Centre to crack down on Karnataka mining mafia: Handique

With the Karnataka government rejecting suggestions for a CBI probe, the Union Mines Ministry is pursuing other moves to crack down on the mining mafia in the state.

In the face of the Karnataka government’s resistance to a CBI probe, the matter was referred to the Cabinet and the issue was discussed in the Prime Minister’s office, Mines Minister B K Handique said. One of his concerns was whether any money from illegal mining was going to terrorists and the issue was discussed at the PMO.

Asserting that the “crackdown” on illegal mining was on the top of his agenda, Handique said that at present there were not enough legal provisions for central intervention and he would make attempts to incorporate provisions for this in the proposed Mining Act.

“There were discussions at the PMO level (on illegal mining). It would be tracked down. If money goes to terrorists, then licenses will be cancelled. It is a big thing. With NIA (National Investigation Agency) now, things are moving,” he said.

“We thought that CBI will be the right approach. But we can’t enforce it. We have given it to Cabinet now. We have asked them (their help) for investigation,” he said.

Asked to elaborate, he said that there was a provision in the law governing NIA and the Home Ministry may be on the path of tracking where the money was going. “They have been consulting us also on this,” he added.

Handique said the problem of not having adequate provisions in the law now was also discussed with Law Minister Veerappa Moily. “With Moily, we have discussed. We have discussed this with Chidambaram also. He had organised a meeting.”

Handique’s insistence on a probe and action in Karnataka comes against the backdrop of allegations of illegal mining by the Reddy brothers, who are ministers in the Karnataka government.

The current moves come at a time when Karnataka Governor and former Union Law Minister H S Bharadwaj has decided to refer to the Election Commission a complaint seeking disqualification of three ministers, including G Janardhana Reddy and his brother and Revenue Minister G Karunakara Reddy, from the state assembly.

Hitting out at the state government, Handique said, “Illegal mining is a dent on the industry… They (Karnataka government) don’t give (permission for CBI probe). They say without CBI enquiry we can control. We (Centre) cannot take any action. It is a criminal act.”

Admitting that he faced severe political pressure in his crusade against illegal mining, Handique said, “Many MPs have come to me…. (it is a) sensitive area, no doubt about it.”

He said the proposed legislation would ensure that anybody can file a case against illegal mining, contrary to the provisions in the existing MMDR Act, under which only state government officials have the powers.

Karnataka is one of the mineral rich states in India with about 11 percent f the country’s hematite iron ore reserves. It has over 9,000 million tonnes of iron ore resources concentrated in the Bellary-Hospet area, while the rest is found in the Chitradurga, Bagalkot and Tumkur districts.

Bihar told to speed up issuing voter cards

Patna, May 31 (IANS) A three-member team of the Election Commission (EC) visiting Bihar Monday asked officials to speed up the process of issuing voter identity cards ahead of the assembly polls in October-November this year, official sources said.

The team headed by Election Commissioner S.Y. Qureshi discussed the election preparedness with government officials here, sources said.

‘The EC team reviewed election preparedness with divisional commissioners and district magistrates and the progress on voter identity cards,’ a source said.

The EC has already instructed the state officials to issue voter cards to at least 85 percent of the voters. The final list of electoral roll is to be published June 15, sources said.

According to official figures, there are 54,324,000 eligible voters in Bihar but only 40,171,917 have photo identity cards.

Rebel Nagorno-Karabakh holds parliamentary vote

Breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh held a parliamentary election on Sunday, a month after the collapse of a plan to end hostility between Armenia and Turkey and ease tension in the south Caucasus.

Most candidates and parties insist on independence for Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan, while some want the region to become part of Armenia. Officials see the poll as part of a process of institution building in the disputed enclave.

Azerbaijan, which is backed by ethnically related Turkey, criticised the election as illegal.

The tiny mountainous region, mainly populated by Christian Armenians, seceded from Muslim Azerbaijan and proclaimed independence after a war in the early 1990s that killed some 30,000. Its independence is not recognised by any country.

