01-30-2009, 11:11 PM
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The Prime Minister of Gujarat
HT link
Neelesh Misra, Hindustan Times
Ahmedabad, January 23, 2009
The 13-year-old boy jumped off clumsily from the adults' bicycle on
the village road, interrupting the reporter's conversation with the
farmer lugging the insecticide sprayer.
"Narendra Modi is the Prime Minister," declared Vipul Kumar Valjibhai
Shyanwa, returning from school in Moti Thori village.
Prime minister? "Of Gujarat," he added knowingly.
Top business leaders Ratan Tata, Mukesh Ambani and Sunil Bharti Mittal
threw a surprise recently by openly endorsing that idea, of Modi
becoming the Prime Minister â of India.
So an HT reporter travelled 100 kilometres down a meandering highway
to Ahmedabad to ask whether that should be so â travelling past
sprawling cotton farms, refurbished villages, small industry hubs
coping with the slowdown, past the new home of the Nano, the world's
cheapest car, to Ahmedabad, the city of wide roads, swank offices and
gleaming malls.
Modi has bowed to Lal Krishna Advani and will wait his turn to be
prime ministerial candidate. When that happens, his critics will raise
the uncomfortable question of 2002, when his administration was
believed to have looked the other way during riots that killed
hundreds of Muslims and Hindus.
But the other face of Gujarat's truth, rarely acknowledged outside the
state, is that the charismatic Bharatiya Janata Party leader has over
the years transformed governance in the state in ways unimaginable in
most parts of India.
Government goes to the villages
Modi holds out lessons in governance for the rest of the country â
IAS officials and farm scientists interact with villagers;
agriculture is soaring due to check dams; depleted water tables are
rising; a quick ambulance service is saving lives in villages and
treatment costs in private hospitals are reimbursed by the government;
every village is connected by broadband and soon by internet-enabled
television; and homes get electricity 24 hours a day â something
residents of India's capital can be jealous of.
Several times a year, the 13-year-old boy gets to see a spectacle in
his village. Officials come visiting. For three days in June, the
government virtually moves to Gujarat's 18,000 villages to monitor
schemes, which the villagers are told about round the year by gram
mitras (friends of the village), chosen from locals. Bureaucrats stay
in villages and get eligible children â especially girls â enrolled in
schools.
Ten-year-old Afsana Bano Umar Khan signed up. She now goes to school
every day, and has a fascinating three hours' experience on a new toy
â a computer. Schools across Gujarat's villages provide free computer
education to children.
"One month ago, I saw a computer for the first time in my life," said
Afsana, a tea seller's daughter, panting after she came running from
her home at Chharodi village. "I am learning to type ABCD on it," she
said. "I want to go to school daily."
Chharodi is a largely Muslim village but that has not dented its
enthusiasm for Modi.
"There have been a lot of good things in Modi's time. We get 24 hours'
electricity and a separate line gives eight hours of power in the
fields," said 35-year-old farm worker Fatahji Mungaji.
"Fancy Punjabi dress!" a shrill salesman shouted as he walked by,
holding a stack of colourful salwar suits.
Murmurs in the land of the Nano
On the highway, as the morning became warmer, vehicles poured on to
the streets, expensive cars driving alongside the colourful
three-wheel motorcycle taxi, a Gujarat speciality.
The motorcycles taxis will soon have competition. They drive past a
yellow sign announcing: 'Nano Car, Project Site'.
The story behind the coming up of that sign near Sanand town
entrenched Modi's position as a favourite of corporate India. When the
Nano project in Bengal collapsed, Modi showed decision-making rare
among India's political class. In four days he provided land to Tata
and enabled their passage to Gujarat, beating other states vying for
the project.
That doesn't cut much ice, though, with Nitin Arwalla, 22, who sells
car seat covers in Sanand.
"How do I care if Modi becomes Prime Minister or not? He has brought
the Nano, sure, but only outsiders are going to get jobs," said
Arwalla. "Let him give us jobs, then he can be my Prime Minister."
Angry youth? A few kilometres down, young 20-year-olds play with fire every day.
This is the private College of Fire Technology, where youth from all
over India â and one from Dubai â train to be firefighters. With
industrial giants swooping on Gujarat, there are lots of jobs coming
their way.
