Didigiri Rules

India, June 5 — The lane leading to 30 B, Harish Chatterjee Street, close to the Kalighat temple in south Kolkata, is crowded on most days. But for the past three days, a fresh fervour appears to have gripped its residents. “Didi, didi, this way”, goes the chorus, as the lady emerges from the tiled house. Some dive at her feet, others attempt to garland her. Her neighbours in the dingy lane have closely witnessed the dizzy rise of Mamata Banerjee. From a student leader at the Jogmaya Devi College to the firebrand minister who is close to dislodging the 33-year-old communist government in West Bengal, she has come a long way. Banerjee’s political career is divided into three phases. First, as a young Congress worker, she trounced CPI(M) heavyweights such as Somnath Chatterjee in the 1984 Lok Sabha polls. In the second phase, between 1991-1997, she ran an almost parallel Congress organisation in Bengal that would later evolve into the Trinamool Congress. In the third phase, between 2006 and 2010, she spearheaded the Singur and Nandigram agitations, trouncing the Left in most elections held since. Most of her life as Congress member was spent trying to convince the party leadership about her credentials as the only leader who could give the Left Front a run for its money. Banerjee’s spunk impressed former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. After his death, she got a ministerial berth in the P.V. Narasimha Rao Government. The same minister sat on a dharna against the government over the Terrorists and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act and fought the Pradesh Congress Committee elections against party satrap Somen Mitra. She lost and realised that the manner in which state leaders perceived the Congress should function and the way she saw it were different. In 1997, her relationship with the Congress leadership reached a nadir, when, during an AICC session in Kolkata, she launched the Trinamool Congress. Her flirtation with the BJP began and she fought the 1998 Lok Sabha elections with the saffron party. After a repeat performance in 1999 she became Railway Minister. Banerjee soon began to grow uncomfortable as her BJP connection was alienating her Muslim voters. A stir over kickbacks for the purchase of coffins for the army gave her the opportunity to wriggle out. In a hurriedly cooked alliance with the Congress, Banerjee fought the 2001 assembly polls and lost. She could not counter Buddhadeb Bhattacharya’s popularity and the simultaneous backstabbing by a section of Congress leaders. The National Democratic Alliance led by the BJP was a natural choice once again. But the Godhra riots further alienated her Muslim supporters and the 2004 Lok Sabha elections saw her party win just one parliamentary seat from Bengal: Banerjee herself. In the 2006 assembly elections too, her party fared badly. In almost three-decade long political career, Banerjee has remained an enigma. Her now-legendary mood swings have baffled even those close to her. She has often behaved rudely inside the Parliament and was even spotted hurling the “resignation letter” at the speaker. One of the lowest points of Banerjee’s career came in 1989 when she lost in the Jadavpur Lok Sabha polls to Malini Bhattacharya. More than the defeat, she became an object of ridicule for using “Dr” in her posters during campaigning. She defended her “degree”, but nobody could trace the East Georgia University that had conferred her the honour. In 1996, she attempted “suicide” by threatening to hang herself with a shawl accusing the Congress leadership of doling out assembly tickets to “criminals”. Banerjee’s split personality has evoked veneration and wrath from admirers and rivals respectively. Says senior journalist Manojit Mitra: “She is strange mixture. It is difficult to understand her appeal with our urban educated sensibilities. But she attracts the masses like a magnet.” “She talks something in the morning and the opposite in the evening”, says West Bengal CPI (M) secretary Biman Bose. After hours, didi, as she is popularly known, loves humming Tagore songs and playing the synthesiser. She also paints, mostly flowers and Lord Ganesha. She is on the treadmill at least once a day. Before and after her workouts, Banerjee works on her books – at last count she had written 17. Histrionics aside, Banerjee is one of the few Indian leaders who reach out to the common man in his own language. She often travels to remote villages to comfort grieving relatives of a party man. Reporters recall villagers leaving their meals and rushing out to have a glimpse of her motorcade. The agitation over Singur and Nandigram, which began in September 2006, revived Banerjee’s sagging political career. Her protests against land acquisition made her the darling of the rural masses, Left loyalists for long. The Communists gave in meekly and the Nandigram project was scrapped. Banerjee reaped rich dividends in the panchayat polls of 2008. In the 2009 Lok Sabha elections, the one-MP-party bagged 19 seats. There has been no looking back since. Whether it was the assembly by-elections or the school committee polls, the Trinamool Congress emerged as a formidable force in Bengal.