Azerbaijan wants Nagorno-Karabakh back, if necessary by force. More than 15 years of mediation have failed to produce a final peace deal and the threat of war is never far away in a key energy transit region to the West.

Turkey, Azerbaijan’s energy trading partner in the region, closed the border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with a close Muslim ally in its losing battle with Armenian-backed fighters in Karabakh.

The breakaway region has seen an increase in tension since Armenia and Turkey announced their rapprochement last year. Azerbaijan feared its interest in Nagorno-Karabakh would be sacrificed as part of a strategic deal.

The accord crumbled last month, when Armenia suspended its ratification following Turkish demands that it first reach terms over Nagorno-Karabakh — a condition Turkey set to appease Azerbaijan, an oil and gas producer which hosts oil majors including BP, ExxonMobil and Chevron.

“Democracy is one of the most important values for us,” Nagorno-Karabakh leader Bako Sahakyan told reporters after voting, urging the next parliament to take further steps towards independence.

Polls closed at 8 p.m. and an election commission spokesman said the result would not be clear until Monday morning.

Parties, which include pro-government Free Motherland, Democratic Party of Artsakh and Dashnaktsutiun as well as opposition, but not popular Communist Party, will need to clear a six-percent threshold to get into the parliament.

Azerbaijan condemned the poll.

“The ‘new election farce’ in the occupied territories violates Azerbaijan’s constitution and the norms of international law,” Azerbaijan’s Central Election Commission (CEC) said in a statement.

Azerbaijan has warned observers against monitoring the poll. “Nagorno-Karabakh is Azeri territory and anyone visiting it without permission from the Azeri side will be declared persona non grata and will not be able to visit Azerbaijan,” said Elkhan Polukhov, a foreign ministry spokesman.

(Additional reporting by Afet Mehtiyeva in Baku; Writing by Margarita Antidze; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

ANALYSIS – Parties aplenty, but can any challenge Myanmar’s junta?

Although dismissed by many as a sham to entrench five decades of military rule, Myanmar’s upcoming election is being taken seriously at home, with dozens of political parties queuing up to take part.

But what remains to be seen is whether any real force will emerge to challenge the iron-fisted rule of a military that seems determined to cling on to power.

The party seen as Myanmar’s only real hope for a democratic future was effectively disbanded as of Friday when Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) opted not to register for what it said were “unjust” polls — a move that angered many of its supporters.

A breakaway NLD faction announced just hours after the deadline that it would enter the election under a new political entity called the National Democratic Force (NDF) — assuming the army-appointed Election Commission agrees to allow it.

But if the NDF or any other pro-democracy parties emerge, their leaders will have big shoes to fill now the charismatic, long-detained Suu Kyi, the icon of Myanmar’s democracy struggle, has clearly stated her opposition to the long-awaited polls.

The NLD won the last election, in 1990, by a landslide but was denied the chance to rule by a junta that used unexplained constitutional technicalities to keep the NLD out of office.

Many experts and people on the ground believe the window of opportunity for an opposing force to win the support of Myanmar’s people and replicate the NLD’s 1990 feat is fast closing.

OPPOSING OPPOSITION?

The break-up of the NLD could lead to a fractious and divisive opposition, with those intending to challenge the military and its proxies more likely to face off with each other.

“We’ll have to wait and see how well the real, genuine pro-democracy parties can work together,” said Aung Naing Oo, a Harvard-educated Burmese academic based in Thailand.

“The problem is the NLD wasn’t strategically deconstructed. The hardliners and moderates who have been through thick and thin might undermine each other. Some may go underground and that’s a recipe for confrontation.”

The prospect of a clumsily-formed and bickering opposition plays right into the hands of the generals, who unlike 1990, appear to have hatched a clever plan to retain control of the country at all levels.

The armed forces drafted a constitution in 2008 and ensured it passed a referendum, granting its commander-in-chief more power than an elected president and allocating control of key ministries, like justice, defence and interior, to the military.