"I had heard scary stories but Gujarat is nice. Things are so much
better here. Our northern states should take lessons," said Virendra
Kumar, 20, from Patna.
Asked how many wanted Modi to become India's Prime Minister, all hands
went up in the class of 50.
"After the 2002 riots, he has improved upon the bad image he had.
There was an impression that he discriminates against Muslim areas on
the issue of development, " said 20-year-old Shahnawaz Thakur, who
lives in Ahmedabad's Jamalpur neighbourhood.
"But our roads are being improved and our footpaths are being
developed. I think he is a brilliant person for running our country."
Cars whiz by. The occasional camel-driven cart rolls along as well.
After a smoking break at the roadside tea shop, young executives
working for multinational giants set out on motorcycles to seek
customers.
In Viramgam town, a row of swank corporate offices stick out on the
dusty and bumpy roads. Private life insurance companies have battled
it out over the past year. Private banks have ATMs.
Hardi Pankajbhai Shah, 21, is among the lucky girls of Viramgam. She
got a job near her home, with a mobile phone company.
"There are few job opportunities here, especially for women. Most
people go to big cities. But there is a higher education hub coming up
nearby in seven years. Then things will be different," she said, as
she collected payment from a customer.
"I think Narendrabhai has a great approach to developing business.
This will reduce unemployment, " she said. "He takes strong decisions
and he does a lot of what he says."
The store's customers are mostly from villages, many of them in their
20s and 30s who love MP3s and caller tunes and buy phones of up to Rs
16,000 although this is not one of the very prosperous areas of
Gujarat. For others, it is the every day things that make a
difference.
"I get electricity, I get water. That is all I care for. Earlier there
was no water â I had to pay Rs 300 per hour as rent to the landlord
for water because he had the boring machine," said farmer Rati Lal,
his teeth blackened by tobacco. "Now I pay Rs 600 every year to the
panchayat. See how much I save?"
That has been made possible by a check dam, one of the one lakh-plus
check dams built across the state during Modi's tenure, with 9:1
contributions by the government and villagers. It now returns to the
farmers most of the rainwater that washed out to sea.
Migration back to the villages
There is someone else returning too: the migrant. "Many people are
coming back from cities because life is better here and I saw on TV
that there is a mandi [recession] in the cities," said 40-year-old
Tarsingh Bhai.
The interventions are showing results. Gujarat's agriculture sector
grew at 10 per cent over the past two years, compared to the national
average of three per cent. The total worth of farm products shot up
from Rs 9,000 crore two years ago to Rs 35,000 crore.
Twenty kilometres down, near Surendranagar, cotton fields open up on
both sides of the road, near a small industries enclave run by the
government. Noisy sweatshops lined along bumpy roads make nails and
wires out of steel industry scrap, and build machines that help strip
cotton balls.
A large number of small industries have shut down in the state as
elsewhere in the country, and many of Gujarat's 2.3 lakh units face a
crisis. Expatriate Gujaratis are devising a plan to help small
industries.
In a dimly lit office beyond a compound where hulky cotton stripping
machines are parked, there is an unlikely discovery â Mansukhbhai B.
Patel, 58, who invented them and holds Indian and US patents.
Patel is a Modi fan, the critical kind. "He is a good administrator,
though it is not as if everything is hunky-dory. We are concerned that
his support to big industry might squeeze us out â but maybe he will
find a way," he said, sipping tea. The cacophony of clanging steel and
the grating of metal filters into the room.
"He should not become Prime Minister. He should remain the Chief
Minister of Gujarat, otherwise he will have to worry about all of
India, and not focus on Gujarat," Patel said.
Back in Ahmedabad, in the Muslim hub of Jamalpur, RH Master, 61,
smiles as he talks about the days when Modi used a bicycle and loved
taking pictures on his Yashica 635 camera, just like him.
Master, who once sold milk, took to photography after flipping through
glossy magazines at his shop and gave up everything to become a
photographer who has won national and international awards. He is a
devout Muslim.
"I think he is a good administrator. He will make a great Prime
Minister," said Master. "But I do not think he will agree to it, he
will stay here as his heart is in Gujarat. And Gujarat needs Modi."
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Interesting to see Gujarati Muslim community are in praise of Modi. Slap on face of those Teesta, Arundhoti and their bogus friends in NRIs organization.
I believe former Air Chief Tipnis has joined BJP. Also didn't Preity Zienta endorse Modi for PM lately?