If recent poll results are any indication, Banerjee is inching closer to the red building at Dalhousie Square. For the past three days, she has remained huddled with top Trinamool leaders. “There is no governance in Bengal right now. I want early elections,” she said on Thursday.

Jaya Ho, says SP for Amar snub

Lucknow, May 27 — The Samajwadi Party (SP) sprang a surprise on Wednesday by re-nominating actress-turned politician Jaya Bachchan for next month’s Rajya Sabha elections from UP. The move is likely to further alienate former SP leader Amar Singh, party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav’s one-time close aide. Singh was forced to leave the party, along with actress Jayaprada, in February. The announcement also reflects the changed equations between Singh and the Bach-chan family. Singh used to call himself the younger brother of Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya’s superstar husband. He often stated the Bachchans were like family to him. When Singh left the SP, it was widely speculated Jaya would also go with him. But she remained with the SP, raising eyebrows. Jaya did support her political mentor in the days before he finally left the SP, but distanced herself later. In March, at a rally of Thakurs in New Delhi, Singh criticised her for staying with the party. This widened the rift between him and the Bachchans further.

Masood’s nomination is aimed at placating Muslim voters, who had deserted the SP when Yadav cosied up to his bete noire and former BJP leader Kalyan Singh in the run up to the Lok Sabha polls.

VHP leader accuses Advani of using Ayodhya issue for personal gains

New Delhi, Sep. 9 (ANI): Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Ashok Singhal on Wednesday accused BJP leader LK Advani of taking out the Rath Yatra for personal political gain.

Advani, he said, should now think about stepping down from the post of Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha.

He also noted that the BJP had deviated from its founding policies and that is the reason for its apparent ‘sinking’.

Singhal’s statements coincide with the times when the saffron party is facing rough weather and controversies have become an order of the day.

The no-show in Lok Sabha polls, revelation on Advani’s lie on the Kandhar episode, Jaswant Singh’s controversial book on Mohammad Ali Jinnah and his subsequent expulsion from the party are the several episodes which hit the party’s image badly. (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)

CPI (M) defends Buddha over skipping politburo meet

New Delhi, Sep 5 (ANI): The Communist Party of India (Marxist) dismissed reports that West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee was deliberately avoiding party’s two-day politburo meet, which began today on Saturday in the national capital.

According to reports, senior party leaders including Brinda Karat claimed that Buddhadeb had just recovered from viral fever and was advised by doctors to take rest, forcing party members urging him to stay back in Kolkata.

The CPI(M) Politburo is meeting to finalise a document to deal with its organisational problems, which led to its defeat in the recent polls in West Bengal and Kerala.

It is being assumed that topics regarding Lalgarh could be raised during the two-day meet, may have prompted Buddhadeb to give the meeting a miss.

It is also said that Buddhadeb is upset over reports of his successor or deputy being selected during the meet.

Differences between the West Bengal Chief Minister and CPI (M) leaders have been reported ever since party’s failure in the Lok Sabha elections, especially after the defeat they experienced in West Bengal during Lok Sabha polls. (ANI)

Swayamsewaks vs Outsiders syndrome killed BJP

New Delhi, Aug.30 (ANI): The bickering in the BJP sparked off by the drubbing in the 14th Lok Sabha polls has let open the can of worms in the saffron party.

BJP which claims to be “structured” and always talked about taking the high moral ground of being democratic, appears to be shattered like no one could expected, not even its principal rival party the Congress.

Apparently, trouble began brewing in the saffron camp when the suave, English spouting, tech savvy leaders, often termed as the outsiders by the swayamsewaks, took centre stage and became the key decision makers about the party’s politics.

BJP’s Prime Ministerial candidate and Loh Purush Lal Krishan Advani, whooiled hard to adorn Vajpayee’s inclusive image, miserably failed to strike a balance between the swayamsewaks and the outsiders.

Rajnath Singh did manage to win the hearts and minds of the core ideological workers but his hard-line approach and demagogic characteristics let him down among the league of the so called “outsiders”.

But, undoubtedly, Singh failed to demonstrate coherence and vision as the President of main opposition party of the Lok Sabha on key issues like Indo-US nuclear deal and response post 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks besides not being able to bring radical organizational reforms within the BJP.

Vacuum at the top-level offered room for the second-rung leaders to exercise and flaunt their authority in the decision-making.

