Nitish promises clean water in fluoride-hit village

Haveli Kharagpur, June 6 — For most people in Bihar, Khaira never existed. Until fluorosis struck this village in Munger district in 1987.

Little has changed for some 5,000 inhabitants of impoverished Khaira, sited 200 km southeast of state capital Patna, since. Except, perhaps, for the number of people crippled – there’s at least one in every family – due to the intake of fluoride-contaminated water.

But on Saturday, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar vowed to make a difference by ensuring clean, piped drinking water for the villagers. Khaira, peopled by Dalits and those belonging to extremely backward classes, was one of Kumar’s stops during the fifth leg of his Vishwas Yatra.

He had conceived the yatra (march) to earn the confidence of the people. “The sight of such sufferings has deeply saddened me,” Kumar said as he walked to the red brick Buniyaadi School with a posse of officials.

The weather – it was hot and humid – didn’t slacken Kumar’s pace as he headed to a room where some 60 fluorosis-affected villagers had gathered to meet him. Only a couple of them could manage to stand straight.

Each of them had brought a rose, as if to thank the government for forgetting them. Kumar, touched by the gesture, was close to tears when the middle-aged Maheswar Prasad related his suffering.

“Prasad was fine two months ago. He suddenly fell ill, his body bloated like a balloon, and his legs caved in.

We petitioned the officials concerned seeking water purifiers, but in vain,” said fellow villager Dhirendra Kumar Sah. Sah’s 11-year-old daughter is also a victim of fluorosis.

He rued that the fluoride factor was preventing the youths of the village from getting married. “Matchmakers avoid our village like the plague,” he added.

The CM then surveyed a hand pump fitted with a filtration unit. He asked a local if the cylinder in the filtration unit was being replaced regularly.

A negative reply made him grill Public Health Engineering Department Principal Secretary Ravindra Pawar, who had accompanied him. Kumar subsequently directed officials to put up boards warning villagers not to drink contaminated water.

“Ensure that it is done,” he said before heading to a solar filtration plant

Bathani Tola massacre: Three sentenced to death, 20 get life term

Ara (Bihar), May 12 (ANI): A court here on Wednesday awarded death sentences to three persons and life imprisonment to over 20 others in connection with the infamous Bathani Tola massacre in Bhojpur District in 1996 in which 21 Dalits were killed.

Additional District and Sessions Judge A K Srivastava announced the quantum of punishment for the accused.

Earlier on May 5, Srivastava had convicted 23 accused persons and acquitted 30 others for want of evidence in connection with the carnage that took place under Sahar block of Bhojpur district on July 11, 1996 by suspected activists of Ranvir Sena, a private militia of land owners.

Around 70 Sena men had raided the village and killed 21 Dalits, mostly women and girls, including two babies in the age group of three to nine months. (ANI)

Pranab to talk with opponents of Women”s Reservation Bill

New Delhi, Mar 19 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is expected to hold talks with those opposing the Women”s Reservation Bill before the Central Government takes a final call on it.

Minority Affairs Minister Salman Khursid, however, said the government has no re-thinking on the Bill, which has got the nod of the Parliamentary Standing Committee.

Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad, Samajwadi Party (SP) supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav and Janata Dal-United (JD-U) chief Sharad Yadav are not in favour of the Bill, as they claim it does not protect the interest of minorities, Dalits and Muslims.

The Yadav trio wants a quota within this for the backward class and Muslim women.

History was created in the Rajya Sabha on March 9 when it voted by an overwhelming majority a Bill to reserve one-third of seats in Lok Sabha and state assemblies for women.

Fourteen years after the first attempt was made in the Lok Sabha and repeated failures subsequently, the Constitution Amendment Bill was adopted in the mandatory division with 186 members voting for it and one voting against.

In the 245-member House with an effective strength of 233, the bill required the backing of at least 155 members and the UPA had the clear support of 165 in the run up to the event.

The bill seeks to reserve for women 181 of the 543 seats in the Lok Sabha and 1,370 out of a total of 4,109 seats in the 28 State Assemblies. (ANI)

Raj Thackeray criticises Yadav trio over Women”s Reservation Bill

Mumbai, Mar 16 (ANI): Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) chief Raj Thackeray has criticized Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad Yadav, Samajwadi Party (SP) supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav and Janata Dal-United (JD-U) leader Sharad Yadav for their opposition to the Women”s Reservation Bill.