HT link
Neelesh Misra, Hindustan Times
Ahmedabad, January 23, 2009
The 13-year-old boy jumped off clumsily from the adults' bicycle on
the village road, interrupting the reporter's conversation with the
farmer lugging the insecticide sprayer.
"Narendra Modi is the Prime Minister," declared Vipul Kumar Valjibhai
Shyanwa, returning from school in Moti Thori village.
Prime minister? "Of Gujarat," he added knowingly.
Top business leaders Ratan Tata, Mukesh Ambani and Sunil Bharti Mittal
threw a surprise recently by openly endorsing that idea, of Modi
becoming the Prime Minister â of India.
So an HT reporter travelled 100 kilometres down a meandering highway
to Ahmedabad to ask whether that should be so â travelling past
sprawling cotton farms, refurbished villages, small industry hubs
coping with the slowdown, past the new home of the Nano, the world's
cheapest car, to Ahmedabad, the city of wide roads, swank offices and
gleaming malls.
Modi has bowed to Lal Krishna Advani and will wait his turn to be
prime ministerial candidate. When that happens, his critics will raise
the uncomfortable question of 2002, when his administration was
believed to have looked the other way during riots that killed
hundreds of Muslims and Hindus.
But the other face of Gujarat's truth, rarely acknowledged outside the
state, is that the charismatic Bharatiya Janata Party leader has over
the years transformed governance in the state in ways unimaginable in
most parts of India.
Government goes to the villages
Modi holds out lessons in governance for the rest of the country â
IAS officials and farm scientists interact with villagers;
agriculture is soaring due to check dams; depleted water tables are
rising; a quick ambulance service is saving lives in villages and
treatment costs in private hospitals are reimbursed by the government;
every village is connected by broadband and soon by internet-enabled
television; and homes get electricity 24 hours a day â something
residents of India's capital can be jealous of.
Several times a year, the 13-year-old boy gets to see a spectacle in
his village. Officials come visiting. For three days in June, the
government virtually moves to Gujarat's 18,000 villages to monitor
schemes, which the villagers are told about round the year by gram
mitras (friends of the village), chosen from locals. Bureaucrats stay
in villages and get eligible children â especially girls â enrolled in
schools.
Ten-year-old Afsana Bano Umar Khan signed up. She now goes to school
every day, and has a fascinating three hours' experience on a new toy
â a computer. Schools across Gujarat's villages provide free computer
education to children.
"One month ago, I saw a computer for the first time in my life," said
Afsana, a tea seller's daughter, panting after she came running from
her home at Chharodi village. "I am learning to type ABCD on it," she
said. "I want to go to school daily."
Chharodi is a largely Muslim village but that has not dented its
enthusiasm for Modi.
"There have been a lot of good things in Modi's time. We get 24 hours'
electricity and a separate line gives eight hours of power in the
fields," said 35-year-old farm worker Fatahji Mungaji.
"Fancy Punjabi dress!" a shrill salesman shouted as he walked by,
holding a stack of colourful salwar suits.
Murmurs in the land of the Nano
On the highway, as the morning became warmer, vehicles poured on to
the streets, expensive cars driving alongside the colourful
three-wheel motorcycle taxi, a Gujarat speciality.
The motorcycles taxis will soon have competition. They drive past a
yellow sign announcing: 'Nano Car, Project Site'.
The story behind the coming up of that sign near Sanand town
entrenched Modi's position as a favourite of corporate India. When the
Nano project in Bengal collapsed, Modi showed decision-making rare
among India's political class. In four days he provided land to Tata
and enabled their passage to Gujarat, beating other states vying for
the project.
That doesn't cut much ice, though, with Nitin Arwalla, 22, who sells
car seat covers in Sanand.
"How do I care if Modi becomes Prime Minister or not? He has brought
the Nano, sure, but only outsiders are going to get jobs," said
Arwalla. "Let him give us jobs, then he can be my Prime Minister."
Angry youth? A few kilometres down, young 20-year-olds play with fire every day.
This is the private College of Fire Technology, where youth from all
over India â and one from Dubai â train to be firefighters. With
industrial giants swooping on Gujarat, there are lots of jobs coming
their way.
"I had heard scary stories but Gujarat is nice. Things are so much
better here. Our northern states should take lessons," said Virendra
Kumar, 20, from Patna.