All this gave confused or wrong signals to the cadres of the organization, for whom discipline has remained a binding force for decades.

It’s no secret that Arun Jaitley , Sushma Swaraj, Vekaiah Naidu and even

Ananth Kumar, considered close to Advani and draw their basic strength from him, showed reluctance and disregard in taking orders from party President Rajnath Singh ,which ultimately fuelled factionalism in the party.

Rajnath looked and sought Sangh Parivar’s shadow to counter his detractors in the party and soon become the blue-eyed boy of RSS.

Though RSS poster boy Rajnath publicly never displayed his annoyance or disagreement with Advani or his brigade but the prevailing discomfort was apparently visible on many occasions.

Discord came to the fore when Advani camp started taking different line and defying Rajnath Singh openly on key issues. In one such instance, ahead of the Lok Sabha polls, when Sudhanshu mittal was inducted by Singh as a Prabhari of North East , Jaitley defied Singh and made no bones in opposing the move . Off late Vasundhra who is considered close to Advani and his family, has shown reluctance to step down as the Leader of Opposition in Rajasthan State Assembly on Rajnath’s call.

There were several instances on which Advani and his followers held divergent views from Rajnath’s thinking and the authority of party President on party affairs and leadership waned dramatically in last three years.

Singh might have failed to impress or befriend hawks at centre like Jaitley ,Swaraj ,Naidu or Ananth Kumar but did get solace from the state leadership, he found a sense of loyalty in RSS’ icons Shivraj Singh Chauhan and Narendar Modi, he also shared good relationship with Chawal Baba Shivraj Singh Chauhan.

Advani’s love and penchant towards the intellectuals and journalists brought him extremely close to Arun Shourie, Jaswant Singh , Sudheendra Kulkarni. But this fascination distanced him from the core ideologues of the party.

In a bid to build up his inclusive and visionary image, Advani, who is seen as the architect of Babri mosque demolition by many quarters of the country, had somewhere lost the plot.

Jinnah fiasco did not move him and he tirelessly made efforts to rid himself from the image of “communal untouchable” to Mr. Secularist. The intelligentsia injected and indoctrinated into the BJP’s Prime Minister-in- waiting that until he bridged the gap with the Muslim community, he could not get to the 7 RCR .

The ideas like Akhand Bharat (united India), cultural nationalism, Ram temple in Ayodhya, which rode the party to the power thrice, took the backseat for Advani but carried on and taken forward by the BJP ‘s President Bal Apte report did held responsible the “prevalent inconsonance” among the top leadership for the defeat in the recent elections.

Today, BJP is in shambles. Once again, the RSS and the top leadership are trying to fix the discontent. But, by merely changing the leaders will these deep-rooted divergences and differences will be ironed out?

A mere reshuffle will not sort out the mess and RSS should think of new alternatives and draw new central leadership from the States, people like Shivraj Singh Chauhan, Narendra Modi, B.S Yediyurappa and Modi have proved their mettle in the states and will be more than willing to perform at the national stage.

Reshuffle can stave off the pressure and trouble temporarily but it is notnough to have a long term solution.

Arun Shourie’s suggestion to bomb the headquarters like the communists did, sounds dogmatic and radical, but sometimes last option is the only option.

And If BJP has to rebuild and resurrect itself before the 15th Lok Sabha elections, it has to pass many litmus tests and the landscape of the central leadership has to be changed. By Naveen Kapoor (ANI)

BJP snaps ties with INLD in Haryana

Chandigarh, Aug 24 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) snapped its ties with the Om Praksh Chautala led Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) in Haryana on Monday.

Addressing aprhs conference, party General Secretary Vijay Goel said: “The alliance with INLD has come to an end, we will contest the upcoming Assembly polls in the state on our own.”

According to sources both parties were said to be at loggerheads over seat sharing for the upcoming assembly elections.

The BJP has demanded 45 out of 90 Assembly seats and there has been no agreement so far.

Party president Rajnath Singh said in New Delhi: “I believe that it’s the rigid nature of INLD in seat sharing that the main reason for deviating from alliance with that party.”

The BJP Haryana unit was strongly opposed to an alliance with the INLD during the 2009 Lok Sabha polls, but the party’s central leadership did not heed to them. The alliance failed to get even a single seat in the state.

Goel also said: “Party workers in Haryana are not happy with the alliance with INLD. In the wake of the poor performance of this alliance in the Lok Sabha elections there should be a rethink on the tie-up.”

