Tag: BJP

  • BJP will stop ‘Love Jihad’, cow smuggling in Bengal if voted to power: Yogi at Malda rally

    By PTI
    MALDA: Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Tuesday lambasted his West Bengal counterpart Mamata Banerjee for allegedly pursuing appeasement politics and endangering national security by allowing illegal immigrants into the state for vote bank politics.

    He promised that cow smuggling will be stopped within a day if the BJP is voted to power in the state.

    Claiming that West Bengal, which had once led the nation, is now facing a lawless situation, Adityanath, while addressing a rally in Malda district’s Gazole, alleged that incidents of ‘Love Jihad’ are happening in the state, but the TMC government has failed to stop them.

    “Appeasement politics for the sake of vote bank has endangered the security of not only West Bengal but also of the country. The TMC government has a problem with refugees getting citizenship but has no issue with illegal immigrants coming to the state,” Adityanath said.

    Claiming that the raising of ‘Jai Shri Ram’ slogan is not allowed in West Bengal, Adityanath said that the people of the state will give a befitting reply to the TMC government for “playing with their religious sentiments”.

    “Jai Shri Ram slogan is not allowed in West Bengal, but people won’t allow this to continue. ‘Love Jihad’ incidents are happening in Bengal. In Uttar Pradesh, we have made a law to stop such incidents but the TMC government has failed to stop both cow smuggling and ‘Love Jihad’,” he said.

    “If the BJP is voted to power in West Bengal, we will stop cow smuggling within 24 hours,” he added.

    Elections to the 294-member assembly will be held in eight phases between March 27 and April 29.

  • With ISF’s entry into poll fray, identity politics gain ground in Bengal

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: With the stage set for a high- octane assembly election in West Bengal, key stakeholders said the state will witness a communally charged electoral battle with fairly large doses of identity politics for the first time since Independence.

    In West Bengal, where the electoral discourse hitherto steered clear of divisive religious propaganda, the BJP and the ruling TMC are locked in a fierce polarising debate, accusing each other of fanning communal sentiments ahead of elections.

    Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, who is facing the toughest election in her long political career, has set off an “insider-outsider” debate, calling the BJP a party from Gujarat and stoking “Bengali pride”.

    The entry of the newly formed Indian Secular Front (ISF) led by Abbas Siddiqui, who became the first religious leader in West Bengal to take the political plunge, has upturned several political equations and added fuel to the campaign of religious identity-based politics in the state.

    “This time, assembly elections will be different from the ones we have witnessed since independence. The BJP has long been trying to create divisions among the communities. But we will fight against it and work to unite people,” senior TMC leader and MP Sougata Roy said.

    The BJP leadership, too, agreed that communal polarisation was on the rise in the state, but blamed appeasement politics by the TMC for it.

    “For us the election plank happens to be ‘development for all’. That said, appeasement politics and injustice towards the state’s majority community by the TMC government has indeed led to communal polarisation in Bengal,” BJP state president Dilip Ghosh said.

    Echoing him, BJP leader Tathagata Roy said Partition scars and the upswing of Muslim identity politics in Bengal have deepened the communal fault lines.

    The opposition Congress, on its part, trained guns on both the TMC and the BJP for fomenting divisive politics — a practice almost alien to the state’s political culture.

    CPI(M) politburo member Mohammed Salim, however, stressed that the narrative wouldn’t yield any result as the masses are “fed up with the misrule” of the TMC and the BJP at the state and the Centre respectively.

    “Had communal narrative been at play in the past (during CPI-M rule), people would have seen the saffron camp and other fundamentalist forces gaining ground back then. But that was not the case. True, this time parties are playing the communal card, but issues concerning common people such as fuel price hike, corruption and unemployment will negate its influence to a large extent,” he said.

    Elections in Bengal, poised to be a stiff contest between the TMC and the BJP, will be held in eight phases, beginning with polling for 30 seats on March 27.

    Votes will be counted on May 2.

    Since Independence, polls in the state, which boasts of being the cradle of the Indian renaissance, have always been fought along ideological lines, with matters related to government policies, unemployment and food security taking centre stage.

    Sources in the BJP claimed that the TMC government’s failure to control communal riots over the last six years has angered not just a section of the minorities, but also those belonging to the majority community.

    According to the data released by the Union home ministry in 2018, communal violence increased sharply since 2015 in West Bengal.