Thackeray said by opposing the Bill, these leaders have endangered Marathi pride as well by opposing the landmark legislation.

Taking a dig at the Yadav trio, Thackeray said they must learn how to respect women from the MNS or else they would be given a lesson on it.

Targeting Lalu Yadav, Thackeray said party tickets should not be given to wives and daughters of politicians.

“The MNS fully supports the Women”s Reservation Bill. But I have one request, that power should be exercised by the women themselves, not their husbands,” he added.

The Yadavs earlier said the Bill passed by the Rajya Sabha does not protect the interest of minorities, Dalits and Muslims, so they want a quota within this for the backward class and Muslim women.

History was created in the Rajya Sabha on March 9 when it voted by an overwhelming majority a Bill to reserve one-third of seats in Lok Sabha and Assemblies for women after government pushed ahead with it, ignoring possible threats to its stability and after eviction of troublesome MPs opposed to it.

Fourteen years after the first attempt was made in the Lok Sabha and repeated failures subsequently, the Constitution amendment bill was adopted in the mandatory division with 186 members voting for it and one voting against.

In the 245-member House with an effective strength of 233, the bill required the backing of at least 155 members and the UPA had the clear support of 165 in the run up to the event.

The bill seeks to reserve for women 181 of the 543 seats in the Lok Sabha and 1,370 out of a total of 4,109 seats in the 28 State Assemblies. (ANI)

BSP to Sonia Gandhi: Apologise to Mayawati in Parliament for Joshi slur

Lucknow, July 16 (ANI): The controversial arrest of Uttar Pradesh Congress unit chief Rita Bahuguna Joshi over her objectionable remarks on State Chief Minister Mayawati has taken the shape of a major political clash with the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP)-led State government here.

BSP State chief Satish Mishra on Thursday demanded that Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi apologise in the Lok Sabha for Joshi’s remarks against Mayawati.

Bahuguna’s house was set ablaze and some property at the premises was targeted by some unidentified hooligans here on Thursday.

The Congress party blamed BSP workers for the arson act.

Reacting to the incident, Congress party spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi said: “It’s a state-sponsored vandalism, hooliganism. We are certainly going to take a serious note of it and all possible legal recourse available to us.”

BSP leaders, however, claimed that Congress workers had set fire to Joshi’s house.

“Our workers did not torch Rita’s house. It was rather Congress workers who set it ablaze,” said Mishra.

State police later claimed to have detained four persons in connection with the incident.

Meanwhile, police prevented the burning of an effigy of Mayawati today. They also baton and cane-charged Congress workers and detained about a hundred of them while they staged a street demonstration against Congress leader Joshi’s arrest.

Police arrested Joshi on Thursday and a local court sent her to 14-day judicial remand for making remarks on Wednesday against the CM in an issue related to rape and murder of some Dalit girls in the UP.

The Samajwadi Party, the main opposition party in Uttar Pradesh State Assembly, blamed the police and offered the Congress party any proposal to carry out a joint protest against the state of affairs in Uttar Pradesh. They criticised the police for acting at the behest of State Government.

“Police are working on the directions of Mayawati Government,” said Akhilesh Yadav, Samajwadi Party’s U.P unit chief.

Bharatiya Janata Party leader Maneka Gandhi demanded the dismissal of the Uttar Pradesh government.

“Time has come for dismissal of the UP Government. In my constituency, about 50 political workers are detained every week. I have never seen a situation like this in India ever,” said Maneka Gandhi.

Joshi was arrested in Ghaziabad en route to New Delhi. She was charged under the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989, for allegedly making derogatory remarks about Mayawati.

Joshi, however, has denied having said anything to offend Mayawati or Dalits.

“It was at a meeting in Moradabad that I had simply sought to draw the people’s attention to the fact that Mayawati’s dole of Rs.25,000 to every Dalit rape victim was quite ironical as the state police chief was spending lakhs on the helicopter ride that he undertakes to hand over that paltry amount to the victim,” Joshi told media persons. (ANI)

Radio Pakistan’s Dalit propaganda exposed

Abohar, July 14(ANI): Radio Pakistan, in its recent Punjabi Durbar programme, has said Scheduled Castes (SCs) children are being denied admission in schools in India, but nothing can be further from the truth.