And it looks as if it will get its hands on the “civilian” side of the new democratic Myanmar too.

At least 20 ministers from the junta, including Prime Minister Thein Sein, resigned from the military last week to become civilian politicians, although as is typical with Myanmar, their parties remain a mystery.

A party known as the Union Solidarity and Development Association (USDA) has attracted wide attention on state-controlled television, prompting accusations the junta has hijacked a social development organisation to use as its vehicle for parliamentary politics.

The USDA appears to be modelled on Indonesia’s powerful Golkar Party and claims to have 24 million members — about half of Myanmar’s population.

PARLIAMENTARY SIDESHOW

A total of 30 groups have applied to become political parties and more may join before the June 6 deadline for new parties to register for the election, a date for which has yet to be set.

Only four of 10 existing parties have applied to run, three, including the National Unity Party (NUP) — the runner-up to the NLD in 1990 — comprise former members of the Socialist Programme Party, the political arm of the military junta that seized power in a 1962 coup before its dissolution in 1998.

Regardless of who wins, most analysts believe parliamentary politics will be a sideshow given the military’s ministerial and budgetary powers and its allocation of 25 percent of the national assembly and a third of senate seats to serving generals.

“The generals don’t want a repeat of the 1990 election and its clear they won’t share power with anyone,” said Aung Zaw, editor of the Thailand-based Irrawaddy magazine.

“Any idea that this election can change the political landscape is wishful thinking. Members of parliament won’t have the power or numbers to go against these military dinosaurs.”

(Additional reporting by Aung Hla Tun in Naypyitaw; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Thai protesters agree to November elections

Thailand’s Red Shirt protesters have accepted an offer for elections to be held in November, but they are refusing to leave their rally site in central Bangkok until the government agrees to a raft of conditions.

The government made the offer yesterday in a bid to end the eight-week stand-off with protesters in the capital.

Local newspapers report the Red Shirts are reluctant to accept the government’s reconciliation plan but gave broad agreement in order to avoid losing public support.

A key sticking point is the election timing – both the government and the Red Shirts want to be in power when the budget is passed and a planned military reshuffle occurs in September.

Tens of thousands rallied at the protest stage to hear the protest leaders’ decision on the government’s proposal.

Protest leader Sean Boonpracong told the crowd it was time to negotiate and said the decision to do so was unanimous.

“We would like to, for the sake of reconciliation, enter into an agreement. We want to negotiate, all of us,” he said.

But while the protesters purport to have accepted prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s road map to reconciliation, that acceptance is highly conditional.

They are demanding the reopening of anti-government media outlets, that the military be pulled back, and a clearer picture of when parliament would be dissolved.

“[We want] the power to determine an election dialogue to the election commission. It is not within the power of the prime minister,” another Red Shirt leader Veera Musigapong said.

“We want a clarification of the timing when the prime minister will dissolve the parliament.”

Thailand has lost $2.2 billion so far as a result of the protests that have shut down central Bangkok.

Almost 50 countries have recommended against their citizens visiting and that will not change until some normality returns to the city.

Even if elections are held in November, there is still high potential for continuing political instability.

Political science professor at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, says election campaigning before a November poll could turn nasty.

“It could actually exacerbate the confrontation and …. it could end up in the same vicious cycle,” he said.

“Whoever wins, the losers will not accept and there will be accusations of fraud and so on.”

He says the success of the election will depend on clear guidelines being set now.

“A lot of this is about posturing, posturing and trying to position yourselves to bargain from a position of strength,” he said.

“So a lot of this has to do with bargaining negotiations, tactics. But most important of all, to me, is the establishment of goodwill and good faith.”

Red Shirts demand exact date for dissolution of parliament

Bangkok, May 5 (ANI): Red Shirt leaders have demanded that Thai Prime Minister Abhisit set an exact date for the dissolution of parliament in line with his national ‘reconciliation’ plan before they cease their agitation.

