Reference Text
Time Left10:00
It
has
been
said
that
India
has
moved
from
British
Raj
to
Billionaire
Raj.
India
has
119
dollar
billionaires,
behind
only
the
US
and
China.
At
the
same
time,
according
to
the
World
Inequality
Report,
22
per
cent
of
India's
national
income
is
cornered
by
the
top
one
per
cent.
Inequalities
have
sharpened
over
the
years.
Such
disparities
always
have
seeds
of
discontent,
which
have
the
potential
to
explode
into
a
rebellion.
It
is
also
a
fact
that
on
corruption,
according
to
Transparency
International,
we
have
slipped
by
two
positions.
Corruption
is
at
the
root
of
several
factors
which
cause
popular
dissatisfaction.
Agrarian
unrest
continues
to
cause
serious
concern.
We
saw
in
the
month
of
March
this
year,
the
kisan
long
march
from
Nashik
to
Mumbai.
There
are
also
reports
that
the
Maoists
have
made
a
dent
in
the
Northeast
and
that
they
are
active
at
the
tri-junction
of
Kerala,
Karnataka
and
Tamil
Nadu.
All
these
are
dangerous
portents.
The
government
of
India
has
two
options
before
it.
One,
that
it
goes
ahead
and
crushes
the
Maoist
movement.
The
possibility,
in
that
case,
is
that
the
movement
would
resurrect
again,
maybe
in
a
new
avtar,
which
could
be
even
more
lethal
and
devastating
than
what
we
have
seen
so
far.
The
other
option
is
to
offer
the
olive
branch
to
the
Maoist
leaders
and
carry
out
sincere
measures
to
redress
grievances,
particularly
those
relating
to
tribals.
Any
offer
of
peace
from
a
position
of
strength
is
always
credible
and
has
greater
chance
of
success.
Perhaps
the
present
situation
offers
an
ideal
opportunity
to
solve
the
problem
and
save
the
future
generations
from
the
anger
and
frustrations
of
a
disgruntled
and
disaffected
group
of
people.
The
government
will,
of
course,
have
to
be
careful
that
the
Maoists
do
not
use
the
peace
period
to
gain
time
and
regroup
their
forces.
It
has
been
said
that
India
has
moved
from
British
Raj
to
Billionaire
Raj.
India
has
119
dollar
billionaires,
behind
only
the
US
and
China.
At
the
same
time,
according
to
the
World
Inequality
Report,
22
per
cent
of
India's
national
income
is
cornered
by
the
top
one
per
cent.
Inequalities
have
sharpened
over
the
years.
Such
disparities
always
have
seeds
of
discontent,
which
have
the
potential
to
explode
into
a
rebellion.
It
is
also
a
fact
that
on
corruption,
according
to
Transparency
International,
we
have
slipped
by
two
positions.
Corruption
is
at
the
root
of
several
factors
which
cause
popular
dissatisfaction.
Agrarian
unrest
continues
to
cause
serious
concern.
We
saw
in
the
month
of
March
this
year,
the
kisan
long
march
from
Nashik
to
Mumbai.
There
are
also
reports
that
the
Maoists
have
made
a
dent
in
the
Northeast
and