Overseas Indians: Postal voting and a few
questions
Jawhar
Sircar
New Indian Express, 23rd
December 2020
When
the suave Arun Jaitley introduced his electoral bonds scheme in 2017, few could
understand then that it was a very smart sleight of hand operation that
‘legitimised’ funding of political parties even by suspiciously-anonymous
donors. By April 2019, the ruling party had bagged 95 percent of these very
opaque funds, but we may never know what quid pros were given to the
benefactors. Another such quick-fingers manoeuvre is clearly decipherable in
the Election Commission’s sudden revelation that, if the Central government so
desired, the facility of casting ‘postal ballot’, which is presently reserved
only for those who on election or defence duty within India, can also be
extended to NRI (non resident Indian) voters. The timing is interesting — just
when three tough non-BJP ruled states go to polls in the next few months. Avay
Shukla has recently explained, quite convincingly, in his popular blog, why
government should first consider the plight of 35 percent of voters who reside
in India but cannot cast their votes by post because this facility is not
available to ‘migrants’ working outside their local polling areas. He has also
argued that, in addition to these 30-32 crore migrants, two other groups in
India surely deserve consideration for voting by post. These are ‘people with
disabilities’ who number some 2.3 crores and the 1.4 crore oldest senior
citizens, above the age of 80.
The Election Commission has admitted
that it has no country-wise data of NRIs eligible to vote, but current
estimates hover between 60 and 90 lakhs. The EC has proposed that, to begin with, the new NRI
postal ballot system may be implemented for those in the United States, Canada,
New Zealand, Japan, Australia, Germany, France, and South Africa. It is not
clear why NRIs in the UK are kept out. The fact that all the Gulf countries are
also excluded because the regimes are non-democratic does not go well with
Kerala. Even elsewhere, the present Election Commission’s proposals are viewed
with wariness ever since its very controversial conduct of the parliamentary
polls in 2019. The priority that the Commission accorded to the USA further
complicates the issue, since it is a demonstrated fact that a large section of
NRIs there, from certain parts of India, are enthusiastic supporters and
financiers of the Hindu Right.
As the question of NRIs and their
voting rights have come into public focus, let us also be fair enough to
gratefully acknowledge their remittances to India. Of the world’s total migrant
population of 27 crore, Indians account for 1.75 cores. In 2018, the World Bank
estimated that Indian expatriates remitted $79 billion — the highest in the
world — followed by China at $67 billion and Mexico with $36 billion. These
remittances constituted more than one fifth of the country's precious foreign
exchange and 2.9 % of India’s GDP. But, frankly, most NRIs
hardly know enough about India’s micro-level domestic elections and are really
not affected by the outcomes of voting. In any case, NRIs in Western and developed
countries would surely be more interested in settling there rather than return,
though a section would never give up its Indian citizenship. Hence, granting
them special facilities for voting through a complicated procedure does not
appear to be really that vital. Besides, vote or no vote, remittances are
hardly impacted — 60 percent go to their families and they invest 30 percent in
banks, shares and property. It is heartening to learn that families back home
still matter a lot to many settled abroad, as their parents must have toiled
all their lives to ensure their success in life overseas.
This brings us to a delicate issue that
concerns a section of Indians who studied in India and then merged into the
Western world, to enrich foreign corporations and themselves. In this nation of
‘first boys’, most availed of the best education that India could offer at
vastly subsidised costs. Though fees appear to have skyrocketed in recent
years, the budget of the ministry of Education reveals that it still subsidises
elite institutions like IITs, IIMs and NITs so heavily that precious little is
left for countless other less privileged universities and colleges and millions
of their students. It is, therefore, not very unreasonable to hope that the
meritorious recipients of such education, who are now an integral part of the
West’s technological hegemony, do something beyond assisting their rich masters
strengthen their asphyxiating grip over hapless citizens all over the planet.
These
strong words are meant for those who are worshipped in India as exemplars of
meritocratic success abroad. When nations and crusaders struggle so hard to
inject some degree of social responsibility into brazenly profit-racking
domineering technology companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon, Apple and
Microsoft, we get into raptures when someone of Indian origin holds an
important post in them. When an ‘Indian’ who headed PepsiCo was wildly
celebrated, few recalled that she was also responsible for dream-selling a dangerously
unhealthy product and squeezing profits unethically from the young. One can
cite many other ‘Indians’ who lead strangling western behemoths in investment
banking, computer hardware, consumer goods and so on. While families and
friends may bask vicariously in their success, the common terribly-manipulated
Indian customer is entitled to ask: “What good are they — to India and her
common folk?
No comments:
Post a Comment