United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) or the Red Shirts have agreed to be party to the compromise proposed by the Prime Minister, but were guarded in their response.

They are unconvinced about the government’s unity and sincerity in offering a roadmap.

Abhisit has offered to hold a general election on Nov 14 as part of the plan which comes with five conditions.

But UDD leaders questioned the poll date offer, saying only the Election Commission had the authority to set an election date, not the prime minister.

“We want the government to come up with a clear and definite resolution on when exactly the House will be dissolved,” Bangkok Post quoted UDD leader Natthawut Saikua as saying.

The government must allow Red Shirt supporters to travel freely to join protests in Bangkok and elsewhere, Mr Natthawut said. Media freedom to report on protests must also be restored.

Agreeing with talks on the road map does not mean the group wanted to trade this with an amnesty for charges against them over an alleged plot to overthrow the monarchy and terrorism, the UDD leaders insisted.

A source with the UDD told Bangkok Post that the protest leaders were reluctant to embrace the road map, but they knew they would be criticised by the public and so agreed have to offer a broad acceptance. (ANI)

Election recount starts in Iraq

Election officials in Iraq have begun recounting millions of votes from March’s parliamentary elections to counter allegations of ballot fraud.

The initial count named former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi as the winner by a slim two-seat majority over incumbent prime minister Nouri al-Maliki.

But Mr Maliki refused to accept the result and demanded a recount, accusing the election commission of using improper counting procedures.

Officials have begun recounting 2.5 million ballot papers – a process that could take at least 10 days and may reverse Mr Allawi’s win.

The delay in forming a new government could stoke new sectarian violence because a change in the result would anger Iraq’s Sunni minority, which voted in force for Mr Allawi’s coalition.

Sindh High Court quashes petition challenging Zardari’s electoral eligibility

Karachi, Apr.22 (ANI): The Sindh High Court has quashed a petition challenging President Asif Ali Zardari’s eligibility, saying he enjoys constitutional amnesty from court proceedings.

Chief Justice Sarmad Jalal Osmani observed that the 2008 Presidential election could not be challenged, and that Zardari could only be removed from the chair through impeachment.

The petition filed by advocate Maulvi Iqbal Haider asked for scrutiny of Zardari’s nomination papers by the election commission saying that he too was a beneficiary of the defunct National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO).

The petitioner also argued that following the Supreme Court’s judgement on the NRO, all those cases dismissed under the controversial amnesty law were restored.

It may be noted that in December last year, a 17-member judge bench, headed by Chief Justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, had declared the NRO as “unconstitutional” and “invalid from the outset”. (ANI)

Afghan election officials quit

The head of Afghanistan’s independent election commission and his deputy have resigned.

“The tenure of the president of the election commission, Dr Azizullah Ludin, has come to an end,” a spokesman for president Hamid Karzai told a news conference in Kabul.

“Yesterday (Tuesday) he told the president that he did not want to continue in the position any more. It was accepted by the president.

“Daoud Ali Najafi also resigned. His resignation was accepted and a new figure will be appointed.”

The spokesman said the pair had previously tendered their resignations although they had not been accepted.

The resignations follow international pressure over last year’s presidential elections which were marred by fraud.

Mr Karzai won the election but the commission was criticised for failing to deal with widespread irregularities.

The institution had been accused of being stacked with Karzai cronies.

A quarter of all votes cast in the election were declared invalid following a probe by a UN-backed watchdog.

Mr Karzai eventually accepted irregularities under extensive diplomatic pressure and his main challenger, Abdullah Abdullah, withdrew from a second-round run-off, fearing a repeat of ballot-stuffing that discredited the first round.

Allawi’s victory could be prelude to political uncertainty in Iraq: NYT

Baghdad, Mar. 27 (ANI): Ayad Allawi’s narrow victory over incumbent Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki in the Iraqi general elections is being seen as a prelude to a period of political uncertainty and possible violence that could delay the withdrawal of American troops from the country, the New York Times reports.