    The state had recorded 27 incidents of communal violence in 2015 which went up to 58 in 2017.

    Although opposition parties pinned the blame on the TMC for this surge in religious aggression and intolerance in the state, which has 30 per cent Muslim electorate, a quick look at Bengal’s socio-political history will reflect how communalism has always had an impact on its political culture, beginning with the trauma of Partition.

    Both the Hindu right and fringe Muslim outfits had wielded considerable influence in violence-hit West Bengal in the aftermath of Partition, before waning considerably over the years.

    During the first assembly polls in 1952, the Hindu Mahasabha, along with Bharatiya Jana Sangh, had won 13 seats and garnered around eight per cent of the total votes.

    Later, Jana Sangh’s influence ebbed, as it ended up with only one seat in 1967 and 1971 elections.

    Similarly, Muslim outfits such as the Progressive Muslim League (PML) and the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) had established its presence in some pockets, with the PML winning three seats in 1969 assembly polls, and IUML bagging a single seat during 1972 and 1977 elections.

    “Although parties like the IUML, PML and the Bharatiya Jana Sangh managed to bag a few seats till the seventies, poll campaigns did not bank on communal narrative. Development issues and anti-state or anti-Centre plank always took precedence,” veteran Congress leader Abdul Mannan Said.

    During the early sixties, however, the rise of the Left parties, who fought for the rights of refugees from Bangladesh, ended the consolidation of right wing forces in the state.

    Noted Historian Sugata Bose contended that refugees from Bangladesh felt cheated both by the Congress and the Hindu Mahasabha when the country endured Partition, and they took solace in the Left’s fold.

    “Refugees from Bangladesh and Bengali Muslims were more aligned to the Left. Therefore, the communal rhetoric never gained momentum in Bengal. The state never witnessed such divisive politics as is the practice now,” Bose, Gardiner Professor of oceanic history at Harvard University, told PTI.

    Poll observers believe that the Left had been able to maintain a balance between communities, which the TMC could not do.

    “Bengal always had the ingredients fit for polarising its society. Not just the state’s high minority population, the influx of refugees from Bangladesh — both during 1947 Partition and 1971 Liberation war – have also been a major factor,” political analyst Biswanath Chakraborty said.

    The politically influential Matuas and Namashudras, who fled Bangladesh due to religious persecution, voted for the Left for decades, before shifting lock stock and barrel to the BJP during the last Lok Sabha polls, following the promise of citizenship under the newly amended citizenship law.

    The TMC feels the ISF’s entry into Bengal’s poll arena will further deepen the divide and help the BJP by eating into the ruling party’s Muslim vote base.

    “The ISF may not win seats but will widen the communal divide further. It could cause harm to the TMC by cutting into our Muslim votes and further pushing the Hindus towards the BJP,” a senior leader of the Mamata Banerjee camp said.

    BJP leader Tathagatha Roy said the assertion of Muslim identity in Bengal politics, a new concept, will consolidate Hindu votes.

    Siddiqui, however, said he has entered politics to fight for the rights of the minorities and backward communities, a cause which the mainstream political parties have neglected so far.

    The BJP, apart from the development plank, has been harping on the issue of illegal immigration and the promise of citizenship to refugees, whereas the TMC has been largely focusing on the insider-outsider debate to take on the saffron camp.

  • BJP MP Nand Kumar Singh Chauhan dies of COVID complications

    By Express News Service
    BHOPAL: The BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh lost its first sitting parliamentarian due to COVID-19 related complications, as six-time BJP Lok Sabha member and former state party president Nand Kumar Singh Chauhan passed away on Monday late night.

    Popularly known as ‘Nandu Bhaiya’, 68-year-old Chauhan was the sitting MP from Khandwa-Burhanpur seat of MP’s Malwa-Nimar region. He died at Medanta Hospital in Delhi-NCR after battling for life on ventilator support for around a month.

    He was airlifted to Delhi after his condition worsened while under treatment in Bhopal on February 5.

    Saddened by the demise of Lok Sabha MP from Khandwa Shri Nandkumar Singh Chauhan Ji. He will be remembered for his contributions to Parliamentary proceedings, organisational skills and efforts to strengthen the BJP across Madhya Pradesh. Condolences to his family. Om Shanti.
    — Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) March 2, 2021

    A BJP veteran, Chauhan had won from his native Khandwa-Burhanpur seat in the parliament’s lower house six times between 1996 and 2019, except in 2009 when he lost to Congress’s Arun Yadav.

