Keshav Prasad Maurya: 'UP is not a hard state, tough only with criminals'Premium Story

The Indian Express | 2 days ago | 29-05-2023 | 11:45 am

Keshav Prasad Maurya: 'UP is not a hard state, tough only with criminals'Premium Story

Uttar Pradesh Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya on BJP’s continuing popularity in the state, Atiq Ahmed’s killing, bulldozer politics, caste and the Opposition. The session was moderated by Senior Editor Shyamlal Yadav.Shyamlal Yadav: You have been the Deputy Chief Minister for the longest time. As a first-generation minister who has worked hard to get here, how do you look at the BJP in UP?We got 52 per cent of the votes and were victorious in 64 Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh. Now, after winning Rampur and Azamgarh Lok Sabha constituencies, we have added two more seats. In 2022, we were able to win 271 Vidhan Sabha constituencies with the help of our alliance partners.We are deepening our contact with people and ensuring prompt service delivery, having started a Gram Chaupal where we are trying to dispose of all complaints at the local level only. So far, we have held such chaupals in over 17,000 villages and disposed of over 1.22 lakh complaints.Shyamlal Yadav: But in the recently-held urban local body elections —considering that BJP has always done well in the cities — you have lost 80 per cent of Nagar Panchayat member seats, 65 per cent of Nagar Panchayat Adhyaksh seats, 75 per cent of Nagar Palika Parishad member seats and 55 per cent of Nagar Palika Parishad Adhyaksh seats.Your numbers are wrong. We won 89 of the 199 Nagar Palika seats and with allies, that figure is now 91 seats. But if you look at other seats, you need to compare the tally with how many seats the Opposition, namely the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), the Samajwadi Party (SP) and the Congress won. Generally, Nagar Palika and Nagar Panchayat elections are not fought on the basis of parties but issues. But the political atmosphere is such today that we are at a number one position in UP.Though we are accused of ‘bulldozer politics’, it’s not like we’ve cleared massive plots of land. Many complaints are being made, we investigate and in cases of wrong-doing, give back the poor their dues and what they deserveShyamlal Yadav: Isn’t gangster-politician Atiq Ahmed’s murder a challenge for the government?Atiq and his brother Ashraf were big criminals. The government had ensured their cases were put in fast-track courts and they were very close to capital punishment. From the government’s and my personal point of view, the killing should not have happened. A Special Investigation Team (SIT) is looking into the incident and all the murderers have been arrested. They will also be subjected to a narco-analysis test to get to the truth and be given a quick and stern punishment.Shyamlal Yadav: You have popularised your initiative to get Rs 35 lakh crore investment into UP. Have you been able to attract investment to other places in UP than just Noida?Investment proposals have come in for the districts of Bundelkhand, Purvanchal and Rohilkhand where nobody showed any interest earlier. Also this time, the investors are not leaving the projects midway as various departments have formed new policies to facilitate them. Our policies are better than other states because we are employing the Gujarat or the Modi model.From the government’s and my point of view, Atiq’s killing should not have happened. The SIT is looking into the incident and the murderers have been arrested. There will be a narco-analysis test and there will be a quick and stern punishmentP Vaidyanathan Iyer: Employment is a challenge as the Government can’t give a lot of jobs. Of course, they are receiving several facilities from the government but is joblessness causing societal issues?No government can give jobs to everybody. But we are providing opportunities because of which the state’s youth are doing well. There is no dearth of opportunities here. The results of Aatmanirbhar Bharat and the relief package announced post-Covid have begun to be visible on the ground. Small businesses can choose from the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) or Startup India initiative. Even smaller businesses can choose the PM Svanidhi Yojana. For example, if someone goes to a bank with an Aadhaar card, seeking a loan for a vegetable stall, they will get it without any guarantee. Talented youth can opt for start-ups. They should venture into new areas. The government is ready to train them and provide them with requisite infrastructure. UP is now an education hub with several reputed institutions like IIT and NIT present. We want to build one university in each commissionerate. The government has everything for every stratum. This is the advantage of having a double-engine government. We are witnessing several admissions today because there is an encouraging atmosphere.My father was a small farmer and we lived in a kachcha house. We aspired to save every penny to build a small room for relatives and guests to sit in. This was a desire of not just my family but every poor family. More than four crore houses have been provided under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, and in UP itself we have provided 60 lakh houses