सुनो सुना रहा हूँ दोस्तो इस बार ‘आप’ की दुखद कहानी,
कुछ आपबीती, कुछ जगजाहिर सुनो तो जरा मेरी जुबानीI
अवसर था, देश जब आतुर था लिखे जाने को कितना सुन्दर
इतिहास,
लोभ-लाभ के चक्कर में लेकिन ‘आप’ बन गयी एक अनचाहा
परिहास I
Rise and fall of 'AAP'
Outlook magazine in its cover story of 12 March issue has dubbed AAP as ‘Arrogant
Aadmi Party’. Responding to it, a reader prefers to call it ‘Arrogant Arvind
Party’. Well, call it by any name, but politically, if there has been any event
in recent history that gave hope to the millions of ‘clean politics’ and then proved
such a disgusting let-down, it has been the birth of AAP in November 2012, its
rise and steep fall. Imagine those days when Anna Hazare launched his first nation-wide
agitation with the little known Arvind Kejriwal by his side spewing heat and
fire. Recall his loud and vehement utterances. His clarion call and a firm
promise to usher in a new era of corruption-free, transparent,
performance-oriented, clean, accountable, people-friendly governance devoted to
‘Gandhian’ values. Here at last is the saviour, the superman the country has
been hungering for to rid the nation of corruption-steeped political parties– the
Congress, the BJP, and the regional ones in the stranglehold of feudal lords.
That’s what we all thought. Sick of the prevailing stink and rot, the whole
nation was excited by the promise of a bright new dawn in the murky
landscape of Indian politics. I was no exception. AK became my hero. And I too
jumped into the fray, became his ardent follower and an AAP member. With a surge of enthusiasm I dashed off to
Kangra along with a couple of my equally enthusiastic colleagues to attend a regional
meeting and ventured to contribute my humble bit in letting the AAP wave sweep all
over my homeland too. But with disillusionment seeping in, wisely I retraced my steps and finally quit.
Recall
AK’s first stint as the CM of Delhi in December 2013. This coughing
‘muffler-man” was still my hero at the time. But lo, he was sitting in dharnas, sleeping on ground at public spaces and shouting invective at his opponents instead of burning midnight oil and expending his energies to put in place a radically new system of governance for Delhi. I began to
doubt my hero. And then after his party’s mind-boggling second win in February
2015 with 67 out of 70 seats in its kitty, and his new term, that huge edifice
of hope began to quickly erode and crumble. It didn’t take long to realize that he too
had packed the party with men and women with feet of clay and in no way
different or better than those that all other parties are peopled by. The kind
imbued with idealistic fervour, grand vision, sacrifice, self-less service and
moral values were nowhere to be seen. And as was but natural, one by one,
skeleton after skeleton in the cupboards of many of his team began tumbling
out. No wonder a good many of the lot were soon fighting court cases for alleged criminalities of various kinds. Instead of setting an example of austerity and
simple life, the AAP helped itself to hefty pay rise for its ministers and
MLAs, swanky bungalows and luxurious cars. Its soul-keepers and founding
fathers such as Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav had already been rudely
chucked out to pave way for life of power, luxury and splendour without any
voices of dissent putting a foul taste in the mouths of AK and his coterie. A
sad witness to all this drama unfolding before me, my disgust and
disillusionment with AAP and its leader had come full circle. I who clapped for
and cheered at every word from AK’s mouth now found the very sight of AAP's protagonists even hard to
bear. I am sure quite similar must have been the thoughts and feelings of many
of you as well. And you will agree that unless the AAP reappears in some new and noble avatar, it will remain a party just like any other and the posterity too will
have nothing charitable or kind to say about both the party and its leader.
Had
AAP been the AAP of aam aadmi’s dreams, had it stuck to its original idea of good,
clean politics that the country is
desperately in need of, it had a great chance
of winning the hearts and minds of people and winning many elections. But divorced from these ideals and indulging in nefarious games of
money and power play, it bungled and floundered and even lost Punjab where it
stood a very good chance. In Himachal, the arrogant AAP blundered again. Out of
the blue, it air-dropped a rank opportunist and a political renegade as its c-in-c
to the surprise and anger of sincere workers who had toiled to bring AAP to HP.
In
short: AAP came as Godsend, but it did nothing except pretend.
A great opportunity went abegging.
Sad, isn’t it?

A great opportunity went abegging.
Sad, isn’t it?

(All photos/images are from Outlook, 12 March issue)