Soon after the declaration of results, Maliki and his supporters hurled accusations of fraud at Allawi, who has the reputation of being an American puppet.

Western observers and an independent election commission said they saw no signs of widespread fraud.

Allawi galvanized the votes of millions of Sunnis — who boycotted the last parliamentary elections in 2005 — to build his edge of 91 to 89 seats over his nearest rival, Maliki, the paper says.

That falls far short of the majority of 163 of the 325 seats in Parliament that he needs to form a government, it adds.

While Iraqi political experts interviewed doubt that Allawi would succeed in assembling a governing coalition, Maliki would remain the caretaker prime minister of the nation until the appointment of a new government.

Reactions in Iraq ranged from jubilation to fear.

Some people partied in the streets, honking horns and firing weapons in the air; others stockpiled food in case of violence and renewed curfews.

“Nobody felt happy in Diyala,” said Qais Jihad, 30, referring to the pair of bombs outside a cafe, killing 43 people who had gathered to await the results. “It is a win with a bloody flavor. Now we want to finish with election troubles and form a government so we can stop Iraqis’ bleeding.” (ANI)

Q+A – What do we know about Myanmar’s election?

Myanmar’s top generals will attend the annual Armed Forces Day parade on Saturday for the final time as the country’s leaders as the military prepares to hand over power to an elected civilian government.

The parade will be led by reclusive junta strongman Than Shwe, who says the military top brass will become civilians after this year’s long-awaited election. Few, however, believe the military will really transfer power.

WHY IS MYANMAR HOLDING ELECTIONS?

Sanctions have crippled the resource-rich country, which was the world’s top rice exporter when it won independence from Britain in 1948 after more than 120 years of colonial rule.

Although Asian trade is picking up, particularly with China, the regime’s refusal to release political prisoners and halt human rights abuses have made it a pariah in the West.

Analysts say Myanmar wants to join the global economy and attract investment. The generals know they must give up power — nominally at least — to achieve this, but they appear to believe the military is the only institution capable of running the country.

WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE POLLS?

No date has been set for the elections but the generals have unveiled laws governing how the vote will be conducted and who can stand. An election commission comprising people “prominent and of good reputation” has been appointed.

Analysts and Western diplomats believe the junta is holding out on a date to try to get rebellious ethnic groups to take part in the process in an effort to show the country is united. The participation of the big ethnic groups is unlikely.

There is wide speculation the vote will take place sometime in October on a date deemed auspicious to the notoriously superstitious generals.

WHO WILL HOLD POWER?

A constitution approved in a disputed 2008 referendum stipulates Myanmar will be run by an elected civilian government, but key ministries such as justice, defence and the interior will be under the control of the military, which will also be granted a quarter of the 440 seats in parliament.

The army commander will remain the country’s most powerful figure, senior to an elected president, able to appoint key ministers and with authority to assume power “in times of emergency”.

Than Shwe has said his inner circle of army generals will fade from the political scene, but analysts expect them or their proxies to continue to pull the strings.

Than Shwe and Maung Aye, another ageing strongman, will probably retire and hand power to army proteges who will ensure they are insulated from any future recriminations. Junta number three Thura Shwe Mann, 62, is widely tipped to take the top post.

WHY IS AUNG SAN SUU KYI SIDELINED?

The hugely popular Suu Kyi, daughter of independence hero Aung San, remains the biggest threat to the military. Her National League for Democracy (NLD) party won the 1990 poll in a landslide, a result the regime ignored and recently annulled.

Because of her rousing speeches, ability to mobilise pro-democracy activists and popular appeal among more than a dozen armed ethnic groups who deeply resent the Burmese generals, the junta has kept her in detention for 15 of the past 21 years.

It is unlikely she will be freed before the polls, for fear of her influence on the public.

Detained or not, she is unable to run because her late husband was a foreigner, and because of the British citizenship of her children and her criminal record.

WHO WILL BE ALLOWED TO TAKE PART?