under this scheme. We also offer some foundational support by way of a toilet, gas connection and a power supply under the Awas Yojana. UP is number one in implementing Har Ghar Nal Yojana. When I was young, my father fell sick and we had no money to treat him. So we mortgaged our one-acre land for Rs 5,000 to a neighbouring family to get money for his treatment. After he recovered, we repaid our mortgage and got back our land. Today, poor families are given an Ayushman Bharat card with a Rs 5 lakh health cover.Vandita Mishra: Is there a limit to a hard state in a democracy? Section 144 is imposed at many places, and for long periods, in UP. There are frequent encounters and the use of bulldozers. Is their any conversation within your government on the need to rework policy and image?Replace the word hard state with good governance. We are tough only with criminals. The land mafia has captured several acres in rural areas by terrorising the poor and claiming they are the henchmen of the SP, ministers of the BSP or leaders of the Congress. Being a minister doesn’t mean you can capture someone’s land. If someone is found guilty after investigations and is subjected to legal proceedings, then you cannot use the term bulldozer government. Vacating illegal occupants of lands is good governance, not strictness. If you ask any common villager, they would tell you how during the rule of the SP government, they would be jailed or beaten up for accusing an SP leader of wrongdoing. This doesn’t happen today; we investigate a complaint and undertake legal proceedings. Ever since we have taken over, there hasn’t been a riot in UP. In Ayodhya, the Lord Ram Janmabhoomi dispute went on for 500 years. But after the Supreme Court’s judgment, the temple is being built peacefully.Shyamlal Yadav: More than half of the state universities in UP have been built by former chief ministers Akhilesh Yadav, Mayawati and Hemwati Nandan Bahuguna. Seventeen of the 75 districts were carved out by Mayawati. The BJP was never known for this kind of work. It is good that you have subjected Atiq Ahmed and Mukhtar Ansari to legal proceedings but why target Azam Khan, who was about to finish building a university?We are building universities in all 18 mandals of the state and sanctioned funds. Work has begun at many places and we are trying to complete it soon. Yadav has a problem of putting a stamp on everything, saying that he had announced it during his term. If you have built something when you were in government, then call it yours. They only got 47 seats in the Assembly elections in 2017 because you cannot escape the scrutiny of the people. Good work has happened and is still happening in our time.I’ll put it simply: Some people who didn’t get a BJP, SP or BSP ticket may have decided to pick up the broom. That’s not AAP’s win. That’s an accidental win. AAP has no future in the state and the countrySandeep Dwivedi: Brij Bhushan Singh, an MP of your party, has been accused of sexual harassment. The police investigation is not progressing and the party has also not issued a statement about this.Sportspersons are the pride of the country. A committee formed by the Sports Ministry is investigating the allegations and a police case has also been registered. It’s not appropriate for me to say who is right or wrong because the investigations are going on and the issue is of national import. I don’t think anything needs to be said. But sports is priority as under the guidance of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath, we have organised a Sansad Khel Mahakumbh, which is grooming talent from rural areas.Harikishan Sharma: The UP CM has two Deputy CMs, probably because of the large size of the state. Do you think a big state like UP requires a full-time Home Minister to look after the law and order situation?UP’s law and order situation is much better than what it was 15 years ago due to the leadership of Yogi Adityanath. The common man is not scared, only the mafia is. You can witness Ram Rajya in UP today. The question of a full-time Home Minister is one that only the CM can look into.Harikishan Sharma: The BJP peaked during your tenure as the state unit president. Since then, its performance has been going down. You got 10 lesser seats during the 2019 general elections. The voter turnout in the recent byelections and municipal elections was low too. In your constituency, Prayagraj, only 30 per cent turned out. Does this bother you?I’d like to correct you. In the 2019 general elections, we got more votes than in 2014. Our aim for 2024 is to win all 80 Lok Sabha seats in UP under the leadership of Narendra Modi. In Vidhan Sabha too, our voters didn’t leave us; our voteshare increased by two per cent compared to the previous Vidhan Sabha elections. Both the BSP and Congress vote shifted to the SP. However, the low voter turnout in the civic body elections is definitely a matter of concern.The Election Commission should also do something so that people understand it is their responsibility to vote. They consider this a right but it’s a responsibility as well. People ask for rights but don’t often stick to them and do their duty.As we are to celebrate nine years of the BJP government on May 30, we are planning to rally our workers, visit every person on the electoral roll, do home