Asked how many wanted Modi to become India's Prime Minister, all hands
went up in the class of 50.
"After the 2002 riots, he has improved upon the bad image he had.
There was an impression that he discriminates against Muslim areas on
the issue of development, " said 20-year-old Shahnawaz Thakur, who
lives in Ahmedabad's Jamalpur neighbourhood.
"But our roads are being improved and our footpaths are being
developed. I think he is a brilliant person for running our country."
Cars whiz by. The occasional camel-driven cart rolls along as well.
After a smoking break at the roadside tea shop, young executives
working for multinational giants set out on motorcycles to seek
customers.
In Viramgam town, a row of swank corporate offices stick out on the
dusty and bumpy roads. Private life insurance companies have battled
it out over the past year. Private banks have ATMs.
Hardi Pankajbhai Shah, 21, is among the lucky girls of Viramgam. She
got a job near her home, with a mobile phone company.
"There are few job opportunities here, especially for women. Most
people go to big cities. But there is a higher education hub coming up
nearby in seven years. Then things will be different," she said, as
she collected payment from a customer.
"I think Narendrabhai has a great approach to developing business.
This will reduce unemployment, " she said. "He takes strong decisions
and he does a lot of what he says."
The store's customers are mostly from villages, many of them in their
20s and 30s who love MP3s and caller tunes and buy phones of up to Rs
16,000 although this is not one of the very prosperous areas of
Gujarat. For others, it is the every day things that make a
difference.
"I get electricity, I get water. That is all I care for. Earlier there
was no water â I had to pay Rs 300 per hour as rent to the landlord
for water because he had the boring machine," said farmer Rati Lal,
his teeth blackened by tobacco. "Now I pay Rs 600 every year to the
panchayat. See how much I save?"
That has been made possible by a check dam, one of the one lakh-plus
check dams built across the state during Modi's tenure, with 9:1
contributions by the government and villagers. It now returns to the
farmers most of the rainwater that washed out to sea.
Migration back to the villages
There is someone else returning too: the migrant. "Many people are
coming back from cities because life is better here and I saw on TV
that there is a mandi [recession] in the cities," said 40-year-old
Tarsingh Bhai.
The interventions are showing results. Gujarat's agriculture sector
grew at 10 per cent over the past two years, compared to the national
average of three per cent. The total worth of farm products shot up
from Rs 9,000 crore two years ago to Rs 35,000 crore.
Twenty kilometres down, near Surendranagar, cotton fields open up on
both sides of the road, near a small industries enclave run by the
government. Noisy sweatshops lined along bumpy roads make nails and
wires out of steel industry scrap, and build machines that help strip
cotton balls.
A large number of small industries have shut down in the state as
elsewhere in the country, and many of Gujarat's 2.3 lakh units face a
crisis. Expatriate Gujaratis are devising a plan to help small
industries.
In a dimly lit office beyond a compound where hulky cotton stripping
machines are parked, there is an unlikely discovery â Mansukhbhai B.
Patel, 58, who invented them and holds Indian and US patents.
Patel is a Modi fan, the critical kind. "He is a good administrator,
though it is not as if everything is hunky-dory. We are concerned that
his support to big industry might squeeze us out â but maybe he will
find a way," he said, sipping tea. The cacophony of clanging steel and
the grating of metal filters into the room.
"He should not become Prime Minister. He should remain the Chief
Minister of Gujarat, otherwise he will have to worry about all of
India, and not focus on Gujarat," Patel said.
Back in Ahmedabad, in the Muslim hub of Jamalpur, RH Master, 61,
smiles as he talks about the days when Modi used a bicycle and loved
taking pictures on his Yashica 635 camera, just like him.
Master, who once sold milk, took to photography after flipping through
glossy magazines at his shop and gave up everything to become a
photographer who has won national and international awards. He is a
devout Muslim.
"I think he is a good administrator. He will make a great Prime
Minister," said Master. "But I do not think he will agree to it, he
will stay here as his heart is in Gujarat. And Gujarat needs Modi."
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Interesting to see Gujarati Muslim community are in praise of Modi. Slap on face of those Teesta, Arundhoti and their bogus friends in NRIs organization.
I believe former Air Chief Tipnis has joined BJP. Also didn't Preity Zienta endorse Modi for PM lately?