Shyam Lal Arora, the district president of the Recognised and Affiliated Schools Association, Punjab termed the report false and malicious propaganda.

“The Dalits are not being discriminated or ill treated here in India. The Dalit children have been given equal rights and status in every school, college, office and department. Pakistan is making such statements to create tension in this country,” said Arora.

“In villages also, Dalit children are being given admission without any discrimination. Pakistan’s statement that the Dalit community is being stopped from taking water from community taps in the country is completely wrong. Here, people of all religions and Dalits take water from the same tap,” Arora added.

Pakistan is trying to create a divide in this country by asserting that casteism is dominant in India.

Radio Pakistan’s propaganda on casteism in India stands exposed by the fact that since independence, the Indian Government has taken several initiatives to improve the socio-economic and literacy conditions of the less-privileged in the country.

For instance, the strategy of the Scheduled Castes Sub-Plan (SCSP), which was evolved in 1979, is one of the most important interventions through the planning process for social, economic and educational development of Scheduled Castes and for improvement in their working and living conditions.

As far as reservation of seats in educational institutes are concerned, the Central Government has reserved 27 per cent of higher education seats, and individual states have been given freedom to legislate further reservations.

In 2008, the Supreme Court had upheld the law that provides for 27 per cent reservation for Other Backward Castes (OBCs) in educational institutions supported by the Central Government, while ruling that the creamy layer among the OBCs should be excluded from the quota.

This shows that the caste system as it existed in the past has been formally abolished.

Radio Pakistan, therefore, needs to study the Indian Constitution before airing baseless allegations about India. (ANI)

Radio Pakistan now comes to the aid of Dalits in India

Abohar, July 6 (ANI): Radio Pakistan in its Punjabi Durbar programme has taken up the cause of Dalit community in India.

The Radio Pakistan has said that the Dalits in India do not have even basic rights.

The allegation has been rubbished by Babu Ram Chawla, General Secretary of All India Khatik Samaj and Mangat Ram Chayal, Vice Chairman of Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee (Schedule Caste department).

“The statements of Pakistan radio about schedule castes in India are illogical. For, people of schedule caste have gained all rights in India from Government and the society. They have been given reservation in jobs, educational institutions, and a number of them are Members of Parliament. So the statements by Pakistan Radio are malicious and we should not believe it,” said Babu Ram Chawla, General Secretary of All India Khatik Samaj.

“Pakistan wants to mislead us. There are special welfare programs in politics, administration for the people of schedule castes. The schedule castes have positioned themselves from Gram Panchayat to the designation of President, the highest position in India,” said Mangatram Chayal, Vice Chairman of the Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee, Supreme Court Department.

Broadcasters of Radio Pakistan will do their listeners a good service by first keeping themselves update about India through newspapers and other news sources.

As they must also remember that only recently all Member of Parliaments unanimously chose Meira Kumar as the head of Lok Sabha, who besides being a highly educated and experienced parliamentarian, comes from a schedule caste community. Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati is also one of the most popular personalities which inspires the Dalits across the country.

India has a history of individuals from schedule caste or Dalit community occupying highest positions in all walks of life without prejudice.

In jobs and education, all socially backward or schedule caste people today have reservations to encourage their participation in mainstream.

Moreover, the Right to Equality is a fundamental right enshrined in the Constitution of India. (ANI)

Andhra Pradesh Bank Association to approach state HRC on ‘Slapgate’

Hyderabad, July 2 (ANI): The Andhra Pradesh Bank Association on Thursday announced that it would approach the State Human Rights Commission (APHRC) to look into the “Slapgate” case involving Congress and Dalit Member of Parliament M. Jagannath.

It may be recalled that Jagannath, an MP representing the Congress party in the Nagarkurnool constituency of Andhra Pradesh’s Mahabubnagar District, slapped Ravindra Reddy, the manager of a local bank, for allegedly denying loans to Dalit applicants.

The President of the AP Bank Association, B Ravikant, confirmed the bank’s decision to approach the APHRC.