visits and ask them to vote.Deeptiman Tiwary: There are allegations that your method of improving law and order is selective. People say Mukhtar Ansari and Atiq Ahmed were heavily prosecuted by the UP police and the Enforcement Directorate while some politicians in Purvanchal, Jaunpur or Banaras have a free hand. What’s your response to this criticism?No matter who the criminal is, he will be prosecuted. He has no caste or party. I read in The Indian Express that the Enforcement Directorate’s strike rate is 98 per cent. It’s not suitable to question an organisation with that success rate. The fact is that our critics want older cases of corruption to be forgiven. But with us, there’s no discrimination or bias that takes place.Jatin Anand: The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) says that politics in UP is changing with people now supporting the Delhi model of development. What about the AAP’s performance in the municipal election?The BJP was, is and will be number one. The man, who pretends to be innocent, will have to answer severe accusations of corruption. Yet he says he wears a shirt, pant, keeps a broken pen in his pocket, a muffler around his neck. I’ll put it simply: Some people who didn’t get a BJP or SP or BSP ticket may have decided to pick up the broom. That’s not AAP’s win. That’s an accidental win. AAP has no future in the state and the country.Shyamlal Yadav: Do you think a caste census should happen before the general election?I’m not against a caste census. Those parties who want it should be fair to all their members first. The BJP should congratulate Mallikarjun Khargeji because nobody was able to become the Congress president outside the Gandhi family. Regardless of the caste question, we want every person in society to get education, representation and respect. In India, if anyone is responsible for giving respect to OBCs, it’s Narendra Modi. Did the Congress ever make any backward caste/class person the Prime Minister? They can’t because it’s not in their nature. They just want to set an election agenda.Shyamlal Yadav: There were reports of tension between you and Yogi Adityanath in the first tenure of this government. How is it this time?This is Opposition propaganda. We are very friendly, work together as a team and deliver good results. Even in the Nagar Palika and Nagar panchayat elections, people are voting for the party.Shyamlal Yadav: Your defeat in the Sirathu Assembly seat was like CB Gupta’s in 1957 and that of Kamalapati Tripathi’s in 1967. What went wrong?The party leadership doesn’t fight an election on one seat. In UP, for example, we were contesting in 403 seats. And I could give my Vidhan Sabha seat just 1.5 days. Whether you’re a minister or state leader, the voter doesn’t care. He just thinks, this is Keshav ji, he sat and drank with us, today he doesn’t have time to even ask for votes. In 1.5 days, you can’t cover a Vidhan Sabha constituency. That’s what happened.Shyamlal Yadav: UP has become an exporter of unskilled labour due to poverty and unemployment. Your government announced a migration commission during Covid. Can’t you change the situation where people from other states come to UP for work instead?We have the labour data on the basis of which the commission has tabulated who has what skill sets. Accordingly, we are relocating them to projects where they can get an opportunity. We have been able to empower women with over 1.2 crore of them getting jobs and livelihood. We have launched platforms for skill development. We have every kind of manpower and talent, what we need is motivation and hard work. Young people won’t idle away anymore but work 10 hours.Alind Chauhan: The NCRB released a report in 2021 that more than 13,000 cases of violence against Dalits were filed in 2020. The three accused in the rape of a Dalit girl in Hathras have been acquitted.Punishment or acquittal is the court’s work. Filing a chargesheet is police work. We want to ensure that no crime happens. If it does, it is not hidden. If the accused are convicted, prosecute them. If not, let them be.Deeptiman Tiwary: Your government said it would table the report on the 1980 Moradabad riots in the Vidhan Sabha. But the riot-hit have died and legal proceedings are difficult now. What can this report achieve except reopen old wounds?We weren’t in government at the time. If there was a report, the then government should have come out with it but they hid it. Because the majority of those killed were Hindus and belonged to Scheduled Castes, it’s our responsibility to tell the truth.Vandita Mishra: Even Nitish Kumar pulled Bihar out from jungle raj. But he didn’t need a bulldozer, did he?Though we are accused of “bulldozer politics”, it’s not like we’ve cleared massive plots of land. Even now, many complaints are being made, we investigate and in cases of wrong-doing, give back the poor their dues and what they deserve.Shyamlal Yadav: As per an Indian Express investigation, senior officers and some BJP leaders bought land in Ayodhya surrounding the Ram Janmabhoomi after the Supreme Court verdict. Why is no action being taken on the report?The inquiry report is with the government and under consideration. If any official is found to have violated rules and bought land by misusing their authority, they will certainly face action.