    He also served as MP BJP president once as well as the state BJP general secretary six times.

    Expressing grief at Chauhan’s death, PM Narendra Modi tweeted, “Saddened by the demise of Lok Sabha MP from Khandwa Shri Nandkumar Singh Chauhan Ji. He will be remembered for his contributions to Parliamentary proceedings, organisational skills and efforts to strengthen the BJP across Madhya Pradesh. Condolences to his family. Om Shanti.”

    Mourning the parliamentarian’s death, state chief minister CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan described the tragedy as a personal loss. “In Nandu Bhaiya, the people have lost their sevak, the state its leader, the party an able organiser and I’ve lost a brother. He was a bridge between party’s older and young generation, as he groomed under tall leaders like Kushabhau Thakre, Rajmata Vijaya Raje Scindia and Sunderlal Patwa.”

    आदरणीय नंदू भैया लोकप्रिय जननेता, कुशल संगठक, सफल प्रशासक थे। जनता दिलोजान से उन्हें प्यार करती थी। हमने प्रयास बहुत किये, लेकिन हम उन्हें बचा नहीं सके।आज उनका पार्थिव शरीर पहले हम भोपाल लायेंगे और बाद में उनके गांव शाहपुर ले जाया जायेगा, जहां उनका अंतिम संस्कार होगा। pic.twitter.com/Guu6jXYRR5
    — Shivraj Singh Chouhan (@ChouhanShivraj) March 2, 2021

    Former MP CM and current state Congress president Kamal Nath and BJP Rajya Sabha member Jyotiraditya Scindia also condoled Chauhan’s demise.

  • Meet and treat party supporters and opponents alike: Nadda to BJP workers

    By PTI
    LUCKNOW: BJP national president J P Nadda on Monday urged party workers and leaders in Varanasi to visit not only party supporters but also its opponents and stand by them in their hours of grief.

    Nadda gave the advice saying this gesture would strengthen the party at the booth level.

    The BJP chief was addressing the party workers on the second day of his two-day tour to Varanasi during which he also visited the Kashi Vishwanath Temple and paid his obeisance to the deity there.

    “The BJP contests polls on its organisational strength and its strength is its booth level workers. It is the booth level workers who take the schemes of the Centre and state government to the last man,” Nadda said.

    He also asked party workers to treat the party supporters and opponents similarly, participate in their moments of happiness and stand by them in their hours of grief.

    Nadda said under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India is continuously moving ahead on the path of development.

    In a statement issued here on Monday, the UP BJP said Nadda also visited the residence of a booth president, Rajesh Yadav, and had snacks with him and his family members and thanked them all.

  • BJP likely to release first list of candidates for upcoming Assembly polls in first week of March

    By ANI
    NEW DELHI: Bhartiya Janta Party’s Central Election Committee (CEC) is likely to meet in the first week of March to decide the candidates’ list for the upcoming assembly polls in four states and one Union Territory.

    According to sources, BJP is likely to announce its first list for the state assembly election in the first week of March after the CEC’s meeting. The meeting is likely to take place on March 4.

    BJP’s CEC consists of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, BJP national party president Jagat Prakash Nadda, Home Minister Amit Shah, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan and others.

    The election for the states of West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala and Puducherry were announced last Friday by the Election Commission of India (ECI).

    The terms of legislative assemblies of four states Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala and West Bengal are coming to an end in May and June. In Puducherry, President’s rule has been imposed and the assembly is kept under suspended animation after the former Chief Minister of Puducherry V Narayanasamy-led Congress government resigned earlier this week ahead of a vote of confidence in the parliament.

    Assam has 126 Members in its Legislative Assembly, West Bengal has 294, Tamil Nadu has 234, Kerala has 140 and Puducherry has 33 seats (30 elected and 3 nominated by Centre).

    As per the schedule, West Bengal State Assembly elections will be in eight-phases, while Assam will be voting in three phases.Assembly elections in Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Puducherry will be held in a single phase on April 6. Counting of votes for all four states and one Union Territory will take place on May 2.