The junta recognises 10 political parties. The NLD, the National Unity Party and the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy were the top three in the 1990 polls. The NLD plans to announce on March 29 if it will run or not.

There are divisions inside the NLD between those who reject the constitution and modernisers who believe a boycott could render the NLD a spent force. Suu Kyi said on March 23 she wouldn’t dream of registering the NLD for the elections, although she also said the decision was not hers to make.

The junta will probably have its own nominee parties fronted by cronies and civilian proxies. With more than 2,000 political activists in prison — and barred from running even if released — the polls will inevitably be far from inclusive.

Two new parties have registered so far, both of them seen as close to the junta. They are the 88 Generation Students of the Union of Myanmar (GSUM) and the Union of Myanmar National Political Force (UMNPF).

WILL THE WEST MAINTAIN SANCTIONS?

Due to the junta’s refusal to free political prisoners and the restrictive election laws, the West is unlikely to lift sanctions, even if the vote is deemed free and fair.

But many pro-democracy advocates say sanctions have been counterproductive, serving only to impoverish the people and make the junta more hidebound. An election that brings change without a full transition to democracy would sharpen the debate over whether sanctions should be removed.

Engagement by Asian neighbours, especially on trade, has done nothing to loosen the junta’s grip on power.

(Editing by Alan Raybould and David Fox)

Election Commission allots rail engine as poll symbol to MNS

Mumbai, Mar 19 (ANI): The Election Commission has recognised Raj Thackeray”s Maharashtra Narvnirman Sena (MNS) party as a state party and a rail engine has been allotted as the party”s poll symbol.

The Commission informed the Supreme Court of its decision as MNS fulfilled all the requirements needed for the recognition of a state party.

For recognition as a state party, a party either needs three percent of the total Assembly seats or six percent votes of the total votes polled in the Assembly elections plus two MLAs.

The MNS that has fulfilled the first criterion had asked the apex court of the country to allot it a poll symbol, so that it could contest Maharashtra Municipal Corporation and council elections. (ANI)

Attempts to freeze BSP symbol a conspiracy of opposition parties, says Mayawati

Lucknow, March 15 (ANI): Bahujan Samaj Party President Mayawati on Monday said that the attempts to freeze her party’s election symbol through various objections were a conspiracy backed by the opposition parties.

Ms. Mayawati also rejected the description that the elephant statues erected in parks and memorials to Dalit icons were related to her party”s election symbol, as she said that the statues the elephants have been shown welcoming with their snouts up, whereas the elephant in the BSP”s election symbol has been shown with its snout down.

The BSP is to submit its reply on a petition filed against the elephant statues with the poll panel on March 18.

Addressing her party’s massive rally on the occasion of 25 years BSP”s existence and the birth anniversary of its founder Kanshi Ram, at the Ramabai Ambedkar Maidan here on Monday, Ms. Mayawati said the Election Commission should take a view of the Congress and SP”s symbols.

Cycles were being distributed to the beneficiaries of the Savitribai Phule Scheme for girls launched by the BSP Government and the hand was used by leaders of all political parties to welcome people, Ms. Mayawati said.

During her 90 minute long address Ms. Mayawati trained her guns on the Congress and dubbed it as anti-Dalit, which supported the caste system.

Justifying the erection of her own statues along with other BSP leaders, Ms. Mayawati said: “Is there any law in the country which bans building statues of living leaders and whether funds can be spent only on erecting statues of dead leaders and not the living ones?”.

She pointed out that the statues of form prime ministers and congress leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi have been erected throughout the country by the Congress and several schemes, colleges, universities, airports, railway stations and roads using government funds have been named after them.

In last 63 years since Independence crores have been spent on building memorials and museums of Gandhi-Nehru family. But, when statues and memorials to Mr. Kanshi Ram and other icons are built, the BSP Government has been charged by the opposition with misusing government money, Ms. Mayawati reminded the public in the rally.

