Showing posts with label Gaikwad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaikwad. Show all posts

Monday, 27 March 2017

Gaikwad-Air India episode shows that netas who assault public servants do so out of a sense of entitlement

Member of Parliament Ravindra Gaikwad’s barbaric assault of an Air India staffer should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with his party, the Shiv Sena. The party rose to prominence in Mumbai in the 1960s by assaulting people its founder, the late Bal Thackeray, characterised as outsiders taking jobs away from the Marathi manoos. For decades, Sainiks took the law into their own hands with impunity, beating up people, vandalising their property, even digging up the pitch at Mumbai’s Wankhede stadium because Thackeray had decreed that the Pakistan cricket team should not play there. Given that the Sena has been getting away with, and even profiting from, such behaviour, it’s not surprising that Gaikwad was unrepentant, even boasting that he hit the AI employee 25 times with his footwear. But there is no way such behaviour can be justified whatever the provocation. And what was his complaint? He didn’t get to travel business class on an all-economy flight.

This sense of entitlement is, however, not confined to the Shiv Sena but is rampant across party lines among people who call themselves public servants. A couple of days after Gaikwad’s assault came the news that a former Congress MP abused a police officer in Hyderabad because he wasn’t allowed to speak to the media at a point reserved for sitting MPs and MLAs. Misuse and abuse of their powers by elected representatives has reached epidemic proportions across the country, the euphemism for it is VIP culture. We’ve become inured to images of people carrying the footwear of their leaders or to goons pushing people around in the name of ensuring respect to self-styled leaders. Government employees are the most vulnerable – from across the country come reports of so-called leaders barging into offices to abuse and slap officials purportedly for not doing their duty. More often it’s for actually having done their duty.View more:-Bulk Sms Service provider

Source:-Hindustantimes