The Rediff Interview/Arun Gawli
'I believe in some Gandhian principles. Violence and non-violence have their own place in society. It all depends on the situation'
If the Congress has Dawood Ibrahim with them, we
have Arun Gawli' roared Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray at a public meeting before the 1995 Maharashtra assembly election.
Just two years later, ' amchi (our)' Gawli has turned
the tables on the Sena, emerging as its rival in Bombay
despite the fact that his party, the Akhil Bharatiya Sena, did
not win a single seat in the municipal election. Its union,
the Akhil Bharatiya Kamgar Sena, too is swiftly spreading
its tentacles in the city.
Acquitted of most of the charges against him, the gangster is,
to a large extent, a free man. Yet, he rarely ventures out of his fortress,
the infamous Dagdi Chawl in central Bombay, and is guarded
at all times by more than a hundred people.
Syed Firdaus Ashraf
had to pass a metal detector and three security checks before he could
encounter Gawli. Excerpts from the interview:
The Akhil Bharatiya Sena is just about a year old.
What makes you feel that it is already a threat to
the Sena?
The Sena did not do anything for its workers after it
came to power. There are people there who have worked
for the party for the last 20 years, and yet no one has
bothered to take care of them. Even the Sena union, the
Bharatiya Kamgar Sena, is not doing anything for its workers.
The Sena did not even keep the promises it made to the
people in rural Maharashtra. The people have realised that
they are not going to get any kind of help from the Shiv
Sena; this is why they are supporting us today.
How successful are your schemes for the
unemployed youth?
This innovative idea belongs to our party. And I hope it
continues to do well. In the last four months, we have given
jobs to 700 to 800 people.
Why did you start taking over the unions
only after the death of trade union leader Dr Datta
Samant? Why are the workers rejecting the traditional
unions in your favour?
You see, the living standard of the labourers is the same as
it was, say, five years ago. The union leaders only gave
them false promises. The workers feel I can rectify that
error. That is why they are supporting me.
How is your union different from the others?
When the workers come to me, I want to know on what
basis they have approached me. Why do they want to join
my union? It is only when I see that 60 per cent of the work
force in a factory is with us, that we allow them to to join
our union.
Do you think the workers's problems have increased after
the liberalisation of the economy?
We believe the rights of a labourer should not be
compromised. But we also say that the employer has the
right to set matters straight in his company and the workers
should co-operate with him.
In the late 1960s, the Congress used the Shiv Sena
to eliminate Communists from Maharashtra. Today, they are
using you to eliminate the Sena.
I do not accept this allegation. God brought me into this
profession. There is no brain behind this party. It is a wave
which has brought me here. The Congress itself is not
united. It has two groups -- one of which quietly supports
the government.
All over Maharashtra, people are upset with the BJP-Sena
government. And the government thinks there is no one
who will take them to task about their misdoings. That no
one will oppose them. The people support me because
I raise my voice on their behalf.
Why did you enter politics?
It was what the public demanded. When I was in jail, a lot
of people approached me and asked me to start my own
party. Many of my supporters in Lal Baug and Dharavi made
me their leader even when I was in jail. I had no choice but
to bow to their desire.
Maharashtra's Deputy Chief Minister Gopinath
Munde, told Rediff On The NeT
that you continue to be involved with the
underworld even today.
Do you expect him to praise me, now that I am his opponent?
He said your party is funded by the underworld...
These kind of statements only reflect the irresponsibility of his
government.
It is alleged that your foray into politics is a front for
your criminal activities.
When has the law ever let go of a criminal, whether in politics,
business or the underworld? Look at Laloo's fate today. Look at
Narasimha Rao and Jayalalitha. If you commit a crime, the law
will discover it sooner or later.
Why should I join politics to hide my criminal face? After all,
the Indian judicial judicial system has given me a second
chance. Do you think I would waste it? If I had to run a gang,
why should I sit here in Dagdi Chawl. The journalists and the
intellectuals are not ******** (expletive deleted). I cannot fool the
people.
That is not the issue. I would like to how your party is funded.
Our party exists because of the people. And it is the people
who are my money and muscle power.
Where does your party get the money it needs?