However, a giant garland, which was put around Ms. Mayawati by BSP supporters, attracted attention of all, as it was alleged that it was made of Rs. 1,000 Indian currency notes. (ANI)

Attempts to freeze BSP symbol a conspiracy of opposition parties, says Mayawati

Lucknow, March 15 (ANI): Bahujan Samaj Party President Mayawati on Monday said that the attempts to freeze her party’s election symbol through various objections were a conspiracy backed by the opposition parties.

Ms. Mayawati also rejected the description that the elephant statues erected in parks and memorials to Dalit icons were related to her party”s election symbol, as she said that the statues the elephants have been shown welcoming with their snouts up, whereas the elephant in the BSP”s election symbol has been shown with its snout down.

The BSP is to submit its reply on a petition filed against the elephant statues with the poll panel on March 18.

Addressing her party’s massive rally on the occasion of 25 years BSP”s existence and the birth anniversary of its founder Kanshi Ram, at the Ramabai Ambedkar Maidan here on Monday, Ms. Mayawati said the Election Commission should take a view of the Congress and SP”s symbols.

Cycles were being distributed to the beneficiaries of the Savitribai Phule Scheme for girls launched by the BSP Government and the hand was used by leaders of all political parties to welcome people, Ms. Mayawati said.

During her 90 minute long address Ms. Mayawati trained her guns on the Congress and dubbed it as anti-Dalit, which supported the caste system.

Justifying the erection of her own statues along with other BSP leaders, Ms. Mayawati said: “Is there any law in the country which bans building statues of living leaders and whether funds can be spent only on erecting statues of dead leaders and not the living ones?”.

She pointed out that the statues of form prime ministers and congress leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi have been erected throughout the country by the Congress and several schemes, colleges, universities, airports, railway stations and roads using government funds have been named after them.

In last 63 years since Independence crores have been spent on building memorials and museums of Gandhi-Nehru family. But, when statues and memorials to Mr. Kanshi Ram and other icons are built, the BSP Government has been charged by the opposition with misusing government money, Ms. Mayawati reminded the public in the rally.

However, a giant garland, which was put around Ms. Mayawati by BSP supporters, attracted attention of all, as it was alleged that it was made of Rs. 1,000 Indian currency notes. (ANI)

Congress – NCP to finalise seat-sharing formula on Saturday

New Delhi, Sep 19 (ANI): The crucial meeting of the Congress Party and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) leaders will be held here on Saturday to give the final shape to the seat sharing agreement for next month’s Maharashtra Assembly polls.

The Election Commission issued notification for the assembly polls in Maharashtra, which is to be held on October 13.

On Thursday it was reported that both parties had broadly agreed to a formula of 174: 114 seats for the Congress and the NCP respectively.

The Maharashtra Assembly has 298 constituencies.

Poll management leaders of both the Congress and the NCP met their respective party chiefs on Friday after three days of negotiations.

They had earlier held a series of discussions in Mumbai to give final shape to the seat sharing process.

If the current formula gets the stamp of approval of both parties then the NCP would settle for ten seats less than what it contested the last time.

Meanwhile the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) – Shiv Sena alliance settled on a seat sharing, for 119 for the BJP and 169 seats for Shiv Sena (ANI)

Election Commission issues notification for assembly elections in three states

New Delhi, Sep. 18 (ANI): The process for forthcoming Assembly elections in Maharashtra, Haryana and Arunachal Pradesh will begin formally with the issuance of notification on Friday.

The prospective candidates would be able to file their nomination papers till September 25.

The prospective candidates can file nomination papers to the Returning Officer or to the Assistant Returning Officer from Friday till September 25.

The assembly elections in three states are expected to be a litmus test for all major parties after the Lok Sabha elections.

The vote-counting will take place on October 22.

It is notable that all the three states that are ruled by Congress, which shares power in Maharashtra with NCP as a major coalition partner.

Maharashtra has a 288-member Assembly, Haryana a 90-member House and Arunachal Pradesh Assembly has 60 members.

