Editorial:-
Electoral democracy is now 40 years old in Sikkim. Poll
violence, at least of the viciousness now on ugly display, is however of much
more recent make. Admittedly, Sikkim is not unknown to political violence and
has seen its share of it in the past, but the campaigning this time appears
even more violent, perhaps because it has taken spite and dislike to a whole
new level and also because instigation appears to be proving more effective
this time around. Needless to add, this is serving no one’s interest and the
only people who will emerge smiling from this muddle will be the agent
provocateurs. One can understand differences of opinion and ideological
conflicts, but nothing, not even provocation, can justify violence. But it is
increasingly being resorted to even in Sikkim now and appears to be spiking as
the day of voting nears. This surge in violence at this time is clearly from a
sense of righteousness which the two sides engaged in the slugging have
appropriated. Both sides – SDF and SKM – appear convinced of their own virtue
and have demonized the other. Carrying such a mindset in the politically
charged environment of the present leads to paranoia and the two sides start
patrolling their turfs as vigilante groups. The moment they spy supporters from
the other side, they are convinced that some sinister scheme is afoot and take
it upon themselves to take action. This is clearly what has been happening and
why there have been such frequent collapses into violence. Not every group of
party supporters is looking for a fight, not every bundle of cash in someone’s
pocket is there to buy votes and not every appeal for peace is a call to ignore
code violations. But too many are seeing it as such. A week down the line the
shortsighted responses and the impropriety of several actions will become
obvious, but it would have been too late even by the time you are reading this
because too much violence has been allowed to transpire already. By the time
this day ends, the votes would have been cast and sealed and there will be no
more rewards for violence. At this juncture, that can be the only hope we sign
off with – a hope that better sense prevails through voting day so that the
electorate is not scared off voting; a hope that the police do their job and
reassure people and keep them safe; a hope that the agent provocateurs take a
day off; a hope that people get to vote without worrying about walking into
fighting mobs; a hope that people give a clear verdict; a hope that their
verdict is respected; a hope that people are respected and spared the violence…
Too much to hope for? We will know by later this evening.
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