Earlier, the BJP, INLD alliance swept the 1999 State Assembly polls and ruled the state for five years. (ANI)

BJP all set to sever its ties with INLD in Haryana

New Delhi, Aug 24(ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is all set to sever its ties with the Om Praksh Chautala led Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) in Haryana on Monday.

According to sources, the BJP Haryana Unit President Krishan Pal Gurjar is expected to make a formal announcement on the issue.

Both parties are said to be at loggerheads over seat sharing for the up coming assembly elections.

The BJP is demanding 45 out of 90 Assembly seats and there has been no agreement so far.

The BJP Haryana unit was strongly opposed to an alliance with the INLD during the 2009 Lok Sabha polls, but the party’s central leadership did not heed to them.The alliance failed get even a single seat in the state.

BJP National General Secretary, Vijay Goel said: “Party workers in Haryana are not happy with the alliance with Om Prakash Chautala’s INLD. In the wake of the poor performance of this alliance in the Lok Sabha elections there should be a rethink on the tie-up.”

Earlier, the BJP, INLD alliance swept the 1999 State Assembly polls and ruled the state for five years. (ANI)

Kulkarni’s exit will not affect BJP: Balbir Punj

New Delhi, Aug.23 (ANI): BJP spokesperson Balbir Punj on Sunday said that Sudheendra Kulkarni’s move to leave would not affect the party

Describing Kulkarni as a “valuable colleague”, Punj said: “If Kulkarni feels that he is uncomfortable in BJP and he has taken a decision to leave the party, well, that is his decision. This decision of his is not going to affect the BJP.”

Another BJP spokesperson Prakash Javadekar said Kulkarni has not been a member of the BJP since 2005.

“He was associated with election-related work. The whole election mechanism was wound up immediately after the Lok Sabha polls by party president Rajnath Singh,” he told a private television channel.

Kulkarni, an IIT graduate and a columnist, was national secretary of BJP when Advani was the party president. However, he resigned in 2005 in the wake the controversial statement made by Advani in Pakistan, where he described Mohammad Ali Jinnah as “secular”.

That speech of Advani was reportedly written by Kulkarni. But Kulkarni continued to serve the party through his close association with Advani. He had served as director and later as an Officer on Special Duty in the PMO under Vajpayee.

During the recent Lok Sabha elections, Kulkarni was active in the election campaign management and was even seen defending the party on news channels and through his columns.

However, he embarrassed the BJP soon after the poll results when he wrote a piece in a magazine where he took a very critical view of the party’s election campaign strategy. He even stated that Advani had failed to assert himself during crucial times in the course of the campaign.

The party had distanced itself from his views when senior BJP leader Sushma Swaraj described Kulkarni as an “independent journalist” who was free to air his opinion.

She had said the views expressed by him in the article were not that of the party. Since then, Kulkarni has been virtually inactive within the BJP. (ANI)

Mayawati expels party leader for questioning installation of statues

Dehradun, July 3 (ANI): Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati has expelled Bahujan Samaj Party leader Munna Singh Chauhan from the party’s Uttarakhand unit for questioning her move to erect statues of her own in Uttar Pradesh.

Munna Singh Chauhan, who unsuccessfully contested the Tehri Lok Sabha seat in the recent general election as a BSP candidate, was shown the door for writing a letter to Mayawati suggesting a focus on the welfare activities for Dalit community rather than erecting statues.

Meghraj Singh, the President of the BSP Uttarakhand unit said that Chauhan was expelled from the party also for his inactiveness.

Chauhan resigned from Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and from Vikasnagar assembly constituency, which he represented in Uttarakhand Assembly a few days before Lok Sabha polls to join BSP.

The expulsion of Chauhan came close on the heels of by election of Vikasnagar assembly constituency. (ANI)

EC seeks power to register parties not contesting polls

Mumbai, June 26 (ANI): Chief Election Commissioner Navin Chawla on Friday said that the Election Commission of India has demanded a power from the Centre which should authorise it to de-register the political parties not contesting elections.

“We have power to register the party but don’t have the power to de-register. We have asked the government for this power,” the Chief Election Commissioner Navin Chawla told reporters here.

CEC said that there are around 1,200 registered parties in the country, half of them don’t contest the polls. “That is why in our reform proposals, we have suggested de-registering such parties.”

Besides, the Election Commission has also suggested to increase the mandatory deposit amount to contest polls, as it found a huge number of non-serious candidates who contested the recent Lok Sabha polls, Chawla shared with the media.