There are 2,061 polling stations in Arunachal Pradesh, 12,894 in Haryana and 82,028 in Maharashtra. (ANI)

Maharashtra polls: Congress to contest 174 seats, NCP 114

New Delhi, Sep.17 (ANI): The Congress party on Thursday announced that it will contest 174 seats in the October 13 assembly elections in Maharashtra, while its partner, the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) will contest 114.

Addressing the media here, Chaudhary Virendra Singh, who oversees Congress affairs in the state of Maharashtra, said, the seat-sharing arrangement has been finalised after several rounds of talks.

It may be recalled that in the last elections, the Congress had contested 164 seats, while the NCP fielded candidates in 124 seats.

The Election Commission will issue the notification for the assembly elections on Friday. (ANI)

Afghanistan Electoral Commission rejects some votes due to irregularities

Kabul, Sep. 7 (ANI): Afghanistan’s electoral commission has rejected results from hundreds of presidential polling stations due to “irregularities”.

According to a Sky News report, the Independent Election Commission (IEC) has thrown out results from 447 voting sites because of irregularities.

The IEC has investigated over 650 claims of serious violations during and after the August 20 vote.

The commission has the power to nullify the results from districts or provinces, or even call for a new election, if it finds large-scale fraud.

President Karzai is currently leading the polls with a 48 percent vote, while his main rival and former foreign minister Dr. Abdullah has got over 33 percent of the vote.

Commission chairman Daoud Ali Najafi has insisted the commission was unbiased in fulfilling its duties throughout the process. (ANI)

CPI (M) charts out strategy for the forthcoming assembly elections

New Delhi, Sep 5 (ANI): The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) politburo on Saturday discussed possible strategies for the forthcoming assembly elections in three states at the two-day meet being held in the national capital.

Senior leader and politburo member of CPI-M Sitaram Yechury after the first day of the meet said: “The Politburo meeting began this morning. We are discussing the current political situation in the country. We are discussing the forthcoming elections for the state assemblies that are going to be held in Maharashtra, Haryana and Arunachal Pradesh.”

“We will also be discussing on how to conduct a rectification campaign which was a decision taken by our last party congress in which we said we will take up the matter after the general elections,” Yechuri added.

Earlier, the Election Commission had declared October 13 as the date to conduct polls for the legislative assemblies of Maharashtra, Haryana and Arunachal Pradesh.

It may be recalled that the party had managed just four seats in Kerala and nine in West Bengal, the two main hubs of the party, during the 2009 Lok Sabha Polls, following which the party has decided to prepare a ‘rectification document’ after its poor performance in the 2009 elections to the Lok Sabha.

The politburo also discussed the current political situation in the country. (ANI)

Western envoys expect run-off in Afghanistan election

Paris, Sep. 3 (ANI): Western envoys to Afghanistan have said that their respective governments should “be prepared for a run-off” in the Afghanistan presidential election if too many votes are ruled “irregular.”

If no candidate gets more than 50 percent of the vote, a run-off between the top two vote getters will be held. The latest results show that incumbent president Hamid Karzai has 47.3 percent of the vote with more than 60 percent of the ballots counted.

The meeting of German, French, British, UN, and US envoys to Afghanistan here was regarded as a show of unity and support in the midst of an Afghan mission seen as unpopular in Europe and dubbed by some US media as “Mr. Obama’s war.”

In European circles, the meeting was also seen as an effort to pressure Afghan President Karzai in the wake of some 1,000 complaints of ballot stuffing and fraud now under review, and to garner support for US efforts to target of irregular election behavior and corruption, the Christian Science Monitor reports.

Hosted by French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, the gathering also included British envoy Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles, Germany’s Bernd Mutzelburg, US envoy Richard Holbrooke, Karl Eide of the UN, and 22 other representatives.

The Afghanistan Election Commission is now going through nearly 1,000 complaints, of which 600 have been addressed, the envoys said – predicting they would finish the process by September 17. (ANI)