  • Mamata will be out of power on May 2: Shivraj Singh Chouhan

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan asserted on Sunday that the BJP will win the upcoming assembly elections in West Bengal, and Mamata Banerjee will lose her chief ministership on May 2 — the day the votes will be counted.

    Offering puja at the Dakshineswar Temple on the banks of the Hooghly on the northern fringes of Kolkata, Chouhan said he prayed for a violence-free Bengal.

    “After the misrule by Congress and CPI(M), resulting in Bengal’s decline over the years, the state of affairs touched a new bottom with cut money and corruption culture during Trinamool Congress’s rule. People of the state want a change and will bring BJP to power this time,” he told reporters.

    “On May 2, Didi (Mamata Banerjee) will be out of power and BJP will replace her,” he added.

    Accompanied by a few BJP leaders, Chouhan visited the 19th-century temple around 11 am.

    “This place is associated with Ramakrishna Paramahamsa and Maa Sarada. This is also the land of Swami Vivekananda. Visiting this place brings in a divine feeling,” the Madhya Pradesh chief minister said.

    Chouhan alleged that 130 BJP activists were killed in the state in the last few years.

    “Their sacrifices will not go in vain,” he said. Chouhan, like several other BJP chief ministers and Union ministers, was visiting the state to campaign for the party ahead of the upcoming assembly elections.

    The Trinamool Congress slammed Chouhan’s comments, stating that they were baseless allegations.

    “Can you imagine someone visiting the temple of Maa Kali to make a political statement? This is only possible for the BJP,” state minister and senior TMC leader Firhad Hakim said.

  • Grand alliance won’t have to poach MLAs to form govt in Assam: Estranged ally’s jibe at BJP

    Express News Service
    GUWAHATI: Taking a jibe at the BJP, its estranged ally Bodoland People’s Front (BPF), which joined the Congress-led grand alliance of opposition parties on Saturday, said party conglomerate will be able to form the next government in Assam without having to poach MLAs from other parties.

    “We will form the next government without ‘borrowing’ MLAs. You have seen it in BTC (Bodoland Territorial Council) elections. MLAs were kidnapped and taken to Shillong and Hotel Lily in Guwahati,” insurgent leader-turned-politician and BPF president Hagrama Mohilary said on Sunday at a joint press conference of the grand alliance.

    Exuding confidence that the coalition will get absolute majority in the upcoming Assam Assembly elections, he said it would drive out the ruling BJP and save the state.

    ​ALSO READ | Congress-led Grand Alliance expanded in Assam with inclusion of BPF, RJD

    “We need 65 (64) seats (in the 126-member House) to form the government. Our target is to win 70 seats,” Mohilary said and wanted to continue but was interrupted by state Congress chief Ripun Bora, who said, “We have already asserted that our goal is to win 101 seats). The BJP has also set a goal of winning 100 plus seats together with allies Asom Gana Parishad and United People’s Party Liberal (UPPL). 

    “We strongly believe we can work together for peace, progress and unity. We will fight the elections together,” Mohilary added.

    ALSO READ | Will Tejashwi Yadav make any impact in Assam and Bengal?

    The other components of the grand alliance are minority-based All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF), CPI, CPM, CPI-ML and regional Anchalik Gana Morcha. This is for the first time that Congress and AIUDF have forged an alliance between them. It was always resisted by former Chief Minister the late Tarun Gogoi of the Congress for the fear of a possible setback in the Assamese-majority Upper and Northern Assam areas where a strong sentiment of Assamese sub-nationalism works.

    Despite its alliance with the BPF in the three-party Assam government, the BJP had not tied up with the former in the BTC elections in December last year. When the polls had thrown up a fractured mandate, it forged a post-poll alliance with the UPPL. The two parties together with Gana Shakti Party had formed the council. Later, the Congress’s lone elected member and another from the BPF joined the BJP.

    The BPF had won 17 of the 40 seats in the BTC to emerge as the single largest party, followed by UPPL 12 and BJP nine. The BTC administers four districts in Bodoland Territorial Region.

    The elections in Assam will be held in three phases starting from March 27, then April 1 and April 6. 

