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India’s students risk playing into Modi’s hands

Over the last three months, India’s universities have turned into a battleground between two contrasting belief systems, principles and ideals. Young demonstrators have accused the government of pushing an anti-Muslim agenda and systematically destroying the country’s secular, multicultural and multilingual founding values. In turn, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has branded protesting students “anti-national”, a label that is increasingly being used to silence critics of the government. 

India’s liberal student body has long been a thorn in the side of the Hindu nationalist BJP. After taking power in 2014, the government moved to cut funding for research centres and exorbitantly increased tuition and hostel fees, while it’s emboldened student wing has led physical attacks on students and faculty members. When, in December, students joined nationwide protests against a contentious new law which extends citizenship to refugees of all faiths except Muslims – it was the final straw.

The demonstrations have presented a challenge to Modi’s party decades-long project of transforming India into a Hindu-centric nation, and the government has responded with force against protesters. Armed police have attacked students on university campuses, emergency laws banning demonstrations have been imposed and internet access has been restricted. In January, a masked mob armed with clubs assaulted students and faculty at New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). Weeks later, a man opened fire at a crowd of student protesters days after a BJP minister called for “traitors” to be shot at a rally.

While the student movement shows no signs of waning, its goals, however, remain unclear. There is a risk too that its strategic missteps might exacerbate the polarisation of Indian society. Take, for instance, the JNU’s boycott of pro-government television channels. Such decisions are essentially impulsive and dangerous in nature as a large part of the Indian population still relies on television as its dominant source of information. Even though social media is saturated with content on the police crackdown of student protestors, the internet penetration rate is merely 36% compared to 66% for television. It is essential that protesters appear on television if they are to raise awareness about the BJP-led Indian government’s repressive response to protests. Refusing media appearances only allows pro-government television anchors and news programmes to push the BJP’s agenda unchallenged.

Secondly, the students have been drawn into using the polarising language that has gained ground since the protests began. Modi supporters have been branded “bhakts” (or fanatics) by opponents of the government, while they in turn have been labelled as “pseudo-intellectuals” and “pseudo-liberals” by Modi supporters. Not only does this rhetoric succeed in delegitimising one side against the other, it also makes dialogue between the two more difficult. Furthermore, it risks alienating a plethora of groups and observers who do not identify with either side. For example, Modi voters that disagree with his party’s religious agenda – the current Indian political climate fails to represent these people. 

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