Is their end near?
Today that labeling would seem a cruel joke.
The filth, the mess, the apathy, the dogma, the arrogance of the empowered, the mediocrity all around, the neglect of anything humane, the breaking of law with impunity, and perhaps all other ills have come together to make the city uncouth and unpleasant.
In recent times the 3 decades' old rulers of the state are losing mandates. Is anything going wrong for them? Are people getting impatient? Are they angry?
The Telegraph has in the July 5 editorial put the matter succinctly. I reproduce it below.
Before you delve into it, a sentence or 2 may be in order.
Lest one thinks that the demise of the present rulers, should that happen, will cure all ills, he/she may be mistaken. The rot in the system is so deep that one fears that one or 2 changeovers will make no difference at all.
Bengal is distinctly unlucky. The political sons of the soil have miserably failed the state. Watching from sidelines I've a sinking feeling that it will be decidedly long, long haul for Bengal to see its pride restored, if ever.
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
Efficient governments are alert to their failings; inefficient ones are oblivious to theirs. It is not surprising therefore that the Left Front government that rules West Bengal — and has done so for more than three decades — is yet to come to terms with the two electoral reverses it has recently suffered. It is possible, of course, that senility — politics is a realm in which a week is famously a long time — has robbed the Left of its reason. When the panchayat poll results went against them, the Left pundits were quick to link it to the land acquisition policy, which followed the industrialization policy adopted by the chief minister, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee. The municipal election results suggest that the Left, especially the Communist Party of India (Marxist), is losing ground in urban segments as well. This, for obvious reasons, cannot be explained by that deus ex machina, land acquisition. So the Left is floundering to explain its losses.
The bewilderment of the Left is rooted in its own refusal to acknowledge its myriad failures. This refusal itself is a product of the Left’s arrogance and smugness. In over thirty years, the Left Front government cannot point to a single sphere affecting the daily life of the people of West Bengal, especially in the small towns of the districts, where it has been successful in demonstrating efficiency. The condition of government-run hospitals remains unfit for any human being. Detailed reports and appeals have failed to wake the government up and make it initiate certain changes and reforms. Thirty years of Left rule have destroyed education, primary, secondary and higher. The CPI(M), which has always maintained a tight control over education, has made it into an extension of the party. It pursued, at one time, an anti-English policy that has produced a generation of Bengalis incapable of communicating in English. This has made that generation a non-starter in any activity outside West Bengal. The CPI(M) has attempted to cover up these failures with its smugness and with the use of terror and intimidation. People are reacting to all this, and if the warning signs are not read in their stark reality, the Left may well find itself in deep trouble, which is entirely its own creation.
It is ironic that the policy of industrialization is a recent addition to the Left’s long list of failures. If it had pursued this policy, however unpopular among certain sections of the population, it could have posted at least one achievement. But faced with opposition, the Left back-pedalled on this policy. The Left is thus visited with all the sins of industrialization without any of its virtues.
Alarm bells have begun to ring for the Left in West Bengal. Is it ready to hear them? The answer, if the past is any guide, is no, since the Left only hears what it likes to hear: a cacophony of its own making. The finger is moving though its writing is still not clearly visible on the wall.
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Labels: Commentary




2 Comments:
... Calcutta, was once hailed as the most lively city east of Suez. From what I have read, Cal those days was equiv to what Singapore is now. Singapore was then a dirty city. In the last 60 years (especially the last 30 years) from what I have seen, the staus has reversed.
U ask Is their end near? What do u expect after the end? Hv u heard of the TINA effect (There Is No Alternative)? A man on the street, seems to fear the lunatic alternative will create a mess worse than the problem itself.
Loken,
Granted your argument does sound true. Which is why my lament, "..the political sons of the soil have miserably failed the state."
Yet deep inside don't you feel that the agony of suffering so long needs a salve even if that means briefly living in a jungle instead of a disorganized zoo?
Partha
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