Citing the instance of Maharashtra, the CEC said: “Too many Independents contested and the Rs 10,000 deposit did not act as a deterrent.”

He also mentioned there were also technical difficulties, like provision for names of maximum 16 candidates per electronic voting machine and it was also not feasible to have more than four machines in a booth.

Moreover, the Election Commission has also suggested to the Centre to disallow candidates having criminal charges, Chawla informed. (ANI)

K. Chandrasekhara Rao quits as TRS chief

Hyderabad, June 19 (ANI): Faced with several senior party leaders revolting against him and holding him responsible for the poll debacle during Lok Sabha elections, Telangana Rashtra Samiti President K Chandrasekhara Rao resigned as party chief on Friday.

The resignation is likely to worsen the turmoil already being faced by the Telangana Rashtra Samiti since poor show during Lok Sabha polls

Party general secretary Madhusudhana Chary said Rao had sent in his resignation but it was yet to be accepted by the party’s executive committee.

A section of the rebel leaders have allegedly made allegations on Rao that he has turned the party into a family concern by giving tickets to his son and nephew.

“I am pained over the way my family has been targeted in the recent days,” K. Chandrasekhara Rao said adding that he would like to continue as an ordinary party worker and continue to work for the cause of separate Telangana state.

Also, a group of rebel TRS leaders launched a new non-political organisation-Telangana Vimocana Samiti-to continue the struggle.

He alleged that some anti-Telangana forces had conspired to damage and weaken the TRS.

Rao, who after quitting the Telugu Desam Party had launched TRS and movement for Telangana state has resigned many times earlier from different positions.

He resigned twice as the member of Parliament and won in by-elections from Karimnagar. This time he however moved to the Mahbubnagar Lok Sabha constituency which he won by a margin of 19,000 votes.

Earlier on June 3, 2008, KCR had resigned as the party president accepting the moral responsibility for the party’s defeat in the by elections following the enmass resignation of the TRS MPs and MLAs.

In 2009 Lok Sabha elections, Rao and the film actress Vijayshanti were the only two TRS candidates to be elected to the Lok Sabha. (ANI)

Rahul Gandhi turns 39

New Delhi, June 19 (ANI): Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi, who was instrumental in the Congress’ emergence as the single largest party in recently concluded Lok Sabha polls, turned 39 on Friday.

The Congress party has decided to celebrate Rahul Gandhi’s birthday as ‘Samrasta Divas’ and hold the ‘sahbhoj’.

Andhra Pradesh Congress Committee will also organize essay writing and elocution competitions in English on the occasion.

Born on June 19, 1970, he is a Member of Parliament from Amethi constituency in Uttar Pradesh.

He has been widely credited with Congress’s big win in 2009 general elections. His tactics are game-changing: insisting on grassroots activism, building deep connections to rural India and trying to democratize the hierarchical Congress Party itself.

He turned down a cabinet post in the Manmohan Singh Government and is concentrating on strengthening the party at the grassroots. (ANI)

Indian Rahul Gandhi turns 39

New Delhi, June 19 (ANI): Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi, who was instrumental in the Congress’ emergence as the single largest party in recently concluded Lok Sabha polls, turned 39 on Friday.

The Congress party has decided to celebrate Rahul Gandhi’s birthday as ‘Samrasta Divas’ and hold the ’sahbhoj’.

Andhra Pradesh Congress Committee will also organize essay writing and elocution competitions in English on the occasion.

Born on June 19, 1970, he is a Member of Parliament from Amethi constituency in Uttar Pradesh.

He has been widely credited with Congress’s big win in 2009 general elections. His tactics are game-changing: insisting on grassroots activism, building deep connections to rural India and trying to democratize the hierarchical Congress Party itself.

He turned down a cabinet post in the Manmohan Singh Government and is concentrating on strengthening the party at the grassroots. (ANI)

Resentment against BJP at JD (U)’s national executive meet

New Delhi, May 30 (ANI): Resentful voices against Bharatiya Janata Party were heard at the Janata Dal (United)’s national executive meet which was held to discuss party’s performance in recent Lok Sabha polls here.

After the meet, JD (U) spokesperson Shivanand Tewari admitted there were some “irritants” in JD-U’s relations with BJP, however, he denied anybody demanding to part ways with the BJP.

