Arvind Kejriwal: The politician with a hole in his sweater
There it was: clean, white and defiant.
A circle of Arvind Kejriwal's shirt was poking from a hole in
the middle of his rumpled sweater. And below, his bare feet were clad
in well-worn sandals with a relaxed coating of dust.
But perhaps more significant than Mr Kejriwal's choice of
look for his BBC interview is that he will probably be quite happy for
us to point it out - unlike many smarter-looking politicians.
'Third class governance'
After his electoral breakthrough last year, dressing down is
now a poll-tested way of dressing up his Aam Aadmi or Common Man party's
anti-corruption campaign.
In the picture Mr Kejriwal seeks to paint, the
always-flawless tailoring of India's political and business elite
represents the corrupt old-order.
t was that order he was targeting in his interview, arguing that the
old established parties have in effect conspired with a handful of
Indian billionaires to create a new oligarchy.
So whether the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its leader
Narendra Modi or Rahul Gandhi's ruling Congress party win the spring
elections, "makes no difference".
Corruption was at the root of all India's problems he argued, dismissing suggestions it was only a minority urban concern.
It was why rural people struggled to find jobs and that "so many farmers are committing suicide"
Mr Kejriwal's sweater had a hole in the middle
He went further, saying that unless India tackles political corruption "the country will not survive".
Corrupt politicians "created the poison" behind India's frequent episodes of communal violence.
"Indians are first class people suffering from third class
governance," he said, saying only a minority could prosper in India.
"If you go to America or London, you will see Indians
shining," he said, which also sounded like a deliberate twist of the
BJP's 2004 "India Shining" campaign slogan. "My job is to change the
system so all of India can shine."
He claimed he had "substantially reduced" corruption during
his short tenure as Delhi chief minister, by encouraging people to use
their phones to record any official offering a bribe.
His plans for bringing change on a national scale are less
clear. Mr Kejriwal said he doesn't want to be prime minister, but again
declared himself "an anarchist" trying to "shake up the system."
Such remarks are bound to divide his many critics and supporters once more.
But regular salvos aimed at the AAP by Congress and the BJP
are a clear sign they're rattled by his political insurgency. "This is a
guerrilla force attacking two standing armies" says Professor Bina
Agarwal of Manchester University.
And the hole in Mr Kejriwal's sweater says this is a man determined to keep burrowing.
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