defeat the bigger threat. The far-off, unknown imperialist, who always evokes the memory of colonial rule, is easily seen as the greater threat in comparison to the more familiar domestic enemies - khadi-clad politician or industrialist. This could be one simple explanation of this change in the meaning of radical politics in contemporary India. But is that really all there is to it? Why despite such favourable situation, despite the consequent thawing of relations among these diverse movements, do all these forces find it difficult to offer such a united resistance? Why, on the contrary, does such a possibility seem more remote with each passing day? This paper will tentatively explore the shifts in meaning(s) of radical politics and the need for radical political theory to grasp their significance if it is to effectively challenge onslaughts on peoples' livelihoods and rights. Clearly this paper cannot even pretend be a complete catalogue of the changes, let alone provide an exhaustive analysis. In a sense, the notes here represent a preliminary attempt at raising some of the pressing issues with all its attendant risks. Do the twin processes of globalization and of the 'increased political assertions of identity' advance or undermine the cause of Indian democracy? This paper argues that neither process is actually univocal and is therefore, full of contradictory potentialities for the future - both, of Indian democracy and of radical politics. Today, even the most hidebound position will find it expedient to assert that socio-historical processes are neither univocal nor unilinear. And yet, what does it mean beyond that express level of banality? What do I mean, for instance, when I say that the process of globalization speaks with more than one voice? I think there are at least two things implied in the assertion. First, that the processes referred to as globalization are many and despite the existence of a unipolar world, they present anything but a monolith. The question really, is of the vantage point from where we choose to look at them and here, I will argue, the vantage point of the nation-state cannot be the ground for erecting any radical politics and that the greatest defeats of recent times can be at least partly (I would say, largely) attributed to this circumstance. Second, that the perceptions of and responses to these processes are likely to be just as diverse, depending once again on the social location of the agents. Just as early colonial capitalism did not begin writing its script on a fresh and clean slate, so the present round of 'globalization' will have to negotiate its advance in each region separately. Therefore, whether or not globalization has a single author, there is really no point debating that authorial intention which is without doubt imperialist. If ours is the epoch of the death of the Author-Subject, it is also the epoch of the emergence of a new type of subject - the reader-subject. This is a crucial shift even in cognitive terms, if history is not to be seen merely as the outcome of the grand conspiracies of imperialism. What is crucial in this instance, is the way the readers - the new players - understand globalization, twist its meaning, play it around for their own purposes. Which potentialities fructify will therefore, eventually depend critically upon the strategic options adopted by the politics that identifies itself as radical. And the efficacy of these choices will depend upon a thorough rethinking of the entire hierarchy of evils that permanently fixes enemies and friends and allies in such a way that constrains rather than enables. Needless to say, this hierarchy of evils can only be thought afresh, if we undertake the stupendous task of rethinking our entire conceptual paraphernalia on which it is based. Political and academic opinion is quite clearly divided into a pro-globalization and an anti-globalization camp. And Indian radicalism is largely identified with the latter. The more strident one's opposition to globalization, the greater one's claim to radicalism. The pitfalls of this position, I will suggest, are such that they are bound to lead to a defense of the status quo, and eventually even of the nation-state. Radicalism appears here to be talking a language similar to that of many other defenders of the status quo, or worse, of right-wing parties - however much it may feel uncomfortable about the fact. That the anti-globalization/anti-imperialist banner is being claimed equally by the Hindu Right is demonstrated time and again. This was the case with the Swadeshi platform of the RSS 'family'; it is so now after the nuclear explosions when an 'anti-imperialist' sentiment seems to have burst forth. Left and radical parties still have to repeatedly tell themselves that theirs is the genuinely anti-imperialist position; that the Hindu Right is not sincere about its position and will eventually compromise with imperialism or that it is already preparing to 'surrender'. There is a certain discomfort in pushing the anti-nuclear argument, itself arrived at after considerable prevarication, because of this apparent fear of imperialism. Surely, there must be something more to differentiate a radical from a right-wing position: they cannot possibly be identical in every other respect except for the ‘sincerity’ of one and the ‘insincerity’ of the other. One may argue in times of an ascendant tide of radicalism that its opponents find it difficult to formally rebut their position and therefore disguise theirs in radical verbiage, but