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Bad blood between Cong, TMC flares on heels of uneasy truce
The Indian Express | 53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am

Days after West Bengal Chief Minister and Trinamool Congress (TMC) supremo Mamata Banerjee extended an olive branch to the Congress while offering her support to the party in its strongholds for the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, the fraught relationship between the two parties got more strained after the Congress’s lone Bengal MLA Bayron Biswas crossed over to the TMC.On Tuesday, the Congress slammed the TMC, saying such “poaching” was not designed to strengthen Opposition unity and only served the BJP’s objectives.Three months after wresting the Muslim-dominated Sagardighi Assembly seat in Murshidabad in a bypoll from the TMC, the Congess MLA switched to the ruling party on Monday. Bayron’s defection comes at a time when efforts are on to forge Opposition unity to take on the BJP in the 2024 polls.In February, the TMC candidate’s defeat in Sagardighi had enraged Mamata, who had then said: “In 2024, we will see an alliance between the Trinamool and the people. We will not go with any of the other political parties. We will fight alone with people’s support. Those who want to defeat the BJP, I believe they will vote for us. The ones voting for CPI(M) and Congress are actually voting for BJP.”The TMC appeared to soften its stance towards the Congress after Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification as a Lok Sabha MP following his conviction and sentencing over his 2019 Modi surname remark.In Bengal, the relations between the two parties have been strained for a long time. In the 2016 and 2021 Assembly elections, the Congress aligned with the CPM-led Left Front to take on the TMC, which swept both the polls.Recently, Bihar CM and JD(U) supremo Nitish Kumar and Deputy CM and RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav visited Mamata in Kolkata, following which both Kumar and Mamata asserted that all anti-BJP forces should work together for Opposition unity for the 2024 elections. Many Opposition parties are going to have their first joint conclave in this regard in Patna on June 12.However, after Bayron joined the TMC in his presence, senior party leader and Mamata’s nephew Abhishek Banerjee said, “Our chairperson Mamata Banerjee has repeatedly stated that she has no problem supporting the Congress in order to defeat the BJP. However, Bengal PCC (Pradesh Congress Committee) chief Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury is claiming that he will fight the Trinamool. This implies that he has no intention of defeating the BJP.”Abhishek said, “We don’t mind supporting Congress, but that doesn’t mean that in places where the TMC is strong, Congress would fight us to strengthen BJP. If Congress weakens Trinamool, the only party to gain will be BJP. We are ready to support the Congress in places where they are strong, but they should do the same thing in places where TMC remains the principal force to take on the BJP.”He also claimed, “Congress and Adhir expects the Opposition to support them, but in return, they don’t want to extend the same support to the other Opposition parties. If Adhir wants to break TMC, who benefits? Not Congress or CPM, but BJP. If I had to break the Congress, Bayron would have joined us back in Murshidabad itself. If we decide to break the Congress, 4 MPs (from other states) would join TMC at a moment’s notice. However, we don’t want to do the politics of breaking political parties, we want to defeat the BJP.”Slamming the TMC after Bayron’s switchover, Adhir said, “Our fight against TMC and BJP will continue.”CPM leader Tanmay Bhattacharya said, “Bayron Biswas won because people wanted to defeat TMC and BJP and that situation has not changed. If vote is again held in Sagardighi, then TMC and BJP will again be defeated.”Launching a scathing attack on the TMC, the All India Congress Committee (AICC) general secretary in charge of communications, Jairam Ramesh, said, “Three months after he was elected as a Congress MLA in a historic victory Bayron Biswas has been lured away by the TMC in West Bengal. This is a complete betrayal of the mandate of the people of the Sagardighi Assembly constituency.”Ramesh also said, “Such poaching which has happened earlier in Goa, Meghalaya, Tripura and other states is not designed to strengthen Opposition unity and only serves the BJP’s objectives.”On her part, Mamata, during a press conference at the state secretariat Nabanna Tuesday, declined to comment on Bayron’s move. “Ask our local party. I do not know. I saw it on news,” she claimed.Mamata also charged, “Left, Congress and BJP never stop doing wrong things. They are the same and they will remain together. Let them remain together. They are three flowers of the same garland. They never think good things. So, I have no time for them.”On Ramesh’s allegation that the TMC had tried to hurt the Congress in other states too, Mamata said, “I think we are all together at the national level. At the state level, all parties should understand they have their own obligations. We have contested only Meghalaya and Goa. But when Congress contested Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Himachal, Gujarat, Chhattishgarh, we never disrupted. Instead of disrupting, we supported them. That is why I don’t have any comments (about Ramesh’s remarks). Anybody can say anything.”The TMC chief also said, “If we don’t fight in other states, how will we become a national party. It is not for winning election, it is for vote percentage also so that we become a national party.”On the June 12 Opposition meeting, Mamata said, “It is happening, I told Nitishji to call a meeting in Patna. He asked me day before yesterday and I confirmed (my participation in the meeting).”Hitting back at Ramesh, TMC leader Derek O’Brien tweeted: “Despite Mamata Banerjee’s support Congress vows to fight Mamata Banerjee in Bengal” Statement from Congress two weeks ago. Congress breaches trust on Opposition unity and then expects bouquets of roses! And about strengthening BJP? Grow up please.”