“There was no talk of breaking our relationship with BJP in the meeting… In Orissa, (BJD chief) Naveen Patnaiak might have had some such problem with BJP but in Bihar no such problem has cropped up,” Tewari told media persons later.

While admitting that there were complaints by JD(U) units in a few states against BJP’s style of functioning under the alliance, Tewari denied there was no opposition from BJP to Nitish Kumar government’s initiatives for minority welfare schemes.

Bihar JD (U)’s President Rajiv Ranjan Singh wanted BJP to reconsider its stand on certain issues whereas Jharkhand JD-U chief Jaleshwar Mahto charged that State BJP leaders had worked against the two official candidates of JD-U, leading to their defeat, sources said.

Among other issues the National Democratic Alliance’s overall performance was also discussed at the JD (U)’s meet.

The two-day JD(U) national executive meet also deliberated on “certain issues raised by BJP just before the elections” and felt they had damaged the prospects of NDA, Tewari said.

“Just before the election, BJP raised certain issues which were not required…BJP must also contemplate what were the issues that damaged them as it was the bigger partner in NDA and the alliance’s Prime Ministerial candidate was also from BJP. For them it must be more shocking,” Tewari said.

He, however, refused to specify the issues raised by BJP. However, sources, said the relevance of BJP candidate Varun Gandhi’s controversial speech and other statements by other leaders were raised at the meet.

The two-day meet was attended by JD(U) President and NDA acting-convener Sharad Yadav, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, and party’s State Presidents, senior leaders and newly-elected party MPs. (ANI)

Buddhadeb assures of more relief as ‘Aila’ death toll reaches 60

Kolkata, May 26 (ANI): The death toll due to havoc caused by cyclone ‘Aila’ in West Bengal has increased to 60. The highest number of deaths occurred in South 24 Parganas district followed by North 24 Parganas, Kolkata and Howrah.

Aila also wrecked havoc in Hooghly, Burdwan and Bankura districts of West Bengal on Monday. About 22 lakh people across the state have suffered losses, according to Chief Secretary Ashok Mohan Chakraborty.

The state government has released Rs.1 crore for rescue and relief so far. Eighteen hundred tonne of rice and one-lakh tarpaulins have been requisitioned for the purpose.

The ruling Left Front Government in Bengal seems to have finally woken up to the demands of the people after the crushing defeat in the recently held Lok Sabha polls.

In an effort to regain contact with the common man, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee today personally visited a relief camp in Nimpith Panchayat under Joynagar Block in South 24 Parganas district, and assured the victims of all government support.

One of the major criticisms, which emerged against Left leaders after the poll debacle, was on their growing inaccessibility and loss of contact from the grass root levels.

Bhattacharjee’s visit to the village camp is being seem as an effort to assure the people that the ruling Left Front has not abandoned them.

The worst affected South 24 Parganas’ district administration has set up over 250 relief camps to accommodate those who have lost their home and hearth to high speed winds and high tides in the Sunderbans delta area.

The Chief Minister asked the victims not to worry about their lost homes, and promised them that money to rebuild homes would be made available within a few days time.

Bhattacharjee has assured that 57 tonne of dry food would be dispatched to the district expeditiously.

He advised the victims in the camp to keep an eye on their children and ensure that all got proper food. The rest, he said would be taken care of by the government. By Ajitha Menon (ANI)

Former Himachal chief minister eyeing ministerial berth

Shimla, May 26 (IANS) The Congress’ lone Lok Sabha MP from Himachal Pradesh Virbhadra Singh, 74, Tuesday pitched himself for a ministerial berth in the new government saying he had put in decades of hard work for the party.

“I am a sincere party worker. For the past many decades, I stood with the party… will remain sincere with it. If the high command feels that my services are required in the central ministry, they can ask me… otherwise I have no problem,” Singh told IANS on phone from Delhi.

Singh, who was a cabinet minister in the Indira Gandhi government in 1980, said: “The party told me to contest the parliamentary elections, I contested it and helped party win that seat.”

“If the party wants to use my experience, it is okay. I am happy with any role the Congress chooses for me,” said Singh, whose supporters are upset over the elevation of Rajya Sabha member from the state Anand Sharma to the cabinet level.

Sources close to him said he was hoping for a cabinet berth and was unhappy when he did not get the call during the first round of swearing in of ministers Friday.

Sharma and Singh are adversaries in state politics and the former is believed to be close to Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

Popularly known as ‘Raja Saab’, Singh, who was the chief minister of the hill state five times, contested the Lok Sabha polls after a gap of 29 years.

