The normally sedate Planning Commission found itself the venue for some unexpected aggression at the annual discussion for Gujarat. Chief Minister Narendra Modi brandished his own data,and vented his sense of victimhood when it was pointed out that his state seemed to studiously ignore its Muslim children. In a letter to Modi on May 18,Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission,Montek Singh Ahluwalia,had pointed out the disparities in primary and upper primary school enrolment: while the states Muslim population hovers at 9.1 per cent,only 4.7 per cent of primary school children and 4.8 per cent of upper primary school children were Muslims. However,Planning Commission member Syeda Hameed who had once headed a womens rights forum to investigate the Gujarat riots and its traumatic aftermath was the clear target of Modis ire.
Whatever the actual state of schooling in the Muslim-dominated area of Juhapura,Ahmedabad the specific area that was disputed there is little point objecting to a critical assessment of the gradual disentitlement and ghettoisation of Gujarats Muslims. After the violence and pain of the 2002 riots,one of the most scarring incidents in Indias recent history,and the state administrations perceived complicity,Muslims have been fearful and insecure,and have increasingly retreated behind their own walls. There is persistent anecdotal evidence of how Muslims are being cut off from public services,including NREGA,and that Muslims who inquire about jobs are turned away. Despite all Modis attempts to refashion himself after the riots and talk a bland development talk seemingly emptied of ideology,there is no denying that his politics thrives on,and exploits,these social divisions.