Bad blood between Cong, TMC flares on heels of uneasy truce
Govt fights back corruption allegations, sculptor defends his design
The Indian Express | 53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am

The Madhya Pradesh Government fought back allegations of corruption in the Mahakal Lok corridor where Saptarishi statues collapsed and suffered damages due to gusty winds at Mahakaleshwar temple premises in Ujjain city, even as its lead architect and sculptor defended the use of Fibre Reinforced Plastic (FPR) to make the statues.Six out of the seven idols of ‘Saptarishis’ installed at the Mahakal Lok corridor, developed on the Mahakaleshwar temple premises collapsed and suffered damages due to gusty winds. Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the first phase of the Mahakal Lok corridor project in October last year, which has now become mired in political controversy after a enquiry team constituted by former Chief Minister Kamal Nath visited the premises on Tuesday and levelled allegations of corruption against the Government.The Congress party had already accused the government of using substandard material to construct the statues.The lead architect of the Mahakal project Krishna Murari Sharma told The Indian Express,”Across India, statues are made with FRP. It helps in greatly reducing the cost. You also need extremely skilled labour to make stone, bronze or copper sculptures. We had carried out all the technical checks when the project was being undertaken,” Sharma said.The lead sculptor of the project, Vijay Podwal had worked in the project for 3 years and stands by his work and the use of FRP to make the statues.“As technology advances we must use the most advanced material. FRP is used in high tech industries like the aeronautical industry as well. The material is lightweight. It can be easily moved and is durable compared to metal and wood which start to deteriorate during rains over a period of time. If we would have made stone sculptures it would have taken us more than a decade at a cost five times more than the budget,” Podwal told The Indian Express.He said that the sculptures which were mostly sitting sculptures “had sufficient self stability to withstand high wind speeds.”“These were statues which were in sitting forms. Even delicate statues like a dancing statue we use FPR material and they are sufficient to withstand high wind speeds. I think that since these statues were elevated on a fabricated pedestal, the winds went into the gap between the statue and the pedestal to topple the statue. We will wait for the formal report to find out what happened,” Podwal said.Ujjain’s Mahakal Lok, 6 idols of Saptarishi were broken by a storm, which was inaugurated by the PM in October last year; About 850 crore rupees were spent on this project. pic.twitter.com/1sD2mgLhJh— Virat Diwakar 🇮🇳🇮🇳 (@ViratCongress) May 29, 2023Minister of Urban Development and Housing, Bhupendra Singh held a press conference where he alleged that art work, installation of the sculpture and other technical aspects related to the Mahakal Lok project was carried out during the Congress rule.“There is no corruption here. Congress is doing dirty politics. They have not given a single evidence of corruption. The BJP makes the allegation that if congress is making allegations of corruption then this project was under them twice and they are accepting that they did corruption.We did out work honestly and with high standards. Don’t hurt the religious sentiments of the people, this has been their (Congress) character. If they have evidence of corruption then show it to the people or apologise,” Singh said.The Minister said that over hundred Fibre Reinforced Plastic (FRP) statues were made at a cost of Rs 7.5 crore and artwork carried out on them “was only possible on such statues” and cited the examples of Kingdom of Dreams in Gurgaon, Haryana, the Akshardham temple in Delhi and other other projects were FRP statues were used.“Mahakal Lok project was taken considering the religious significance it holds in Ujjain. The work was carried out in high standards…The art is only possible on these statues. It takes a lot of time on statues made of other material and even then You can’t make that art. The agency which made this has a three year contract and they will replace the statues. The Commissioner (Ujjain) has also given the report that due to high wind speeds several buildings and trees had fallen in the area,” Singh said.Congress spokesperson, KK Mishra, who was part of the enquiry team which visited the area on Tuesday has called for Singh’s resignation alleging that it has “become pastime of the government to put the blame of its big sins on the Congress.”