“We are approaching the Human Rights Commission in connection the incident of the MP slapping a bank emplyoee. We are also going to review decicions to not give loans to government sponsored schemes,” he told a television channel over the phone.

“We are going to ask the human rights commission to take strict action and also to protect the interests of employees,” he added.
Ravikant’s move comes even as M Jagannath has been summoned by the Congress leadership to New Delhi to explain the scandal that has left most in the nation shocked.

Jagannath was caught on camera slapping the bank manager. He will meet Law Minister and party general secretary in charge of affairs in Andhra Pradesh Veerappa Moily and party President Sonia Gandhi.

Jagannath has already met Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister YSR Reddy and explained his conduct.

Jagannath has denied slapping the manager. He claimed his hand only touched the cheek of Reddy, a manager of a AP Grameen Vikas bank branch, when he tried to put it round his shoulder.

Employees of grameen banks in the Congress-ruled state were up in arms and staged protests in several districts and stopped disbursal of loans under government schemes. The bank branch where the incident happened has threatened to go on strike from today.

The police has booked a case against the MP on charges of assault and use of criminal force to deter a public servant from discharge of his duty and said investigation was on. Dalits have filed a counter suit against the bank manager alleging violation of various acts that protect and safeguard the rights of the socially underprivileged.

Congress spokesman Manish Tiwari has described the incident as regrettable and unfortunate, and added that in-house mechanisms will be used to deal with the incident after a report is submitted. (ANI)

Money for statues should have been used for the poor: Congress

New Delhi, June 29 (ANI): The Congress party on Monday said the money used for installing statues of Dalit icons by Uttar Pradesh’s Chief Minister Mayawati could have been used for upliftment of the poor and backwards in the state.

Stating that the party was not against installing statues of national heroes, Congress said, but it was against “overdoing” it.

“We feel the money (spent on statues) could have been used for upliftment of the poor and backwards in the state,” Shakeel Ahmed, Congress spokesman said in the national capital.

“We are not against memorials for national heroes…But when it is overdone, it becomes problematic,” Ahmed added.

Meanwhile, reacting on Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav’s comments of bulldozing the statues if he could, Ahmed said this could be his (SP chief’s) thinking but certainly not that of the Congress party.

When asked Congress party’s reaction to Mayawati’s comments stating making Meira Kumar the Speaker of Lok Sabha would not help Dalits, the Congress spokeman said: “If someone cannot understand the importance of the post of the Speaker, what can we say?” (ANI)

Dalits in India find sponsors in Pakistan Radio

Abohar, May 29 (ANI): In its latest Punjabi Durbar programme the commentators have come up with the argument that Dalit leaders in India have been accepting the directives given to them from Brahmin leaders.

The programme has been attacking the integrity of Dalit leaders, who have been accused of forgetting the welfare of people of their community.

Radio Pakistan has alleged that Dalit leaders who have won elections in the past forgot to work for their community and accepting the diktats of ‘Brahmin’ leaders. Apparently the reference is directed to Mayawati, Chief Minister of U.P., who has an upper caste Advisor.

Villagers, living in the border areas, are amused.

Inderjit Singh Baserke, a Congress leader from Dalit community, however rubbishes such allegations. He points out that Dalits had reserved seats during the elections for Legislative Assembly and the Parliament. They have become MLAs and MPs. The children of Dalits have also got reservation in educational institutions and later in government jobs at all levels.

“I am proud of our Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh. The first Prime Minister of India Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru provided reservation to the children of Dalits and today they proudly hold posts of IAS officer, IPS, and PCS, oficers.

Many leaders of the Punjab state Congress party are Dalits. People of Dalit society are never ill-treated in Punjab. This is the land of our Gurus. Today, the Dalits enjoy an equal status with higher castes,” said Dalit leader Inderjit Singh Baserke, the general secretary of the Punjab Pradesh Congress, Punjab.

“Radio Pakistan wants to provoke the Dalits in India. We have to be careful,” Baserke added.

The Constitution of India offers to its all citizens six fundamental rights– Right to equality, right to freedom of speech and expression, right against exploitation, right to freedom of religion, cultural and educational rights and right to constitutional remedies.

The rights guaranteed under the Constitution of India are fundamental rights and are enforceable in a court of law.