this is not an argument that can be sustained in the present conjuncture of worldwide retreat. Undoubtedly, there is a core of injustice to globalization as it involves a restructuring of global power relations to the benefit of metropolitan capital to the disadvantage of all others. And yet, there are possibilities that present themselves to third world radicalism and the labour movement, precisely because it lacks a single voice. For instance, the whole debate on labour rights could be brought back on the agenda of a government that was steamrolling the structural adjustment programme, post-Marrakesh (i.e. after the signing of the GATT agreement), almost entirely due to the fact that the spectre of the 'social clause' was raised by representatives of the metropolitan powers. It was they, and surely not out of altruism, who raised the question of universal labour standards and in so doing, forced the issue on the agenda of the trade unions too. Until then, it was just there as a routine question in resolutions criticising the labour policy of the government. The urgency with which the question of the defense of the public sector was taken up was hardly visible on questions of child labour or unorganized labour, for instance. How the fact of the metropolitan powers raising these issues is viewed depends upon the vantage point one adopts and from the vantage point of the nation-state it is bound to become an inevitable constraint. The radical project, I will argue, can only be revived if and when it can delink its fate from that of the nation-state. This can be accomplished only through a thorough going critique of the nationalist project in India, as such and by rethinking the generally posited easy and necessary relationship between nationalism and anti-imperialism. In this context, the renewed political assertions of identity themselves need to be seen as interrogations of the dominant project of Indian nationalism embodied in the post-independence state. This nationalism actually continued to preserve an upper-caste Hindu hegemony in an abstract universalist constitutional language. Once that project is problematized, questions are likely to emerge in very different light with very different priorities, as they indeed are. It can then throw into question the very hierarchy of evils defined by radical, left-wing common sense and lead to the emergence of a very different agenda. These interrogations then, already occupy a postnationalist terrain in that sense, even though they are not yet theoretically articulated as such. Labour, Social Clause and Nationalism One of the most classic instances of the 'aporias' of radical politics at the present moment - thanks to its implication in the politics of the nation-state - is the Indian debate on the social clause. The most interesting aspect of this debate is the amnesia that frames radical/left-wing responses. There seems to be no recollection of the fact that the first faltering steps towards introducing factory and labour legislations in this country were the product of a 'trade war' in the penultimate decade of the nineteenth century. Those were the days when the textile barons of Manchester and Lancashire were pushing for factory reforms within India, faced as they were with competition from India's nascent textile industry. This amnesia is itself a feature that needs to be theorized. However, let us leave that for now and return to our narrative. As the final negotiations to the Uruguay Round on the General Agreement of Tariffs and Trade (GATT) came to an end and the accord was to be signed, the representatives of the metropolitan countries produced their trump card: Trade could genuinely be free, they argued, only when all conditions were equal. Third world exporters have the 'unfair advantage' of cheap labour whom they endlessly exploit through the existence of practices like bonded and child labour, through non-payment of minimum wages and the denial of trade union rights. They can therefore outprice their competitors from the first world, they averred. Hesitatingly and falteringly, the third world elites and government representatives registered their mildest protest. On April 13, on the eve of signing the GATT accord, the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and Pacific (ESCAP) did unanimously adopt a declaration. Cautiously worded, the document "emphasized the need to combat protectionism and to avoid its assuming new forms in the future", while taking into account "the fact that many opportunities and challenges were arising from positive developments in the global economic situation particularly with the successful conclusion of the Uruguay Round." Official statements from the Indian government were few and far between. It was only in August, almost four months after the signing of the accord that the government set up a commission headed by Subramaniam Swamy, a former Commerce Minister, to deal with the issues arising out of the social clause and recommend what position to take. Soon after taking up the responsibility, Swamy argued for taking the middle path. He argued that "the shrill denunciation of what is now known as the social clause does not benefit India since even if such a clause does not become part of the to-be-formed WTO, de facto, US and European companies have started to sign export contracts with Indian companies after ascertaining if they meet acceptable labour standards...In my view, rather than flatly rejecting or completely surrendering on the issue of social clause, we must pursue a