Kejriwal Helped By Media Taking You For A Ride
The
politician used every past associate of his to climb the ladder of fame and
success, and a large section of the journalistic fraternity agreed to be
cheerleaders of his fake movement with initial help from the UPA government and
waylaid RSS swayamsevaks
S
|
ome days ago, Times Now went ballistic over a claim
by Kumar Vishwas of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) that the Bharatiya Janata Party’s
(BJP’s) chief ministerial candidate Kiran Bedi had a soft corner for the party
she is now in even during the Jan Lokpal (JLP) movement of 2011. The claim
sounded strange to this columnist who was a part of the movement, albeit with a
fair dose of scepticism.
Here was a political poet known for his fondness for former
prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and eulogies dedicated to current Prime
Minister Narendra Modi, who was asserting that Bedi, not he, was the BJP’s mole
in India against Corruption (IaC)! But my amusement was not substantive enough
to merit a full-fledged article. Hence, I dug deeper. What came out of the debris
of that movement turns out to be more sinister than an inconsequential poet’s
political tilt.
Kejriwal being interviewed during IaC's April 2011 demonstrations. One wonders why the media never projected any other agitationist so prominently since Jayaprakash Narayan in the 1970s |
On 4 April 2011, a day before the big event of JLP
movement’s inauguration, Arvind Kejriwal, now national convener and supreme
leader of the AAP, had attended a meeting of the National Advisory Council —
known to all as a hangout of UPA chairperson and Congress president Sonia
Gandhi’s favourite NGO heads. This information comes from some organisers of
the event at Jantar Mantar who have fallen out of favour of the AAP. And it was
corroborated by the NAC website till the time the site was functional. Kejriwal
attended three meetings of the NAC in course of the JLP movement, too.
Since the BJP has long accused that the IaC was a safety
valve created in collusion with the Congress to create an impression of an
uprising, against which the then ruling party actually had to concede no
ground, AAP chief Kejriwal must come clean on these meetings.
Anyway, the television channel’s anchor huffing and puffing
on his show the other day looked grotesque to this columnist. The Times group,
comprising the said channel and the newspaper Times of India — with an
otherwise serious Hindu trailing closely — had crossed many a limit of
journalistic constraint three years ago to promote the movement [The Indian
Express was perhaps the only mainstream media outlet that had a cynical
approach to the movement right from the beginning].
Negatively excitable Arnab Goswami was positively excited about IaC |
The ‘mass rising’ was packaged according to the perceived
taste of the group’s subscribers. One of those days when Anna Hazare was on
hunger strike at the most prime location in Delhi for demonstrations, senior
journalist Ved Pratap Vaidik, for long associated with Baba Ramdev, had told me
he was stunned when Times Now called Kejriwal backstage to tell him the
yoga guru must be “immediately removed from the stage” because “a saffron-clad sadhu
does not suit the taste of our viewers”!
Recall that Ramdev, till then more famous than any activist
of the IaC, thanks to about 5-year long campaign against black money via Aastha
channel, had come to Jantar Mantar to pay a visit to the fasting Anna as a mark
of solidarity. One may imagine the extent of marketing techniques employed to
foist the JLP movement as a grand event — even the kind of look personalities
caught in the television frame must sport was meticulously decided by media!
“It was no doubt a media-managed event,” said another
veteran journalist Vineet Narain at a seminar organised by fellow columnist
Sudesh Verma and yours truly in May 2011, adding, “There were 71 OB vans
waiting to cover the function even before anything worth reporting had
happened.”
Of course, the AAP’s leaders are likely to dismiss Narain.
When I had invited Prashant Bhushan to be a distinguished panellist for the
seminar above, he wrote back, thundering, “I notice that you have invited a
fraud like Vineet Narain for this anti-corruption seminar. I
cannot share the platform with frauds and crooks like Vineet Narain.”
I don’t know what makes Narain a fraud. What I know is the fact that he chases
people for all the wrongs he finds them doing, not sparing even fellow
crusaders against corruption.
As for Vaidik, today a reader might think he is making up
these stories after his run-in with Arnab Goswami following the former’s
foot-in-the-mouth statements in Pakistan. But this is not what the veteran
journalist from Indore told me recently. The revelation dates back to the
afternoon of 6 April 2011; I’d met him at Gauri Sadan on Hailey Road that day.
