Modi aims at history and Gandhis with world’s tallest statue

Friday, 1 November 2013 04:04 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: Narendra Modi is building the world’s tallest statue at a cost of almost $340 million in honour of one of the country’s founding fathers, a project he is using to undermine his chief rivals, the Gandhi-Nehru political dynasty. The statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, who was first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s deputy and his interior minister but often at odds with him, is to be built on a river island in Gujarat, the home state of both Patel and Modi. Modi, who rules Gujarat as chief minister and is the leading opposition candidate for prime minister in general elections due next year, is to inaugurate the construction of the statue on Thursday, the 138th birth anniversary of Patel. “Every Indian regrets Sardar Patel did not become the first prime minister. Had he been the first Prime Minister, the country’s fate and face would have been completely different,” Modi said on Tuesday at a public function. The statue, twice the size of the Statue of Liberty, is seen as a not-so-subtle bid by Modi and his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to appropriate an independence-era hero associated with the ruling Congress party that has largely been run by the Nehru-Gandhi family. Nehru, his daughter, Indira Gandhi, and grandson, Rajiv Gandhi, were prime ministers and the family has ruled for more than half of India’s 66 years as an independent nation. Rajiv’s widow, Sonia Gandhi, is the current leader of the Congress and Rahul Gandhi, her son and Nehru’s great-grandson, is leading the party’s campaign to take on Modi at the general elections, due to be held before May. Congress party Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who was with Modi at the public function, said: “I am proud and happy that I belong to a political party to which Sardar Patel was attached. Sardar Patel was totally secular, and believed in the unity of India.” The 20.63 billion rupee cost of the 182-metre iron and bronze statue has been widely criticised as being unnecessary in a nation where one-third of the 1.2 billion people live in poverty. It is to be financed by the Gujarat government and public donations. “We’re turning the whole of India into a necropolis,” said Mohan Guruswamy of the Delhi-based think tank the Centre for Policy Alternatives. A Gujarat government official involved in the project said it would be partially funded by small contributions with the Gujarat government making up the difference. He denied it was a waste of funds, calling it ‘icon-based’ development that would attract tourism.

COMMENTS