“It would have been better that being the Minister of Urban Administration and Development, he would have accepted this historic corruption with morality and responsibility and resigned from his post till it is investigated,” Mishra said.Just a week after it was inaugurated by the PM, Ujjain’s Congress MLA Mahesh Parmar approached the Madhya Pradesh Lokayukta alleging financial irregularities in the construction following which notices were issued to 15 officials.Ujjain’s Congress MLA Mahesh Parmar said, “I had filed a complaint with the Lokayukta and notices were issued. But following that nothing much happened in that case, if an investigation was conducted on the basis of my complaint then today the officials involved in this corruption would have been investigated. Bhagwan Mahakal will not forgive these sinners, justice will be brought upon them.”Ujjain city officials have said that since the project was in the initial stages of the five years defect liability period, the company that made and installed them will replace them at the earliest.   The corridor, said to be one of the longest in the country, traverses the old Rudrasagar lake which has been revived as part of the redevelopment project around the Mahakaleshwar temple, one of the 12 ‘jyotirlingas’ in the country.Measuring more than 900 metres in length, the corridor has around 108 aesthetically ornate pillars made of intricately-carved sandstones that depict the Anand Tandav Swaroop (a form of dance of Lord Shiva), 200 statues and murals of Lord Shiva and goddess Shakti. 

Govt fights back corruption allegations, sculptor defends his design
ED arrests Abhishek Banerjee's aide after 12-hour questioning
The Indian Express | 53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) on Tuesday arrested Sujoy Krishna Bhadra, a Kolkata-based businessman and a close associate of Trinamool Congress second-in-command Abhishek Banerjee, after questioning him for nearly 12 hours in connection with the school jobs scam in West Bengal.The ED officials said Bhadra was arrested as he was not cooperating with the investigators and dodged their questions. The agency claimed to have found his links with three companies and suspected that crores of rupees were being laundered through these entities. Also, the ED officials had recovered documents during raids at his house earlier.Bhadra’s lawyer Najmul Alam Sarkar said, “They (ED officials) are not communicating with us. I kept waiting for long outside the agency’s office but I wasn’t allowed in.”Earlier, the agency had asked Bhadra to appear in person at its office in CGO Complex in Salt Lake where he reached at 11am on Tuesday. This was the first time he appeared before the ED investigators even as he was summoned for questioning earlier also.The CBI has also summoned him twice.On May 20, the ED agency carried out a search in his flat and office in Behala. Earlier, the CBI had searched his flat on May 4. The businessman appeared before the CBI once in March but skipped the agency’s second summons and instead sent his lawyer.The businessman was first named in the recruitment scam by Tapas Mondal, one of the arrested agents allegedly involved in the scam.According to sources, Abhishek Banerjee’s mother is a director in a company run in the name of Bhadra who claims to be an employee in Banerjee’s office.It is alleged that the TMC leader is a partner in the company, Leaps & Bounds Private Limited, which is into manufacturing of packaged mineral drinking water.Also, the ED has written to state departments in the corruption probe seeking some details. The letters have been sent to the departments of Public Works, and Urban Development, and the Municipal Service Commission. The agency has enquired about the process under which recruitments have been made in the last eight years. The ED also wanted to know as how many people have been employed in these years.Bhadra, also known as Kalighat er Kaku (uncle from Kalighat) had earlier alleged that he was a victim of a politically motivated investigation.Interestingly, he had contested the Bhowanipore by-election in 2011 as an independent candidate against TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee (Chief Minister) and polled 809 votes.Time is ticking, says BJP; TMC hits backTaking a dig at the TMC leadership following Bhadra’s arrest, Leader of Opposition in Bengal Assembly Suvendu Adhikari tweeted, “The long arm of law is finally reaching towards the masterminds & the biggest beneficiaries. No one will be spared. The high and mighty will go to jail. Time is ticking.”He also shared pictures claiming Bhadra’s links with Abhishek Banerjee.Countering his claims, TMC spokesperson Kunal Ghosh said, “Suvendu Adhikari is facing an FIR in the Narada case that is being probed by a central agency. Clearly, Bayron Biswas’ joining the TMC didn’t go down well with the BJP and the Congress. It was a planned effort to uplift the morale of their (BJP’s) workers. If he (Bhadra) has been arrested for something wrong, the party won’t stand by him. It is a politically motivated move.”Lok Sabha MP and West Bengal Congress president Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury said, ” This is so funny that they are finding a link between Bayron Biswas and the ED probe. The TMC is a corrupt party. Technically speaking, Biswas is still a Congress MLA.”CPI(M) leader Sujan Chakraborty said, “I am surprised that if an employee of (Banerjee) can own three companies and have crores of rupees, I wonder how much property and money his employers have.”

