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Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. Image Credit: AFP

One of the most obscene moments after the death of the gang-rape victim in New Delhi was a tweet by Narendra Modi, the Chief Minister of the Indian state of Gujarat, offering regret and condolences to the dead woman’s family. Modi, who has quelled restive minorities by allowing attackers to subject women to unspeakable horrors, has done more than any man to numb his prudish country to sexual violence.

Yet, he was elected to a third term last month and is the presumptive front-runner of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the main Hindu opposition party, for prime minister in next year’s national elections. So long as Indians keep rewarding politicos such as Modi, the country’s collective outrage after the New Delhi case will not change the culture that makes such atrocities common in India.

The attack on the 23-year-old physiotherapy student was depraved. Five men and a teenager on a private bus are accused of kidnapping, beating, raping and violating her with an iron rod — and then dumping her and her semi-conscious male friend by a highway, where they also allegedly tried to run her over. Monstrous as this crime was, consider what happened in Gujarat in February 2002, a few months after Modi assumed office.

Organised bands of armed Hindus — some from groups tied to Modi’s party — fanned across the state seeking revenge against Muslims for allegedly burning a train full of Hindu pilgrims a few weeks earlier. The Hindu rioters systematically sought out and destroyed Muslim homes and businesses, killing more than 1,000 people. Muslim women were singled out. According to many Indian and foreign sources, including a Human Rights Watch account and a report by an international research team called ‘Threatened Existence: A Feminist Analysis of the Genocide in Gujarat,’ women were stripped, gang-raped, often publicly, and in almost all cases then burned or hacked to death. The reason the violence reached such extremes was that the state police stood back and did not intervene to stop the attacks by Hindu fanatics and even told victims that it could not protect them.

As if the bloodletting was not horrific enough, Modi subsequently dismantled the shelters constructed by private organisations for dispossessed Muslims, calling them “child-breeding centres”. Compared with the New Delhi rape, which has triggered a protest movement in India calling for the clinical castration and execution of the suspects, the Gujarat rapes and pogrom elicited barely a whimper.

Many Hindus either deny that the horror even occurred or, if they accept it, claim it was not as grisly as news accounts suggest. And if they believe the accounts, they say Muslims had it coming. Fewer than 100 out of the thousands accused — among them only one state minister and one BJP leader — were convicted and that was a decade later. Modi himself was exonerated. Whatever public disgust there was against him has dissipated, given the stellar economic growth that Gujarat has seen under his watch. Business leaders and corporations, from India and overseas, turn a blind eye to Modi’s role in allowing the bloodshed and praise his economic stewardship. His business backers have already managed to get the British government to reverse its long-standing ban on him and to give him a visa. Now they are trying to persuade the US government to follow suit.

What accounts for the wide gulf in the Indian public response to the single crime in New Delhi and the mass crimes in Gujarat? On a positive side, attitudes towards women have evolved considerably since the Gujarat atrocity 11 years ago. Indian women’s aspirations and opportunities have increased, especially in big cities, and they are demanding that the governing classes keep pace and create an environment in which they are free to move around safely. After the New Delhi attack, any politician or even religious guru — no matter how revered — who suggested that women need to circumscribe their lives and choices for their own protection was condemned and lampooned, something scarcely imaginable when I was growing up in New Delhi (in a Hindu household) in the 1970s. However, the darker reality is that the young woman’s rape and murder outraged the country’s Hindu urban middle-class because it was a random and senseless act that could have just as easily victimised their daughters. Not so with attacks on the Muslim women in Gujarat.

The premeditated and programmatic violence against them meant that the broader Hindu majority was insulated from it. If the New Delhi woman’s fate made every Indian feel more vulnerable, the attack on the Muslim women made Hindus feel more secure. There are other reasons for India’s apathy towards Modi’s misdeeds. India is a democracy and has its share of human rights activists and watchdog groups keeping an eye on government brutality.

Yet, the public at large has little appreciation of the dangers associated with overly muscular governments. Indians complain constantly about government dysfunction and corruption. Yet, they have little compunction about giving draconian powers to their rulers in the name of security. The upshot, tragically, is that Indians care less about state-fuelled rape than when perpetrated by individuals. The scale of the sexual violence in Gujarat was unprecedented in India.

However, smaller episodes are a matter of routine. The Indian army has been accused of using rape as a weapon to crush secessionist movements in Kashmir and Manipur. After one particularly heinous case eight years ago, Manipuri women stripped naked and stormed the Army headquarters with placards plaintively protesting: “Indian Army Rapes Us”.

Tolerating sexual violence for any purpose erodes the overall stigma against it, opening a moral space where hoodlums can run amok. The lack of national outrage against the mass rapes perpetrated under Modi reduces their true cruelty, breaking down the psychological walls that would at least prevent nonsociopaths from going on a rampage. Hindus who turn a blind eye to the rape of Muslim women cannot ultimately protect their own. How India can restore moral boundaries is a difficult issue, but it certainly will not be solved by electing Modi to a higher office — even if he were Adam Smith himself. Protesters should not just seek justice against the six accused in New Delhi. Modi, too, has much to atone.

— Washington Post

Shikha Dalmia is a contributor to Bloomberg View and a Detroit-based senior analyst at Reason Foundation.