middle path of seeking to modify the US and European countries' rigid stand..." Only very gradually did the third world/developing countries governments manage to come out with a collective position in the form of the Delhi Declaration. In the Fifth Conference of the Labour Ministers of Non-Aligned and Other Developing Countries, held in New Delhi in January 1995, the declaration was adopted that expressed "deep concern about the serious post-Marrakesh efforts at seeking to establish linkage between international trade and enforcement of labour standards through the imposition of the social clause." Ironically, the most "forthright position" in defense of the national capitalists was taken by the trade unions who claimed to steadfastly stand for workers' interests and rights. All the major trade unions attending the 32nd Session of the Standing Labour Committee, namely the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC), Indian National Trade Union Congress (INTUC), Hind Mazdoor Sabha (HMS), the Bhartiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS), United Trade Union Congress (UTUC), Trade Union Coordination Committee (TUCC) and the UTUC (Lenin Sarani) gave their unstinted support to the government in the name of anti-imperialism. "Though normally on all other policy matters, given the direction of overall government policy, the unions and the government are at opposite poles," said the CPI-M organ, "the social clause is a singular issue on which there is unanimity not only among the trade unions and employers, but also on support to the government for wanting to reject the US move." The central trade unions even went to the extent of appealing to the Fifth Conference of Labour Ministers of Non-aligned and Other Developing Countries, expressing their resolute "opposition to the linking of 'labour standards' to trade as a non-tariff protectionist measure." The position of the trade unions was therefore, not simply a tactical one taken among themselves but amounted to an unconditional declaration of support to the government, leaving no bargaining possibility whatsoever. It did not matter at all that precious little had been done by the government on this front for close to five decades. It did not matter that for almost five decades the Indian nation-state had no time or inclination to think either about its toilers or its children. What mattered was the 'fact' that imperialism was blackmailing the 'nation' and the 'working class' was historically destined to play its 'anti-imperialist' role. Never mind of course, the fact that no one ever asked this mythical 'working class' what it wanted. Parenthetically, we may note that while there has been a lot of talk by the advocates of globalization about the 'immense possibility' contained within it for third world industrialists/exporters, it was the left-wing economists and theorists who argued practically from the standpoint of the national bourgeoisie that such was not the case. They claimed that it would mean unmitigated disaster for the nation as a whole. And if it is disastrous for 'the nation' it must also be so for all those who comprise it. All this of course, even as the ‘national’ bourgeoisie continued to negotiate its alliances and collaboration with transnational companies. One relevant case here is that of the owner of the Ranbaxy pharmaceutical group Mohan Singh, who provided the financial back-up and the office space for the National Working Group on Patent Laws (and intellectual property rights) peopled mostly by CPI-M activist-intellectuals. At least for a section of the Ranbaxy group, however, this was the way to increase bargaining pressures for international collaborations which they finally pulled through and then subsequently lost interest in the issue. It is interesting therefore, that neither the government nor the industrialists, against whom the social clause was aimed, ever attacked the social clause in a forthright manner. Their strategy was more of finding and utilizing the spaces within. It was left to the trade unions then to do the same. There were however, certain dissenting voices from the margins. For instance, Srilatha Swaminadhan of the Rajasthan Kisan Sangathan argued that the fight over the social clause was between two sets of exploiters wanting a larger slice of the pie at the expense of the toiling peoples of the world and that if the Indian workers wanted to improve their lot they should use this opportunity. They should "fight and insist on the linkage of the social clause with multilateral trade agreements" and to "continue to add more and more demands of the workers to be linked to multilateral trade agreements." Sujata Gothoskar of the Workers' Solidarity Centre, Mumbai even recalled the anti-worker attitude of the nationalist leadership to the move for factory legislation and the enactment of the Indian Factories Act (1881) and argued that the workers could not possibly have a stake in such a nation. She did see problems in the institution of the social clause, its monitoring, its use or misuse and underlined the need for evolving an independent worker-oriented position. Thomas Kocherry, Chairperson of the National Fishworkers' Forum, which has been leading militant struggles of the fisherfolk in the wake of liberalization gave expression to his ambivalence: "On the one hand, it is clear that the real motivations of the developed countries are dubious, on the other hand, the failure of our government in protecting workers makes one wonder whether it is an opportunity to be