Himachal Congress chief Kaul Singh Thakur said that it was the prerogative of the prime minister to select his cabinet.

Leader of the opposition in state assembly Vidya Stokes also echoed similar views.

“It’s the decision of the party high command (to allot berth in union ministry),” she said.

Stokes, who does not enjoy cordial relations with Singh, is a close confidante of Sonia Gandhi. She too advocated for the elevation of Anand Sharma.

The Congress only managed one of the four seats with Singh winning the Mandi seat by a margin of over 13,000 votes.

A former state cabinet minister said on condition of anonymity: “Singh is fighting a ’survival battle’ now. He has vast experience and is one of the seniormost MPs, having been elected first time as back as 1962.”

“If he is marginalised, it will demoralise the party cadre,” the leader said.

Gujarat to seek Sri Lanka’s help in setting up resorts

Gandhinagar, May 24 (IANS) Gujarat will shortly contact Sri Lanka following its offer of assistance to set up resorts along the state’s 1,600-km coastline.

“At the Vibrant Gujarat summit in January, Sri Lankan officials had offered to help us set up resorts on the Saurashtra-Kutch coastline on a public private partnership (PPP) model,” a senior state tourism department official said.

However, according to him, two developments delayed any progress: Sri Lanka’s preoccupation with the offensive against Tamil rebels, and the Lok Sabha polls in India.

Gujarat’s tourism department officials had reportedly been told at the summit that Sri Lankan entrepreneurs were best equipped to help the state develop resorts on a PPP model given their long experience in developing such resorts in the island nation.

Following this, Gujarat too had shown an interest in inviting investment from Sri Lankan entrepreneurs to develop hotels and motels on the national highway on the Saurashtra coast connecting Jamnagar with Porbander.

“We are following up on the offers made by companies or individual entrepreneurs during the summit,” the tourism department official said.

Sikhs celebrate Manmohan’s premiership in Jammu-Kashmir

Jammu, May 24 (IANS) Two days after Manmohan Singh was sworn in as prime minister, massive celebrations were witnessed in the gurudwaras here Sunday.

Sikh youth danced to the drum beats and others distributed sweets to mark the celebrations, hailing a Sikh becoming prime minister for the second time. Manmohan Singh was sworn in as prime minister Friday.

The biggest celebrations were witnessed outside Digiana Gurudwara, where Manmohan Singh paid his obeisance in December when he came to campaign for the assembly polls in the state.

“He paid obeisance at this gurudwara and sought blessings. He became the prime minister again because of that,” said Avtar Singh Khalsa, a Sikh leader.

He said: “We are extremely delighted.”

Congress legislator Raman Bhalla, who participated in the celebrations, thanked the Sikh community for supporting the Congress in the Lok Sabha polls.

He said Manmohan Singh sent a strong signal to the people of Jammu and Kashmir by inducting Ghulam Nabi Azad into the central ministry. Azad, a former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, is a Rajya Sabha member from the state.

People consider RJD-LJP alliance opportunistic: Raghuvansh

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): Having faced an embarrassing drubbing in the recently held Lok Sabha polls, Rashtriya Janata Dal on Wednesday admitted that the pre-poll tie up with Ram Vilas Paswan’s Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) proved a wrong move during elections.

“People of Bihar rejected the RJD-LJP alliance because they considered it as an opportunist alliance. The break up of the Congress-RJD alliance did not help our poll fortunes,” said Raghuvansh Prasad, while reacting to a question over the RJD-LJP alliance.

While reacting to the question of his joining the Cabinet, Raghuvansh said, “It is up to my people to decide whether I would be joining the Cabinet or not.

RJD and Lok Janshakti who formed the Fourth Front, distancing themselves from the UPA alliance to go all alone in the LS elections failed to put up a good show against the National Democratic alliance.

BJP-led NDA captured 32 of the 40 seats in Bihar, a success widely being credited to the good development work done by chief minister Nitish Kumar in the State.

Lalu Prasad Yadav lost to friend-turned-foe Ranjan Yadav of Janata Dal – United in the prestigious Pataliputra seat by a margin of over 30,000 votes.

But he survived by a thing margin defeating BJP’s Rajiv Pratap Rudy in Saran constituency.

Whereas LJP’s supreme Ram Vilas Paswan lost to JD (U)’s Ram Sundar Das by a margin of over 37,000 votes in Hajipur constituency. (ANI)