ED arrests Abhishek Banerjee's aide after 12-hour questioning
Condoms, birth control pills in ‘wedding kit’ trigger row in MP
The Indian Express | 53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am

A mass wedding event held in Madhya Pradesh’s Jhabua district under the government’s wedding scheme for economically weaker sections got embroiled in a controversy after over 200 newly-wed couples were gifted make-up boxes containing condoms and contraceptive pills.The event was organised under Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan’s Mukhyamantri Kanya Vivah/Nikah Yojana in Thandla where 296 couples got married.Senior district official Bhursingh Rawat blamed the state health department, saying health officials distributed condoms and contraceptives as part of an awareness programme related to family planning.“We are not responsible for distributing condoms and contraceptive pills. There is no provision in the Mukhyamantri Kanya Vivah for the provision of such a kit. We have told the local administration officials to keep a check on this in future and conduct a door-to-door campaign instead of distributing condoms at a mass wedding event. This is a tribal area with low literacy rate. People don’t have a lot of scientific temperament, so keeping that in view we will make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Rawat told The Indian Express.Dr Ashok Patel, district family and welfare officer, told The Indian Express: “There was confusion at the event. We saw over 200 newly-weds at one place and thought we could target them. We had over 200 of our own health workers who educated them on the kit. But some people could not understand… there were couples who thought this was a part of dowry… It would take us over one month to track them all down and distribute these kits,” the officer said. The ‘Nai pahal’ kit is provided to newly married couples by the local ASHA workers.The purpose of the kit is to impart best practices for family planning, “motivate newly married people to keep a gap (up to 2 years) after the birth of the first child after marriage using temporary family planning means” and has been distributed by the local health department for the past one year.The kit contains two months worth of condoms, daily and weekly contraceptive pills, two pregnancy kits packed into a gift box. Along with these, the officials have also given a mirror, two packets of bindis, two towels and two handkerchiefs.The Madhya Pradesh government launched the Mukhyamantri Kanya Vivah/Nikah Yojana in April 2006 to provide financial assistance for wedding of women from economically weaker sections. Under the scheme, the government provides Rs 55,000 to the bride’s family. Last month, the scheme came under fire after some brides were made to take pregnancy tests at a mass wedding event in Gadsarai area of Dindori.Following the distribution of the “nai pahal” kit, the Congress targeted CM Chouhan. “Will BJP leaders reveal to the public what they gifted their daughters after their marriage? Why is it that only when it comes to tribal people they are publicly subjected to this? Is there no right to privacy left for them? In the past as well, mass pregnancy tests were carried out in this region by the administration,” said Congress spokesman Piyush Babele.