Yet, I will make my case stronger with more quotes. And it could be
embarrassing for the Times group because I am going to quote someone The Times of
India’s Crest edition (now closed) had reported in glowing terms: Gaurav
Bakshi.
This screenshot would help if The Times of India were to pull down the linked article |
“He created the Anna Hazare page on Facebook and today (27
August 2011) can count 3, 52, 961 people who follow it,” reads the report,
which has encomia showered on Bakshi throughout. Bakshi was covered also by NDTV,
CNN-IBN,
besides The
Times of India’s main edition.
“For the record, Kejri asked me to somehow get Baba off the
stage,” Bakshi says. Kejriwal did not mention Times Now, of course. “I
was told that he (Baba Ramdev) was here to hijack the movement. We have to
ensure that he gets off. There have been concerns that his projection will go
against everything that we are doing,” the disillusioned activist who is now
into Bollywood films said.
In this entire image-making exercise for the movement,
Kejriwal did not flinch before dumping the baba who lent him space on
the stage in his massive mobilisation programmes, the biggest of which was
organised at the Ramlila Ground on 27 February 2011. Later, when the IaC
activists had become big names in activism, thanks to the unprecedented media
support, they were hardly moved by the humiliating treatment meted out to the
yoga guru into the wee hours of 5 June that year.
“I rang up Arvind late in the night when I got the news of
police action at Ramlila Ground and told him how the peaceful crowd was lathi-charged,”
said journalist-activist Shivendra Singh Chauhan who had created the IaC’s
Facebook page. “All that Arvind said in response was, ‘Hmm’… I’d thought he
would be shocked to learn that our fellow activists were holed up in tents and
gurudwaras that night,” Chauhan said.
Bakshi, projected by the media back then as “Arvind’s right
hand man”, says Kejriwal was always uncomfortable in the company of
saffron-clad gurus. He made comments like “they have people who are brainless
who follow them blindly”, but the AAP leader never had any qualms about using
their services whenever required to swell up the crowd at his rallies. “He was
both anti-Ramdev and anti-Sri Sri Ravi Shankar on the inside. On the outside,
he never projected it. He wanted their support at some level,” Bakshi said to
this writer.
“He conveyed it to me many times; he said it to me many
times and I saw him act on it many times over the course of many months —
October 2010 to May 2011. I saw this consistently happening,” Bakshi said,
adding information about the IaC’s first rally: “90 per cent of the support for
their 30 January 2011 rally was made up of supporters of Baba Ramdev and Sri
Sri’s Art of Living.”
Anna Hazare couldn't have launched himself on the Delhi stage without initial help from Baba Ramdev |
Baba Ramdev retreated after the degrading ‘request’ to leave
Jantar Mantar in April. Sri Sri continued, but only with his support at the
grassroot level; they were never allowed to interact with the media though they
were very much part of the core team of Anna.
Bakshi found it strange that Kejriwal did not suffer from
this discomfiture while sharing stage with Muslim and Christian clerics. The
former aide of Kejriwal grew increasingly uncomfortable with this dual
character of Team Anna’s chief planner and began distancing himself from the
IaC beginning September 2011 and finally snapped his ties with them in February
the next year.
It may interest the reader that, before the backroom parleys
above, Kejriwal had tried to use even LK Advani to climb the ladder of fame.
Theatre personality Lovleen Thadani, whose office in Zamrudpur is used by the
AAP these days, and whose family is known to Advani’s since their years in Sindh
(now in Pakistan), informed this writer at her residence three years ago that
she had taken Kejriwal to the BJP patriarch before the JLP movement to figure
out ways of making his activism a success. Advani reportedly turned him down
saying his own yatras were being greeted with lukewarm public response,
and that he must look for some other mascot for his movement.
It was not a few months’ preparation, though. We could have
well seen Kejriwal as a BJP neta today if the big party were
accommodative enough for newcomers. “He would regularly apply to us to give him
permission for presentations,” a member of the BJP’s intellectual cell said to
this columnist, adding, “We would decline his request more often than not, as
the general impression about him was that he was a racketeer.”