exploited." One extreme reaction has also come from some NGOs, particularly those working on issues of child labour. Notable among them is the Bachpan Bachao Andolan and the South Asian Coalition Against Child Servitude, who decided to use the social clause in what appears to be quite a naive and unproblematic way. Quite unmindful of the power play involved in international trade, many NGOs have even lent themselves to the business of certifying products made without the use of child labour. On the other side, it soon became clear that the working class and workers' organizations and trade unions of the first world countries were rallying around the positions of their own governments demanding the enforcement of the social clause, the linking of labour standards with international trade. The ostensible logic of their position was pro-labour - they wanted third world labour to have minimum rights too. Yet, there was something more to it which was revealed in the American case during the NAFTA debate. The fear that NAFTA would lead to the movement of US capital to the low wage areas of Mexico aggravating domestic unemployment, was played upon by the maverick presidential candidate Ross Perot in his metaphor of the "giant sucking sound across the border". The stand of the US unions exemplified the position of almost all the Northern trade unions. But in the middle of this apparently unified voice of metropolitan labour and capital, there came another, from the World Bank. This position was spelt out in its annual World Development Report, 1995 entitled Workers in an Integrating World. While the Bank celebrates globalization in the report by claiming that "these are revolutionary times in the global economy", in the same breath it expresses unease that "there are fears of rising insecurity as technological change, expanding international interactions, and the decline of traditional community structures seem to threaten jobs, wages, and support for the elderly." These are precisely the type of changes that have led to growing casualization and informalization in countries where structural adjustment programmes and neo-liberal economic policies have been implemented, including the United States itself. These are also changes that, in countries like India, are bound to aggravate conditions that the 'social clause' seeks to 'rectify'. But the Bank is opposed to the social clause: "it is best to keep multilateral trade agreements confined to directly trade-related issues to prevent protectionist interests from misusing such links to reduce the trade that workers in low and middle-income countries need if their incomes are to rise." So it suggests that the best way to ensure optimum labour standards in any given country, is to institutionalize "free trade unionism" and collective bargaining. Workers' organizations can then themselves negotiate with the employers and the government. The Bank’s position needs to be studied and understood more seriously, but it does seem that because it is entrusted with the task of forcing the debtor countries to open up their economies, it probably finds it difficult to sustain its propagation of the free-market and support the social clause at the same time - a constraint that does not exist for the Western nation-states. There are also indications that there has been an acute awareness that, if the experience of the past is any guide, structural adjustment programmes cannot be simply railroaded and that high degrees of destitution can lead to political instability and eventually jeopardize the very success of these programmes. In fact the arch conservative journal The Economist devoted two full articles to comment on the WDR `95 further strengthening its anti-social clause and pro-unionism position. Whether or not these are proposals that the Bank will ever push any government to adopt, depends not just on how serious it is about them but also on how serious others are about them and how much they can push it in that direction. Take for instance, the pressure brought upon it on the Sardar Sarovar Dam issue that has forced it suspend funding to it for some time and concede some ground at some level. If the World Bank has finally been forced to set up a World Commission on Large Dams to examine the entire question of big dams, which includes Medha Patkar and L. C. Jain, it is precisely because of the pressure brought upon it - not only from the movements within but also internationally. We do not yet know what will come out of it but it is certainly an important development. So we now have basically five different positions actually being articulated in very interesting ways. 1) The pro-globalization, pro-social-clause position of the Western powers 2) The anti-globalization, anti-social clause position of the Indian trade unions and Left parties 3) The pro-globalization, anti-social clause position of the Indian government and elites and the World Bank. Supported by a section of conservative opinion represented by say, The Economist. 4) The anti-globalization, pro-social-clause position articulated by some representatives of the unorganized sector workers. This is not really a 'pro social-clause' position as it argues for making use of the opportunity but does not repose any faith in the powers that seek to impose it. It also includes many ambivalent voices. Included in this category of responses should also be the Northern trade unions many of whom stand opposed to globalization in more complicated ways but support the social clause. 