Who will give us funds? Builders and industrialists only fund
people who are in power. Today, our party is not in a position
to return favours, so why will anyone give us money? Probably,
everyone feels that we are of no use to them as we are not
in power. People who give funds to any party are involved in
black marketeering. And these are the people who continue
to benefit when such governments come to power.
So where do you get the money from?
We have all kinds of people -- rich, middle class and poor -- in
our party. These people donate the money, according to their
capacity, to keep the party going. Our party has hardly any
expenses. We do not have annual celebrations, unlike the
Congress which is holding its plenary session in Calcutta.
(laughs)
Today, you are referred to a gangster-turned-
politician...
I began doing social work only to bring succour to those who
suffered the atrocities of that underworld don, Dawood
Ibrahim. The police were the ones who branded me a
gangster. I've never said that I lead the 'Gawli gang'; it is the
police who say that. The people on the street do not call me
a gangster; only the police and the press do so.
At one time, they called Dagdi Chawl a deadly place. Today,
the situation is different. Today, people from all over
Maharashtra come to Dagdi Chawl without fear. If I were still
in jail, everyone would have still feared the name of Dagdi
Chawl.
You must understand that many people are compelled
to become gangsters because of circumstances beyond
their control. The Constitution of India does not recognise
a gang as a legal entity. The words 'gang' and 'gangster' have
been coined by the police.
Former underworld gangster Haji Mastan refused
to be called a gangster unless that charge was proven
against him in court. Do you agree with his view?
I do. How can you call me a gangster until
you prove that charge against me in court? I don't even
have a gang, so why do you call me a gangster?
Why did you become a gangster?
I did not become a gangster; I only stood against Dawood
when he was involved in the narcotics trade. As a result, my
brother and a reporter from the weekly magazine,
Khatarnak, were killed by his men. And the police
labelled me a gangster. Till date, I have not committed any
crime. Yet, the police framed wrong charges against me
under TADA.
Where did you work earlier?
I worked in Godrej for some months before I joined Crompton.
After that, I became a social worker and the police termed me as a
gangster.
Earlier, Bal Thackeray used to say that if the Congress
had Dawood Ibrahim, he had Arun Gawli. Why did you
distance yourself from the Sena?
Balasaheb made this statement during the
elections in Maharashtra. He knew it would get him votes.
I came to know about this statement when I was in jail.
As a result of his statement, the government shifted me
to an aanda (egg) cell, where prisoners are
kept isolated from others. That started affecting me
mentally.
Have you ever met him. Or telephoned him?
No, never.
Have you met any of the Sena leaders?
Yes, people like Mohan Rawle know me since they have been
in politics for a long time.
The ABS did not win a single seat in the Bombay
municipal election despite contesting in 40 constituencies.
First, we were a new party. Second, I was not completely
involved in the ABS; I supported the party but I used to
function from outside. Third, the Shiv Sainiks met me very
often. Fourth, they arrested me under the National Securities
Act. The Sena played a clever game -- their MP, Mohan
Rawle, went on a fast, demanding that I be released. As a
result, the people thought that I was backing the Sena. They
spread rumours that bhai (brother) said to
vote for the Sena.
Is the government implicating you in false
cases and harassing your workers?
They are trying to charge me with false cases. However,
thanks to the courts, I am free. The police are harassing my
family and party workers. They are even harassing
the fathers, mothers and relatives of my party workers. They
say they will continue to interrogate them as long as their
son is part of the ABS.
The only way to escape this
harassment is to resign from the ABS. I have told my people
that they can resign from the ABS by stating police
harassment as a cause.
Will the economic differences in Bombay lead
to a class war between the haves and the have-nots?
If the income difference continues to be large, it might happen in Bombay. The rich must realise that
they can live peacefully only if the poor are happy. Otherwise,
the poor people will loot them.
Do you think you will be a force to contend with
in the coming elections?
I have a good amount of support. But I am not overconfident.
You have taken to wearing the Gandhi topi
(cap) these days. Do you believe in his ideals of non-violence?
The Gandhi topi is a necessity in politics. I wear
it because I do puja (worship) regularly. And I do
believe in some Gandhian principles. Violence and
non-violence have their own place in society. It all depends
on the situation.
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A new Sena emerges to challenge the old
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