Kejriwal’s links with the Sangh Parivar is indeed old. In
these videos dated 2009 — video
1 and video 2 —
he is seen using the platform of Swadeshi Jagaran Manch of the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). It is for this long relationship that the RSS swayamsevaks
came out in large numbers to support the JLP movement, but they were never made
part of the IaC’s closed-door meetings or the Joint Drafting Committee for
Lokpal that included the UPA Government’s Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal, Finance
Minister Pranab Mukherjee (now President of India), Home Minister P
Chidambaram, Law Minister M Veerappa Moily, Water Resources Minister Salman
Khursheed, and activists Shanti Bhushan (co-chairman of the committee), Anna,
Prashant Bhushan, then Karnataka Lokayukta Santosh Hegde and Kejriwal.
The RSS had an additional reason to lend its strength to the
JLP movement in August 2011. It was believed that in the preceding months of
the movement, IaC’s working relationship with the UPA government had soured due
to little or no progress in the meetings of the joint drafting committee. And
the pronounced nationalist slogans like “Bharat Mata ki Jai” at the
venue — whether for real or only for public consumption — were enough to move
nationalists, with or without the permission of the RSS’s headquarters at
Nagpur.
Backstage, the link was the strongest with the then ruling
party. And it was downright unscrupulous; it can be proved to be illegal [violation
of the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act or FCRA] as well. The Congress-led
UPA government allowed Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia to access foreign funds even
when their NGO Kabir was not yet registered. It received
$172,000 in 2005 from Ford Foundation while it was registered not before
2007. The foundation’s representative Steven
Solnick admitted to Business Standard in August 2011, “Our first
grant to the NGO was of $1,72,000 in 2005; the second was in 2008 of
$1,97,000.” I am not questioning the second grant.
Page 100 of this Ford Foundation file dated 2005 shows Kejriwal-Sisodia's NGO Kabir as a recipient of its donation |
Among other people that Kejriwal exploited, Anna was the
foremost. The veteran’s exploitation is no longer an allegation of the BJP. Kejriwal’s
party colleague and former chief editor of IBN7 Ashutosh wrote in his
book, Anna Kranti, that Arvind was happy about Anna’s arrest on 16
August 2011 (p 98).
Page 156 of Ashutosh’s book says that on the ninth day of
the August hunger strike, cardiologist Dr Naresh Trehan had started
administering intravenous drip to Anna, worried about the fasting activist’s
declining health. When the news leaked to the media, an embarrassed Anna
removed the syringe. On page 92, the book says Kejriwal was found sending SMSs
surreptitiously to journalists. Before that, page 88 reveals how convenient
news — such as the time when Anna was about to offer prayers to Mahatma Gandhi
at Rajghat — was being leaked to the media by Sisodia, now the AAP’s No. 2, as
well.
Was the news of Anna on drip leaked deliberately, too, as a
ploy to force the veteran Gandhian to refuse medical intervention, imperilling
his life, so that the event turns all the more sensational?
Much after the excitement ebbed, on 29 October that year,
Kejriwal made Vishwas move a motion to dissolve the IaC core committee in a
meeting in Kaushambi that was attended by all members of ‘Team Anna’. But when
this information reached the media, Kejriwal passed it off as Vishwas’s
personal opinion.
Then in an 8-hour long meeting on 9 January 2012, the plan
to make the AAP was made following this writer and some fellow activists’
insistence in a meeting with Kejriwal on 4 January that year that forming a
political party and then getting elected was the only way to enact laws that the
IaC wanted. That the activists were ‘forced to’ form the party because the UPA
government did not react to their hunger strike in July-August that year was
merely a dramatic concoction, employees of the Public Cause Research
Foundation, Kejriwal’s NGO that forms the core of the AAP’s cyber team,
informed me when I was a member of that party.
PCRF’s employees also told me that not only Ashutosh but
also journalist Punya Prasun Bajpai was constantly prodding Anna to form a
party. The journalist duo prodded him the most after IaC’s demonstrations at
Mumbai’s MMRDA stadium in December 2011 flopped.
So here is a party whose chief exploits all his associates
to enhance his profile as an activist and then dumps them. And you also have a media
that plays a cheerleader, foisting a fake revolution, whose anchors now froth
at the mouth yelling at IaC’s former activists for being a mole of the BJP while
they were part of the agitation! Whose mole were these journalists? The
Congress’s? Or, were they just interested in a ‘reality show’ fetching high
TRPs?
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