5) The somewhat unclear stand on globalization, of the pro social clause NGOs working on child labour. It is interesting that the organized trade unions representing the organized sector workers, especially the public sector, have adopted the more unhesitatingly outspoken nationalist position. They are after all, not affected by any of the issues being raised in the package on international labour standards. Child labour, bonded labour, below subsistence wages and lack of union rights are not what they are fighting for. It is precisely where these issues are of critical importance, and where precious little has been done in the last five decades, that the attitude to the social clause is more complicated. It is precisely there that the stake in the 'nation' is the least- at best it is ambiguous. It is reminiscent in many ways, of the situation at the time of the nationalist movement when important leaders of the backward castes and dalits (the untouchable castes) exhibited a similar ambivalence towards the nationalists. It reminds us once again of the ways in which hegemonic constructions of nationalism work to exclude the already marginalized. It may in fact, be useful to mention here that even the attitude to the GATT agreement itself, has not elicited the unanimous opposition that would have been expected. Sharad Joshi's Shetkari Sangathan has, for instance been arguing that Indian farmers should make use of the opportunities presented by the accord. I may also mention in parenthesis that, the NBA which leads the movement of another marginalized, even excluded section, displays a likewise ambiguous stance towards nationalism and has not hesitated to use international fora to raise what many would consider “India’s internal matter”. If there was any merit to the dominant nationalist position during the anticolonial struggle - though this is itself a matter of serious contention in our troubled present - there is no way it can be seen as a simple embodiment of anti-imperialism today. If it was possible then to indefinitely defer the claims of the subaltern/marginalized sections in the name of national independence, it was because there was at least a possibility that free India would mean the emancipation of these sections also. Fifty years after the independent Indian nation-state came into existence, and precisely at a time when it is being challenged by the very excluded sections, the desire to do so can only be seen as a suspect effort to defend the privileges of the Indian capitalist elite and worse, the brahminical Hindu elite. What the entire debate brings out, in my opinion, is the highly complex nature of the present conjuncture. It underlines the impossibility of defining radicalism with reference to the stance on one or even a set of issues. Most importantly, it throws into question the entire nationalist radical project that: (a) privileges anti-imperialism as the defining feature of radicalism and (b) sees the nation-state as the only locus of conducting an anti-imperialist struggle. It also demands a questioning of the very idea of actually existing Indian nationhood and the place it assigns to the toilers in it. It is important to recognize that it is precisely such an idea of nationhood that makes it possible for the ruling elite to brand the Narmada Bachao Andolan also as anti-national, on the ostensible plea that they are blocking "national development" and "progress". That the stand of the Left parties is not simply a knee-jerk position but backed by a kind of theoretical articulation is evident from the following statement by a theorist of the orthodoxy. Aijaz Ahmed, despite his deep marxist suspicions of nationalism says, "But a blanket contempt for all nationalisms tends to slide over the question of imperialism. I think that those who are fighting against imperialism cannot just forego their nationalism. They have to go through it, transform their nation-state in tangible ways..." Or further, that "...there is something profoundly democratic about anticolonial nationalisms" because they politicize populations that have hitherto remained outside the domains of modern politics. This idea that they have to go through it, that it is only through the nation-state that the struggle against imperialism can be legitimately conducted is precisely what is at issue here.. If the discussion in the earlier section on the social clause shows that there is already a challenge to the notion of a unified national interest and that correspondingly, there are different responses to globalization, then that should lead us to ask further questions about the idea of nationhood. For, it shows that there is no single unified ground - the 'working class' - from where radicalism can speak, and that the responses can be most effectively formulated from the social location of the actors. It shows that existence as an unorganized sector worker or an organized public sector worker can crucially determine the extent of stake one has in the nation. But then we are already on sticky terrain. Why would the location of an actor as an unorganized sector weaver, for instance, be the more important ground from where s/he would choose to act? If the weaver is simultaneously an OBC (Other Backward Caste - a group of castes who have fought for affirmative action to ensure jobs for them, and have been at the centre of what is known as the Mandal commission controversy), or a Muslim or considers him/herself a Hindu, situated further in some specific geographic locale, could s/he not respond as a member of any of these social