But who can enlighten the broadcasters of the Punjabi Durbar programme of Pakistan radio, who are presently finding it difficult cover items relating to the activities of the Taliban in their programmes. They seem to think that talking about Dalits in India is the answer. (ANI)

Prakash Singh Badal asks people to be calm

Amritsar, May 27 (ANI): Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal has appealed to the people not to allow miscreants to disturb peace in the state.

“I appeal to the people of Punjab that these miscreants are enemies of the country as well as enemies of Punjab. After a lot of difficulty, peace and prosperity returned to Punjab and they want to disturb that. We should not let them fulfill their vested interests,” Badal said.

Punjab was engulfed in a spate of violent protests over the killing of a Sikh preacher in Austria.

Thousands of Dalits torched trains, cars and shops on Monday to protest against the murder of a leader of a religious sect in an attack on a temple in Vienna, prompting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to appeal for calm.

The preacher who died was from the Dera Sach Khand, which has a large Dalit following among lower caste Sikhs and Hindus in India.

At least 16 persons were hurt in the violence in Vienna on Sunday when six armed men attacked two preachers visiting from India during a temple ceremony.

Austrian police said they did not know yet about the motives for the attack.

Sikhism officially rejects caste but social hierarchies still prevail. Dera Sach Khand has gained many followers from the Dalit community in Punjab and is opposed by many mainstream Sikhs. (ANI)

Curfew relaxed briefly in violence-hit Punjab, Badal calls for all-party meet

Chandigarh, May 26 (ANI): Curfew was relaxed for a brief while in some parts of Punjab on Tuesday, though there were reports of sporadic violence.

On Tuesday, the atmosphere in the northern state was still tense, a day after two protestors were killed in large-scale violence and arson sparked by the killing of a leader of a Sikh sect in Vienna, Austria. Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal will preside over an all-party meeting that will take stock of the overall situation and make appropriate recommendations.

The state government had to call in the army in four cities — Phagwara, Hoshiarpur, Ludhiana and Jalandhar to bring the situation under control. No traffic is being allowed into Ludhiana till 2 p.m.

At least 45 persons including 20 policemen were injured as followers of the Dera Sachkhand Ballan Sikh sect and various Dalit organisations fought pitched battles with security personnel and indulged in vandalism.

Rail and road traffic were badly hit while trains were stranded in several stations in the state. Police said that in all there were 86 incidents of violence in Punjab.

The protesters torched four bogies of Jammu-Kanyakumari express at Jalandhar but the passengers left the train leaving behind their luggage’s to protect themselves from the violent mob.

On Monday night, an SAD municipal councillor killed a protestor allegedly in self-defence after being attacked in Jalandhar district where authorities relaxed curfew for two hours on Tuesday.

A mob allegedly attacked SAD councillor Balbir Singh Bittu and burnt his car. Bittu opened fire at the mob in which Vijay was killed.

Jalandhar is a stronghold of the Dera Sach Khand, a Sikh sect comprised of mainly Dalits who took to the streets in protest against the death of one of their gurus Sant Raman Nand during a clash between rival Sikh communities in a Vienna Gurudwara.

Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal said the situation was under control and claimed violent incidents was limited only to a few pockets in Jalandhar and its surrounding areas.

“The situation is normal, there is no violence at this moment and some incidents which took place today were limited to a few pockets, mostly in Jalandhar,” Badal and his deputy and son Sukhbir Badal, who is also the SAD president, said while condemning the Vienna incident.

Meanwhile, police in Vienna said investigations are still on. The Austrian Foreign Minister Michael Spindelegger said that he has assured the Indian Government that the culprits involved in the attack would be brought to book. (ANI)

Rahul says, Congress will always stand for ordinary person

Amritsar, May 11 (ANI): Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi on Monday said that his party would always stand for the ordinary man unlike the National Democratic Alliance, which ignored various sections of society, including the poor, the farmers and the Dalits during its tenure.

“When the Congress government came to power in 2004, Sonia Gandhi, Manmohan Singh and we all made just one promise that we will work for the ‘aam admi,’ farmers of Punjab, mazdoor (labourers), Dalit and it will be there government. We functioned as per our promise,” he said, slamming the NDA for “thinking” about the rich and upper classes.

