NDA plays the language card

This appears to be a clever use of the language card that would do nothing for keeping the country united across several languages and cultures.

Update: 2017-06-24 18:56 GMT
However, differences cropped up between the couple in 2010 resulting in a divorce and later the man died (Representational Image)

The Union government’s move to issue passports in English and Hindi is yet another blatant political effort to consolidate NDA votes for the general elections 2019. It is aimed at the Hindi heartland of Uttar Pradesh, where the ruling dispensation would like to consolidate the gains it made in the 2017 Assembly elections, and Bihar where it was rejected at the state level the last time out. This appears to be a clever use of the language card that would do nothing for keeping the country united across several languages and cultures. While those who know how to read and write Hindi would be benefited by being able to follow all the instructions in the somewhat complicated process of applying for the basic international travel document, the move would be of little help to those who speak, say, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam or Kannada.

With the technology available today, it should be possible to imbed the basic information about the passport holder in all Indian languages plus German, French, Spanish and even more of the world’s 7,000 languages in a chip to be part of the document, besides storing the biometrics of the holder. There is no logic in tampering with the existing arrangements except to promote more of the nationalism that all Indians are expected to wear on their sleeves today and, unfortunately, according to the rulers of the day, nationalism is equated with Hindi alone. Those living south of the Vindhyas are being given another reason to suspect that the frenetic use now of a 2011 parliamentary panel recommendation to promote Hindi is just another sign of the intense political agenda being pursued.

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