groups/communities? And if it is possible that as a Muslim or a Dalit, the problem more pressing is not really one of an abstract entity called globalization but, say of self-respect or the right to life, would that aspiration be any less legitimate or radical? By what authority can it be decreed that X and not Y should be the focus of radical political mobilization? Can we continue to smugly inhabit a transcendental space from where we can lay down the agenda of radicalism, which cannot but be based on the denial of lived experience? In other words, the unravelling of the nation itself implies the ‘coming out’ of issues proscribed by hegemonic nationalism so far - with all its attendant problems. If that happens, it is doubtful whether our assumption of imperialism being the main enemy/danger/threat for all can remain intact. This brings us back to the question posed at the beginning of this paper: why has the ‘possibility’ of a nationalist, anti-imperialist mobilization against globalization not materialized? Precisely because, it seems, the ‘main-ness’ of the threat is felt differently now that the proscribing authority is crumbling. Ironically, the trajectory of left-wing radicalism is moving in the opposite direction to that of the Indian nation. For left-wing investment in Indian nationalism has been growing in inverse proportion to its unravelling. Since the decade of the 1980s, this assertion has assumed forms and has adopted a language that has marked a serious rupture from those of popular struggles of earlier decades. The struggle of the `sixties and the `seventies arose around issues of price-rise, corruption, wages and land, but despite their militant forms, they remained within the framework of the Indian nation. At best they challenged the class domination of the capitalists and landlords in their rhetoric and in the transgression of the institutional mechanisms of redressal but never went beyond the confines of the idea of nationhood. The culturally coded power of the upper castes and their continuing stranglehold could never be challenged within the sanitized secular language of modern politics. So, for example, the slogan of ‘land to the tiller’ that became the hallmark of agrarian radicalism from the days of the Telengana movement of the 1940s, remained a movement that never touched the Dalits. Kancha Ilaiah has argued that because they were not cultivating castes who owned at least the implements of cultivation, the Dalits remained outside the pale of such radicalism. Along with nationalism then, it is probably the unreflexive use of imported categories like ‘class’ that are being challenged today. Naturally then, left-wing nationalism would tend to have increasingly diminishing purchase on such protests of the subaltern and marginalized sections. [The above is an edited version of a paper that was written more than two years ago. Many developments have taken place in the meanwhile. Some of the things discussed in this paper have become clearer. One instance of the problematic nature of anti-imperialism and its easy relationship with nationalism, is illustrated in a communication I reproduce below.] Post Script [For the general information of friends, I am attaching this extremely interesting note sent by someone who has been alert to the dangers of a naďve anti-imperialism, as an appendix. Comments within square brackets are mine] ---- GLOBALIZATION AND HINDUTVA: A comment from an activist Benaras, India January 20, 2000 (Posted on SACW dated 21/1/2000) Recently, an e-mail message from New Delhi ? subject: WTO DG Mike Moore faces protestors in India ? was widely distributed on various anti-globalization listservs as well as some progressive and radical news services. The message (attached below) provides a brief description about a recent anti-WTO protest in India and an "open letter" to WTO Director-General Mike Moore, signed by six organizations. Superficially, the post is simple enough: a short account of a protest against the schemes of Mike Moore and the WTO, as well as an accompanying Open Letter whose rhetoric is common to activists involved in anti-globalization movements ("biopiracy," "Wicked Trade Organization," "pawn in the hands of the United States," etc.). However, I write this message to draw attention to some of the groups who have signed on to the Open Letter. Three of the six groups that I have been able to identify are widely-recognized front groups affiliated with the Hindu Right in India, while a fourth has supported the current ruling party which represents the interests of those right-wingers. I have not yet been able to identify the other two groups, but they obviously have no qualms associating with the Hindu right-wing, at least on the evidence of the letter. The Hindu Right, comprised of a network of affiliated organizations collectively known as the "sangh parivar", is led by the fascistic RSS (Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh), the VHP (Vishwa Hindu Parishad) and the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party). The RSS-VHP-BJP combine and their affiliates promote the idea of a "Hindu Rashtra" (Hindu homeland) which manifests itself in a militant anti-secular, anti-Muslim and, more recently, anti-Christian posture. The attack on the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya in 1992, is one infamous recent chapter of the movement, while the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, for his alleged appeasement of Muslims, is another well-known post-independence bookmark (although