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Is India a true democracy?

Barry Nirmal

(Feedback of readers are at the end of this essay.)

 

Is India a true democracy?

By: Barry Nirmal

The recent elections in India have confirmed the fact that in India we have a socalled 'democratic' system that truly allows people to replace one set of rulers by another. But is it a sign of true democracy?

The political system that exsits in India is not democracy. It can be called 'richocracy', i.e. the rule by the rich. When the affairs of the state are decided by political parties that are funded and controlled by the very rich, who are a small minority, when the institutions of the country such as the courts are dominated by the very wealthy class, such a system is not democracy.

How can you have true democracy when the the majority of Indians who live in the rural areas live in poverty? They have no electricity, no clean drinking water and no good schools? The fact that the traders, and the middle classes, who live in big cities, and who constitute a minority of the one billion Indian people, enjoy wealth and have good schools does not prove that we have true democracy.

How can India be strong when there is no unity amongst the people? How can you have unity when vast majority of people living in the rural areas are poor and destitute? How can you have unity between those who are poor and those who are rich?

Without unity amongst the people how can we fight external enemies who are always hatching plots to weaken our country and subjugate our people once again?

There is no doubt that we have a political system that allows people to change the rulers. This is much better than the political system that prevails in countries such as China and Vietnam. Recently one Vietnamese friend of mine who lives in the USA remarked that the government in Vietnam would be terribly afraid of holding the kind of elections that take place in India.

But the truth of the matter is that in essence during the elections the Indian people really do not have much choice because they only have a choice between two or more sets of bad rulers. This is because the whole political system, the government machinery and and the vast bureacracy are reeking with corruption.

We have no doubt made great strides in such fields as military sciences and software engineering. But this should not mean that we should become complacent. We must preserve the good things we have, get rid of bad things we have acquired by imitating others, and acquire the good things we lack.

Some people equate Indian and American democracies, saying that both are dominated by money, and that both democracies are the best democracy that money can buy.

Well, it is true that American democracy is dominated by money, but this is because America is the bastion of world capitalism. In America you have the best democracy that money can buy.

In America, the vast majority of people are well off. Even an ordinary person who works as a garbage pick up person for the little town, can not only afford to support his family financially, but he can also afford a family car. He is not ashamed of telling others that he is a garbage collector working for the little town. This is because there is dignity of labor in the West.

But in India things are different. The vast majority of the people there, who live in rural areas have no electricity, no clean drinking water, no regular source of income, and little hope that things will improve in the future.

What kind of democray is this where the vast majority of people are destitutes? Is right to vote the essence of democracy? No, it is not!

America is the sole world superpower. To compare India and USA as if they were on equal footing is meaningless. For Indians to blindly imitate the ways of USA is futile.

Thanks,

Nirmal


Feedback of readers about this essay are as follow:
Nirmal Biswas wrote the following:

Dear Nirmal, Your essays are beautiful and thought provoking. It should get published in leading magazines and news papers.

Best wishes,

Nirmal


Ashok Ghosh writes from Houston, Texas:

"This should be an eye opener to all those of Indian origin that criticise the US while praising India as the sole champion of democracy! India may be world's largest democracy but certainly not the greatest, or else so many felons and 'dons' wouldn't be 'adoring' the high offices... US domestic/ foreign policies are geared primarily towards its interests and every thing else is just secondary!!

I find the comments of KUMAR RHAUL in your web page very appropriate and to the point."

Ashok Ghosh.


Dear Mr. Nirmal,

This is good and to the point. Many people miss this. I will use some of this information in my yahoo group, which you may wish to join also: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/IonI

Regards, Jayakumar


Mr. Ram Narayanan who is a well-known Indian activist living in USA and who promotes friendship between Indian and USA wrote the following:

Congratulations, Nirmal!

Ram


Mr. Gupta who is a rich Indian living in Houston wrote:

Keep up the good work, Nirmal Ji,



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