Rahul said the opposition parties made a new promise daily. He ridiculed NDA’s slogan of ‘India shining’ during the Lok Sabha elections in 2004, by terming the English slogan intended for the privileged.

Gandhi lampooned the BJP leaders for telling the entire country that India was shining. “But they did not go to the houses of the poor, the farmers, the Dalit and other weaker sections. They just went to the houses of the rich. You (voters) then showed them the door,” Rahul said.

He claimed that the biggest achievement of the UPA in its five-year rule was employment guarantee scheme, providing for 100 days of assured employment during the year.

Rahul Gandhi said that the Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh was the “pride of Punjab and the country” who took the country forward in all spheres.

“Manmohan Singh is pride of Punjab and India,” said Rahul Gandhi while sharing a stage in any election rally for the first time with the prime minister Dr. Singh.

During his earlier visits to the state on 5th and 9th May, Rahul addressed election rallies at Barnala, Mohali, Ludhiana, Moga and Hoshiarpur. (ANI)

NHRC takes suo motu notice of Dalit discrimination in Madhya Pradesh

New Delhi, May 6 (ANI): The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has taken suo motu cognizance of a news report published in two parts in The Hindustan Times on May 5 and 6 under the title “Apartheid” alleging how dalit kids are being discriminated against in four districts – Jhabua, Sheopur, Katni and Ujjain of Madhya Pradesh.

The report has also alleged that health workers in these districts avoid Dalit hamlets and examine women without touching them.

The Commission in its proceeding said, the report, if true, raises serious issue of violation of human rights of Dalits and has issued a notice to the Chief Secretary of Madhya Pradesh seeking his comments on the report within four weeks.

The Commission is also deputing its investigation team to visit the places mentioned in the reports to conduct an on the spot inquiry. The team will submit its report to the Commission within four weeks. (ANI)

Radio Pakistan comes to the aid of Dalits in India

Abohar, April 28 (ANI): Instead of looking at its country’s depleting reputation in the world for being a haven for terrorists and the Taliban in Swat Valley, Radio Pakistan’s prime concern is the welfare of lower caste people in India.

In the latest Punjabi Durbar programme, Radio Pakistan has alleged that people belonging to the SC (Scheduled Caste) and ST (Scheduled Tribes) in India are subjected to inhuman treatment in India.

The programme has alleged that upper caste Brahmins don’t allow the lower castes to pray in temples or fetch water from their wells.

The allegations have been dismissed as baseless by Dr. Kuldeep Singh of Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP).

“Pakistan is trying to create divisions in the country by asserting that the concept of casteism overpowering India. As the district head of Bahujan Samaj Party I want to say that the system of casteism is the issue of the past. At present, in Bahujan Samaj Party people of different castes like Brahmins, Thakur, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Jatt Sikh to the people of lower castes like schedule castes and schedule tribes work together for the betterment and the progress of the country,” said Dr. Kuldeep Singh.

“I want to ask Pakistan about its system of casteism, where people are fighting one another. Such conditions will not be there in any other country of the world,” said Dr. Singh.
“At a time when India and Pakistan were united, the situation was very bad. Dr. Bhim Rao Ambedkar wrote our Constitution, which came into force on 26th January 1950. Since then the concept of casteism has been reduced to a great extent. He created a feeling of togetherness and brotherhood in the people of different castes and helped them in getting their rights.”

The broadcasters of Raido Pakistan need to study the Indian Constitution before airing baseless allegations about India. It must remember that that all Indians, irrespective of caste, creed, and religion have the Right to Equality.

In Uttar Pradesh, the people irrespective of their caste or creed or without any pressure of any community elected their leader Ms. Mayawati.

Moreover, people of the lower castes, today enjoy reservation in almost all government jobs and education institutes across the country. (ANI)

Mayawati is India’s anti-Obama: Newsweek

New York, April 20 (IANS) Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati features on the cover of Newsweek’s latest edition, with the US weekly drawing parallels between her and US President Barack Obama – in their rise to political heights though belonging to the bottom of the social ladder.

However, the weekly with the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief’s photo on its cover design, says Mayawati is a ‘bigger underdog’ and a ‘bigger threat’ to the ‘established order than Obama was’.