Gandhi, like other historical figures, has been appropriated by the parivar for their purposes). The sangh parivar has recently stepped up its rhetoric and attacks against Christians while continuing to stir up anti-Muslim and anti-secular sentiments (it goes without saying that the Hindu Right is also militantly anti-communist and anti-feminist). The sangh parivar is the heart of a well-organized Hindu Right mass movement in India which is implicated in all aspects of Indian society, and whose political arm governs the country as well as many key states. To speak cautiously, the movement has fascist overtones, although many progressive activists in India would not hesitate to label the Hindu Right as out-and-out fascist. The Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), Bhartiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) and Akhil Bhartiya Vidayarthi Prishad (ABVP), signees to the open letter to Mike Moore-are all openly part of the sangh parivar movement. The SJM encourages the production and consumption of domestically produced goods, appropriating the swadeshi legacy of the Indian freedom movement. The BMS is a labour front, founded to counter so-called "communist" inspired ideas of class-struggle. It stresses harmonious, paternal relations with management in the "national interest" (much like other right-wing and fascist trade unions in modern history). The ABVP is the student wing of the parivar, which likewise wishes to re-structure the relationship between students, teachers and college administrators on the family model while purposely downplaying radical student politics and agitations. Meanwhile, the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS) is a farmers' organization which is seemingly independent of the parivar. However, it is sympathetic to the BJP, especially in the state of Uttar Pradesh where it has provided electoral support on more than one occasion. The BKS, like the other two groups signing on to the open letter (Laghu Udyog Bharati and Swamajvadi Abhiyan) apparently have no problems identifying with clearly identified Hindu Right organizations like the SJM, BMS and ABVP. To be sure, elements of the Hindu Right do genuinely oppose globalization, and more-often-than-not employ anti-colonial, anti-imperialist rhetoric in doing so. However, the anti-globalization posture is tied to a wider agenda which seeks to scapegoat so-called "pseudo-secularists" and "anti-national" Muslims and Christians for the nation's problems. Interestingly, the BJP, the largest party of the current ruling coalition government, has embraced free-market "reforms" and has recently passed a whole series of privatization and de-regulation bills, which makes the pleadings of the open letter below all that much more suspect. [This may not be right, for there are different strands within the Hindu right and the ones signing the statement are the more xenophobically nationalist. The ABVP has recently even been doing an Indian version of the Taliban in some North Indian cities, threatening couples appearing to enjoy Valentine's Day or issuing fatwas to girls wearing western clothes. Some colleges have already fallen in line and have enforced the dress code dictated by them.] The anti-WTO posture of elements of the Hindu Right is similar to existence of chauvinistic right-wingers like Pat Buchanan in the USA, or the array of anti-immigrant, far-right politicians in Europe who are also outspoken opponents of globalization. (Admittedly, these are imperfect analogies, and I use them simply to provide a basic frame of reference for readers who might not be familiar with India's political culture.) The existence of far-right opponents of globalization is something that various progressive opponents of globalization have been reckoning with in the past few years. I refer here to a recent statement of the People's Global Action against "Free" Trade movement (PGA) who squarely addressed the issue at their conference in Bangalore last summer: "We reject all forms and systems of domination and discrimination including, but not limited to, patriarchy, racism and religious fundamentalism of all creeds. We embrace the full dignity of all human beings. [T]he denunciation of "free" trade without an analysis of patriarchy, racism and processes of homogenization is a basic element of the discourse of the (extreme) right, and perfectly compatible with simplistic explanations of complex realities and with the personification of the effects of capitalism (such as conspiracy theories, anti-Semitism, etc.) that inevitably lead to fascism, witch-hunting and oppressive chauvinist traditionalism. [The] PGA rejects all reactionary forms of resistance to capitalism." [PGA Bulletin, Issue #4, October 1999] Undoubtedly, there is a militant, progressive, grassroots and radical resistance to capitalist globalization in India, and I will forward a quick article I recently wrote on the topic after this post. The PGA has also posted accounts of recent protests on which my own article heavily relies. I encourage people receiving this note to re-post it to lists and individuals who may have received the original post below without knowing about the right-wing connections of the protesting organizations signed on to the Open Letter to Mike Moore. It is important to stay informed about all movements against the WTO and globalization ? including the reactionary ones. But this note is being posted in the interests of providing some necessary context which the original message was missing. Jaggi Singh jaggi@tao.ca