  • BJP remembers garlanding statue on Chandrasekhar Azad’s death anniversary

    Bharatiya Janata Party Dhamtari City Board garlanded the statue of Veer Chandrasekhar Azad at Azad Chowk in Kostapara Ward on the death anniversary of freedom fighter martyr Veer Chandrashekhar Azad. On this occasion, Dhamtari City Divisional President Vijay Sahu and Divisional General Secretary Akhilesh Sonkar threw light on the biography of Azad. Akhilesh Sonkar said that Chandrasekhar Azad was born on 23 July 1906 and the martyr was born on 27 February 1931 in Allahabad, Azad always used to say “the enemy’s bullets, we will face, we are free, we will remain free”. He, along with revolutionary companions Bhagat Singh and Ramprasad Bismil, blew the trumpet of revolution in the country, Lala Lajpat Rai’s death was avenged by shooting English bulls in Lahore. Chandrashekhar Azad, together with Mahatma Gandhi, worked for the country’s independence. Mahatma Gandhi’s non-cooperation movement came to an abrupt halt in 1922. This led to a change in Chandrasekhar Azad’s idea and adopt revolutionary ideology. On this occasion, the District Communications Head, Shridutt Upadhyay, Divisional President Vijay Sahu, General Secretary Akhilesh Sonkar, BJYM President Vijay Motwani, Amrit Sahu, Mithilesh Sinha, Hemant Banjare, Avinash Dubey, Chirag Atha, Ajit Sahu, Neil Patel, Vinod Rao, Shivnarayan Chota , Vishnu Sinha, Dhanesh Tiwari, Chandrakala Patel, Rukmani Sonkar, Ajay Meenpal, Ward Councilor Rahi Narayan Yadav, Kailash Sonkar, Kailash Sahu, Abhishek Sharma, Ballu Chhata, Shivam Sahu etc. were present.

  • Mamata Banerjee’s COVID jab request ahead of polls dubbed ‘smart move’, could paint BJP in a corner

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee recently wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking his help to procure Covid-19 vaccines so that everyone can be inoculated free of cost before the assembly elections, a ‘smart’ move that political analysts say is aimed at cornering the BJP ahead of assembly polls.  

    “The Centre’s decision to make vaccines available at some private hospitals gives a clear hint that it would not be able to give free vaccines to all. The CM wants to put pressure on the BJP government at the Centre on this issue ahead of the polls,’’ said an official at the state secretariat. According to TMC sources, the Centre’s inability to give Bengal adequate volume of vaccines would become the ruling party’s weapon to target the BJP. 

    ALSO READ | Bengal assembly elections: Poll strategists of BJP camp shift base to Kolkata

    “In a video conference just before vaccination started, the CM had made it clear to the PM that the state wanted to buy vaccines and give them for free to the common people. Initially, the BJP was trying to cash in on vaccination claiming the Centre has fast-tracked the process to keep people safe from the virus. Now the CM’s request is bound to put the Modi government in a quandary because their inability to provide vaccines in adequate numbers will be exploited by the TMC ahead of the elections, which can damage the BJP,” said a TMC leader.

    Mamata in her letter said that the people will be forced to go to the polling stations without any vaccination coverage if free of cost immunisation is not done ahead of elections. So far, about 2 lakh health workers and doctors have been administered jabs in the state. Another 2 lakh frontline workers, including police personnel, are being given vaccines in the second phase.

  • PM doesn’t have time to meet farmers: Chidambaram slams Modi government

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Senior Congress leader P Chidambaram on Saturday attacked the government over the ongoing farmers’ protest, saying the reward to the farm sector for growing at 3.9 per cent in a recession year is to treat the protesting farmers as if they are enemies of the state.

    He asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi why did he not travel 20 km to talk to the protesting farmers sitting on Delhi’s borders, even though he was travelling to Kerala and Assam.

    “The reward to the farm sector for growing at 3.9% in a recession year is to treat the protesting farmers as if they were enemies of the state,” the Congress leader said in a tweet in Hindi.

    “The PM travels from Kerala to Assam but does not have the time or inclination to travel 20 kms to meet the farmers on the border of Delhi,” he added.

    The former finance minister, in another tweet, said the government will still claim that it has doubled the income of the farmers and all farmers get MSP when the truth is only “six per cent of farmers are able to sell food grains on minimum support price”.

    Farmers are sitting at Delhi’s borders since November last year in protest against the three new farm laws and are demanding their repeal.

    They have also held several rounds of talks with the government, which has proposed to put the three laws on hold for 1-1.5 years.