While commenting her ‘suspiciously ostentatious fortune’ and her ‘limited accomplishments’ on behalf of the socially oppressed Dalits, whose cause she champions, the weekly has said her possible bagging the prime ministership would ‘ironically end up bolstering the caste system that has kept them (Dalits) in chains’.

She would ‘likely be a highly divisive national leader – an anti-Obama – and not only domestically’.

Mayawati became the chief minister of India’s most populous state of Uttar Pradesh in 2007 on her own steam. She is now gunning for the country’s top job, or even as king maker, after the parliamentary elections in India get over in May.

‘Her supporters are trying to position her as India’s answer to America’s youthful black president,’ the weekly said.

It said the chances of her party actually winning a majority of the seats in parliament were unlikely. ‘But the likely outcome is that the two main parties, Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), will be forced to rely on coalitions. Mayawati’s followers hope she’ll emerge as kingmaker in the negotiations, with enough clout to grab the top job herself.’

‘There are indeed parallels between Mayawati and Obama. Like America’s president, Mayawati is young – just 53 in a country where most political leaders are in their 70s.

‘She is also an outsider who comes from a long-oppressed segment of society: the Dalits.

‘Mayawati is both a bigger underdog and a potentially bigger threat to the established order than Obama was. While he benefited from a first-class education, she grew up in a shantytown with eight brothers and sisters and attended poor state schools.

‘Obama enjoyed the backing of a long-established party, while Mayawati’s organization, the BSP, has been built up largely by Mayawati herself – and in a part of the world where women have made it to the pinnacle of power only as wives, widows or daughters of beloved male leaders.

‘But unlike Obama, Mayawati has built her power on demagogic class warfare. As her national ambitions have grown, she recently began reaching out to upper-caste voters – but by playing on their fears of the upwardly mobile middle castes, not by appealing to their better, caste-free angels.

‘She has accumulated a suspiciously ostentatious fortune, and is dogged by corruption charges. She is admired by many Dalits, but often more for her power and jewels than for her limited accomplishments on their behalf.

‘Her victory, if it comes, may be seen as a great leap forward for India’s oppressed – but, ironically, will end up bolstering the caste system that has kept them in chains.

‘Mayawati would likely be a highly divisive national leader – an anti-Obama – and not only domestically.’
Indo Asian News Service

SP, RJD, LJP confident of defeating NDA, Mayawati

Saifai (Uttar Pradesh), April 9 (ANI): The newly formed front of Samajwadi Party (SP), Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) kickstarted its election campaign in Saifai, the native village of SP supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav, on Thursday.

Addressing an election meeting in the village, RJD chief Lalu Prasad Yadav asserted that there can be no government at the Centre without the three parties.

Taking a dig at the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), Lalu said, “Its not in the destiny of Advani to become the Prime Minister of India. The three of us will wipe out NDA.”

Expressing confidence of winning in the upcoming elections, he said Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati will be defeated by the unity of the three parties that can be broken by none.

Lalu Yadav further praised Mulayam Singh Yadav for supporting United Progressive Alliance (UPA) at its hour of need.

Accusing Mayawati of not doing anything for the backward classes, LJP chief Ram Vilas Paswan said, “Some people act as if they were friends of Dalits but they are not,” he said. Our fight is for the rights of the poor, he added.

The leaders of the new alliance are slated to address poll rallies in Bareilly, Varanasi and Gorakhpur later in the day. (ANI)

The Khan of Nabarangpur

HE IS one of India’s longest serving MLAs – a rare Muslim who has never lost an election in a constituency where Muslims do not make up even 1 per cent of the voters. Meet Habibullah Khan, the 74-year-old MLA of Nabarangpur, a son of the soil and symbol of national unity in this remote tract of Orissa, 450 kilometres southwest of the state capital of Bhubaneswar.

Khan – who has won all eight Assembly elections since he first began contesting in 1971 – would have won again, his voters say. But Nabarangpur is now reserved for a tribal candidate, following the delimitation or redrawing of constituencies.

Khan is not unhappy. “I will now have more time to spend with my people,” he says, sitting in a plastic chair on the pavement outside the Congress office on the town’s main street.

Shoppers walking by stop to wish him good evening. He replies to each one, often addressing them by their first names.

“He has family-like relations with most people in this area,” says Krushno Mohan Choudhury of Anchalaguma village. “He is always around, be it a wedding or on on funeral.

” Nabarangpur is a predominantly tribal district with a substantive population of Dalits. Khan’s ability to be counted among them is evidence of the sense of unity and integration he has fostered.

Khan’s maternal grandfather, Tariq Hassan Khan, migrated from Afghanistan to settle down in Tara Gaon, 12 kilometres from Nabarangpur town, more than a century ago. As a child, studies did not interest Khan, and that was a big worry for his parents.

Making it worse, he did not want to work under any one. So Khan chose to make his own fortune.

After an apprenticeship with a Muslim merchant, he started a string of businesses, from selling groceries to running rice mills. Success in business propelled Khan into politics.

From heading a local cooperative society of grain stores, he emerged as a big sponsor for community functions. “In 1961, they pushed me to become sarpanch (village head),” Khan says of his villagers.

A year later, he was president of the zilla parishad (district administration) – a job that stayed with him until he contested and won his first Assembly election in 1971. The first two terms, he served as an Independent and Swantantra Party candidate respectively.

Ever since, he has been with the Congress. All these years, Khan says, Nabarangpur has never seen a religious riot.

“I have always done what my grandfather used to do: Never give them a pretext to fight,” he says. It was his grandfather who first extracted an oath from the villagers that they would stop slaughtering pigs – a delicacy for Dalits and tribals – and in return, Muslims in the area would stop slaughtering cows.

“Even today, no cow is slaughtered here, no pig is killed for a feast,” says Khan.

So many fronts, how many against poverty, terror, asks Sonia

Hyderabad, April 7 (IANS) Congress president Sonia Gandhi Tuesday said that floating a front has become a fashion and a new front is coming up every day.

Addressing three election meetings in Andhra Pradesh, she ridiculed the Third Front, the proposed Fourth Front and also the grand alliance of the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS) and the two Left parties in Andhra Pradesh.

‘These days it has become a fashion to launch a front. You have first front, second front, third front and fourth front. I want to say fifth and sixth front may also come up,’ she said while addressing a massive public rally at Vijayanagaram in north coastal Andhra.

‘It is easy to form a front but has anybody opened a front against poverty, unemployment, communalism and terrorism like the Congress did?’ she asked.

Seeking a clear mandate for the Congress party, she said fronts mean instability. ‘Fronts means instability, instable governments. Congress means stable, experienced and strong government,’ she told the rally near Bhongir in Nalgonda district.

‘It is ridiculous that a third front leader and TDP leader (Chandrababu Naidu) who calls himself secular was shoulder to shoulder with the BJP and NDA. It was during their rule that many corruption scandals and Gujarat riots took place. For him then everything was right. He did not see any wrong?’ she said, adding that if this was secularism, then she wanted to caution the people against it and the opportunist politics of the TDP.

‘I want to ask the TDP, the BJP, the second front, the third front and the fourth front what they have done for the poor, the farmers, Dalits and the minorities?’ she asked.

BJD Government has destroyed peace in Orissa: Rahul Gandhi

Kandhamal (Orissa), Apr 8 (ANI): Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi today said that the Naveen Patnaik-led Biju Janata Dal (BJD) Government has destroyed peace in Orissa.

“Clashes took place in the name of religion in Kandhamal and elsewhere as the non-Congress government in the state was responsible for the spread of disharmony and hatred,” he said at an election meeting in this district.

Rahul also said that when the Congress was in power, Orissa was an isle of peace.

Alleging that the present State Government had failed to ease the troubles of tribals, farmers and downtrodden, he said, “I have travelled many states, but Orissa happens to be the poorest of all. Dalits and tribals are the worst hit in this poverty stricken state.”

Terming the Congress as a ‘friend of tribals’, he said the Centre had ensured tribals land rights law.

“Though the UPA Government has pumped in huge funds, the state could not utilise it properly while it failed to properly implement welfare programmes including NREGS and the mid-day meal scheme,” he added.

Rahul asserted that the UPA had fulfilled all promises made before the2004 elections.

Kandhamal District witnessed the killing of several Christians and the burning of several houses and churches following the murder of VHP leader Laxmanananda Saraswati.

On August 25, a 29-year-old Catholic nun was allegedly raped and a priest assaulted at Baliguda during a shutdown in Orissa. (ANI)