January 20, 2000 Benaras, India (based in Montreal) ----------original post---------- Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2000 10:31:51 -0800 From: Anuradha Mittal amittal@foodfirst.org [Note that the address is of Food First, a radical NGO, working on issues related to globalization.] To: fianusa-news@igc.topica.com Subject: [asia-apec 1378] WTO DG faces protestors in India New Delhi, Jan 11 While more than 200 activists were staging a demonstration outside, three protestors sneaked into a heavily guarded venue session of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) Partnership Meet 2000, here today. WTO Director General Mike Moore had just finished speaking when an activist walked to the dias and spoke against the dangers of allowing WTO to police the world economy and also criticised the Indian industrialists for joining hands with "an evil force". Mr Mike Moore is in New Delhi on an invitation of the CII. Taking the delegates attending the conference by surprise, the three activists distributed to the delegates a copy of an open letter to the WTO Director General. Terming the WTO as a "Wicked Trade Organisation", the activists said that the recent protests on the streets at Seattle had clearly demonstrated that trade was not the answer for human development. "The protests that began in Seattle will now be seen in India," they said. A copy of the open letter to Mr Mike Moore is appended below: AN OPEN LETTER TO MR MIKE MOORE Jan 11, 2000 Mr Mike Moore Director General World Trade Organization. Dear Mr Moore, We have tolerated enough. For several years now, the people of India have been a mute witness to the systematic effort of the rich countries to recolonise the developing world under the garb of free trade. Over the years, the WTO has legitimised under TRIPs the steal, grab and plunder of biological wealth and traditional knowledge from India. Your patent laws have been designed to facilitate biopiracy from the biodiversity rich countries. We are aware that almost 90 per cent of India's estimated 45,000 plant species and 81,000 animal species are already stored illegally in the United States. To protect the economic interests of a few million farmers on either side of the Atlantic, the WTO has reached an Agreement on Agriculture, which is aimed at marginalising the 550 million Indian farmers and putting the country's food security at an unmanageable risk. For us, the survival of our small and marginal farmers, forming the backbone of the economy, is as essential as protecting the democratic traditions of this great nation. A majority of the small-scale industries in India have already closed down. The pharmaceutical sector, which made available medicines within easy reach of the people, is at the verge of closure. Multi-national companies, which your organisation essentially represents, have already embarked on the process of loot and repatriation of resources. And if the past tradition is any indication, we know that after you quit the WTO, you too will join one of these companies. Your interest in furthering the cause of these companies is, therefore, obvious. As if this is not enough, you are bringing in labour, environment and multilateral investment within the gambit of the WTO. In any case, Seattle has clearly demonstrated that you are merely a pawn in the hands of the United States. Unabashedly, you addressed joint press conferences with the US Trade Representative. You behaved as if she was your boss. You threw all the democratic norms to wind by permitting the US to hijack the global forum. The WTO is, as a placard being carried by a protestor on the streets of Seattle read: "Wicked Trade Organisation." Your agents in India, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), perpetuate the unequal doctrine on unsuspecting and gullible masses. For your kind information, many of the people you support have already sucked the national exchequer dry. For instance, the non-performing assets of the nationalised banks in India, milked dry by a few industrialists, stand at a staggering Rs 5,00,000 million !! [Note, contra Jaggi, that the rhetoric is also anti-capitalist and not merely anticolonial!] The WTO protects the criminals. We cannot allow this to go on forever. Let this be a warning from the people of India. We will not allow a global system, which actually protects and supports the rich and the powerful at the cost of the lives of millions of poor and hungry. Mahatma Gandhi has taught us that tolerance of injustice is a crime. We will, therefore, no longer accept any sort of coercion, threat and injustice. You are perhaps aware that we have had a long history of driving out the pirates and the colonial masters. And we will do it once again, if need be. [Of course, the irony is that the first time it happened, these organizations were abstainees. Both, the RSS, and the individuals associated with the running of the present government, including the Prime Minister, stayed studiously away from the anticolonial struggle, where apparently Gandhi taught them to fight injustice!] From: Swadeshi Jagran Manch Bhartiya Mazdoor Sangh Akhil Bhartiya Vidayarthi Prishad Bhartiya Kisan Sangh Laghu Udyog Bharati Swamajvadi Abhiyan -----end of message----- __________________________________________ SOUTH ASIA CITIZENS WEB DISPATCH is an informal, independent & non-profit citizens wire service run by South Asia Citizens Web (http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex) since1996. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold