Why Infosys is latest RSS target



The (RSS) directly targeted India’s IT pioneer and major through its in-house Hindi mouthpiece, “Panchajanya”, demanding accountability for the glitches that cropped up in the new income tax filing portal developed by Infosys, days after the company’s CEO, Salil Parekh was summoned by the finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman and given a deadline until September 15 to reset the software.


However, Panchajanya’s diatribe against acquired an ideological dimension after the magazine in its cover story “Saakh aur Aaghaat” (Reputation and Harm) accused the company of “destabilising” the Indian economy and operating in cahoots with the “tukde, tukde gang”, a phrase used to defame Naxals, Leftists and Jammu and Kashmir separatists in the past. The basis for the allegations rested, not on any evidence, but on two queries and circumstances that the article flagged: would have provided such “shoddy service” to its overseas clients? Second, the company “helped” the “tukde, tukde gang”, a term overarching enough to insinuate Infosys’s support to establishment-unfriendly portals and its co-founder, Nandan Nilekani having contested the 2014 elections from Bengaluru South as a candidate. However, Nilekani is hardly persona non grata with the Narendra Modi regime. Not only did the Modi government embrace his Aadhar concept and programme after initial reservations and a few amendments, in July this year, Nilekani was made a member of an official panel to advice the Centre on measures needed to design and accelerate the adoption of Open Network for Digital Commerce, although the notion of digital commerce is red rag to the RSS’s economic front, the Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM).





The singling out of Infosys by name without evidence typifies the hit-and-run tactics used by the RSS and its affiliates in the past but those principally claimed prominent political victims. This is the first time that a corporate major has become a likely sufferer of the manoeuvre.


The attack on Infosys came days after Piyush Goyal, the commerce minister, assailed industry for seeking out “foreigners” as business cohorts and for partnering “falana, dhimkana” (anyone and everyone). Goyal, who is a Mumbai boy, was the BJP’s treasurer for years like his late father, Ved Prakash Goyal and no stranger to the Bombay and Bangalore Clubs, hit out against the Tatas for allegedly opposing some clauses of the proposed Consumer Protection (e-commerce) rules, 2020 which he wanted to enforce. However, his remarks were made at a closed door function hosted by the CII, that surfaced in a leaked audio tape and not stated publicly like “Panchajanya” did.


While Modi’s first term saw little pro-active interventions by the Sangh’s economic and labour fronts, notably the SJM and the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh, and the Sangh-patronised Confederation of All India Traders or CAIT, barring an agitation that ended up putting the amendments in the Land Acquisition Act, in deep freeze, in his second tenure, these outfits are claiming credit for stalling policies and decisions. For instance, the CAIT campaigned against Amazon and Flipkart for “imperilling” the survival of India’s small and medium traders by “colluding with multinational giants to plunder our retail market” and lauded Goyal for “showing” the Tatas their place.


The Centre and the did not react to Goyal’s outburst or the tirade against Infosys except for Sangh sources maintaining that “national interest” was supreme in both cases and “non-negotiable”. The Centre’s decision to not join the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership or RCEP was welcomed by the SJM as another example of “upholding national interest” despite pressure.


While on August 12 PM Modi implored the corporate sector to take advantage of a raft of “reforms” his government introduced, notably discarding the 2012 retrospective tax amendments and correctives to decriminalise economic offences and scale up investments, it remains to be seen if the recent interventions from within the and the Sangh will impede his attempts to pull off a balancing act.


Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the BJP’s other PM, managed to keep the swadeshi lobbyists at bay, except in 2000 when his government was forced to “shelve” the Sankhya Vahini project that would have set up a high speed data network. The RSS, then headed by the swadeshi-wedded KS Sudarshan and backed by Dattopant Thenagdi, the BMS founder whose name still inspired reverence in the RSS and cadre, raised the issue of “security threats” once it was known that Raj Reddy, a US-based computer scientist, was the brain behind Sankhya Vahini. Thengadi dissed the endeavour as a “fraud on the nation” and nothing was heard of Reddy or his “brain-child” again.


Vajpayee paid a price for being confrontational with the RSS and its economic fronts on other occasions. His finance minister Yashwant Sinha was abused publicly while Vajpayee was lampooned in an SJM in-house magazine. However, the BJP rose to defend its PM in a signed statement against Thengadi. That statement was signed by Narendra Modi, then a general secretary.

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