Gujarat is too powerful for Delhi to mess with. Gujarati people, the state 
government and the NRIs investing in Gujarat sing the same tune - Help the 
economy prosper and everyone gets benefit from it.
I can bet Delhi will have to retract. Delhi and the Congress bigwigs tried to 
remove Modi before but didn't succeed. I wish Assam could face upto Delhi the 
same way.
Dilip Deka

From: mc mahant <mikemah...@hotmail.com>
To: assam assamnet <assam@assamnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2011 9:38 PM
Subject: Re: [Assam] Off With MODI's head


Off with his head  
  
    
    
      
        
          Tavleen Singh 

Posted: Mar 20, 2011 

            

                  Last week, when it was announced that there were 
plans afoot to set income tax sleuths on to those who invest in Gujarat,
my first reaction was disbelief. Surely not, I thought, not when 
foreign investors are fleeing India in droves, not when the Reserve Bank
has itself pointed out ominously that foreign direct investment in 
India has dropped by nearly 40 per cent in recent months. Why would a 
prime minister whose expertise lies in the field of economics allow such
insanity to go ahead? 




The reasons could most certainly not be economic, so I started searching
for political reasons and realisation quickly dawned. Narendra Modi has
long been seen by political pundits in Delhi, especially those of 
Congress persuasion, as the only man who could in 2014 challenge their 
glamorous young prince and so he must be destroyed. Besides he has been 
flying too high for his own good, has he not? Always holding those 
conventions to boast about ‘vibrant’ Gujarat and always making jokes 
about the Congress Party that the silly old ‘aam aadmi’ laughs his head 
off at without noticing that they are laughing on the same side as a 
merchant of death, a ‘maut ka saudagar’. Remember when the financial 
scandals started falling out of the central government’s cupboard at so 
alarming a rate and how he made that speech in which he said ‘munni 
badnaam hui’. How dare he? Who did he mean? The Congress Party or she 
who leads it? So off with his head. 





Not easily done politically because somehow he has managed, wretched 
man, to keep winning elections (with even Muslims voting for him), so 
someone in Delhi came up with the cunning plan to destroy him 
economically. Ordering income tax raids on political opponents is an old
Congress practice that was used recklessly and with powerful effect by 
first 




Mrs Gandhi during the Emergency and then again by V P Singh when he was 
Rajiv’s finance minister. He went too far, though, because he started to
raid Rajiv’s friends and so he had to go. But to get back to Gujarat. 
Under that ‘maut ka saudagar’, its economy has climbed to dizzying 
heights. Even a casual visitor can see the speed at which roads get 
built, the availability of electricity in remote villages, the check 
dams that help irrigate areas that have never seen irrigation, the 
primary health centres that actually work. Investors see much more. They
see an administration that is less corrupt than most and a chief 
minister who fulfills his promises. If he tells you that he will make 
land available to you in a week, he ensures that this happens, and if he
promises a single window to clear your projects, he delivers. 




These are not things that Congress chief ministers can do because their 
primary concern is to ensure that the ‘high command’ is kept happy by 
regular and large infusions into the coffers of the party. They can get 
away with no governance at all as long as they do this. Then they have 
to ensure that they pay regular obeisance to the party’s ruling Dynasty 
and by the time all this is over, there is little time for doing 
anything else. So the best governed states in India are those that are 
not run by Congress chief ministers and the only way to keep them in 
check is to curb them in every possible way. If it is income tax raids 
in Gujarat, it is unwieldy schemes like the NREGA in Bihar. You see when
the central government puts in place a scheme like this then the state 
government loses some of its own control over funds and welfare 
policies. They regularly complain about this but their complaints fall 
on deaf ears because this is an area in which Sonia Gandhi and her 
cabinet, the National Advisory Council, are personally interested. 




The end result is that India, so glittering, so full of allure only six 
months ago, is now beginning to look like it did before economic 
liberalisation. It is beginning to look like a dangerous country to 
invest in and in this bleak scenario there is Gujarat that has so far 
continued to shine like a beacon where foreign and Indian investors are 
concerned. This cannot be allowed to happen because it makes the rest of
India look even worse than it already does. Besides, we all know that 
Narendra Modi is an evil man, a merchant of death, so who cares if all 
his efforts to make Gujarat rich and prosperous are endangered by 
famously corrupt income tax inspectors. Of course, there is the small 
problem that the people of Gujarat may suffer as well but since they 
have been regularly rejecting Congress at election time who cares about 
them. Off with their heads as well.                          
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