Condoms, birth control pills in ‘wedding kit’ trigger row in MP
Rahul Gandhi's US visit: Can Cong break Modi spell on Indian diaspora?Premium Story
The Indian Express | 53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am
The Indian Express
53 minutes ago | 31-05-2023 | 11:45 am

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s plans to address a gathering of the Indian diaspora in New York this week is likely to make explicit an important reality — the diaspora is where India’s domestic politics intersects with foreign policy. A deeply polarised Indian polity, in turn, sharpens the divisions within the diaspora.Until now, the dominant Indian image of the diaspora has been a simplistic one. According to the cliche, the members of the diaspora served as India’s unofficial ambassadors to the world – they celebrate and spread Indian culture, win friends and influence people for the benefit of the homeland.This romantic notion is increasingly at odds with the ground reality. The diaspora carries within it all the faultlines of the Indian society that find expression in their lives abroad.Several factors have come together to make the interaction between India and its diaspora at once more charged, contentious, and consequential. The Indian political class has never been as divided as it is today. India’s internal gulf is bound to envelop the diaspora in the run-up to the 2024 general elections. Rahul Gandhi’s engagement with the diaspora in New York on Saturday comes less than three weeks before Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives for a state visit to the White House. The PM is also expected to address a diaspora event in the US.During his visit to the UK in March this year, Rahul Gandhi did not hold back on his criticism of India’s trajectory under the NDA government. He is unlikely to bite his tongue in the US either. The popular American notion that “domestic politics must end at the water’s edge” had some resonance in India too. The traditional Indian political reluctance to take domestic disputes abroad no longer operates.Meanwhile, there are many structural changes in India’s relations with its diaspora. For one it is growing bigger by the day. One estimate puts it at about 33 million. These include Indian citizens studying, living, and working abroad as well as the people of Indian origin who have settled in other lands. According to the United Nations, the Indian diaspora is the largest in the world. As many countries hunt for talent to run their advanced industries, the demand for Indian professionals will continue to grow. The Modi government is promoting “migration and mobility” agreements that will facilitate more substantive flows abroad of Indian scientists, engineers, doctors, accountants, managers, and bankers. The global footprint of India, then, will continue to widen and deepen in the years ahead.Second, the diaspora is richer and contributes in myriad ways to the Indian economy – from hard currency remittances to the air travel market, from consuming Indian goods to entertainment.Third, the Indian diaspora is getting active in the politics of the host nations, especially in the Anglosphere which is more open to immigrants than other societies. The prime minister of Britain Rishi Sunak and US Vice-President Kamala Harris are just two examples of the widespread Indian successes in electoral politics in the UK, US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The English-speaking world is also the preferred destination of Indians, and the Indian presence in Western politics is only likely to grow.Fourth, the diaspora’s engagement with Indian politics too has grown. Over the last few decades, the Indian diaspora has graduated from the passive role of extending support to presumed collective Indian goals or individual commitments to community development at home. The leaders of the diaspora now take active positions on the issues of the day in India. They mobilise their local political leaders and officials to take up their real and perceived grievances against Delhi. The retail politics of the English-speaking democracies make it easier to win support from local leaders, who might know little about the nuances of the issues they choose to speak on. Put simply, there is now a toxic interaction between India’s domestic politics and the activism of diasporic groups in the West.Fifth, active Indian political engagement with the diaspora raises questions about meddling in the domestic politics of host nations. This is already a problem with China, where the party-state is extending its authority into other sovereignties through the diaspora. Delhi, of course, is not a political monolith like Beijing and has no desire to emulate Beijing on this score.Sixth, the story is not just about India but of the Subcontinent. If you add the migrants from Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, the South Asian diaspora swells up to 45 million. You would think the shared culture between and across the subcontinent would bring the South Asian diasporas together in their new abodes. What we have seen instead is its deep fragmentation amidst competitive political mobilisation. Rallying Indian and Pakistani diasporas against the interests of the other homelands is only one part of the story. More troubling has been the resurgence of religious, ethnic, and caste solidarities that overwhelm the rich collective inheritance of the Subcontinent. Unconstrained by the nationalist framework at home, the other identities acquire much power.That brings us back to Rahul Gandhi’s visit to the US. Although the Congress party has a much longer history of mobilising overseas Indians, it had ceded the space to the BJP. During the struggle for independence in the early 20th century, the Indian National Congress led the mobilisation of the diaspora. Besides the Congressmen, socialists of various shades, and the communists developed significant connections to Indians abroad as well as progressive forces around the world. As the structures of these parties atrophied, their internationalist engagement became erratic and ineffective.Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was the first to see the value of the diaspora in the pursuit of Indian foreign policy interests in the US. The Narasimha Rao government persisted with the idea as it galvanised the Indian diaspora in the US to fend off the anti-India campaigns organised by Pakistan in Washington. The early 1990s also saw a more fundamental effort to mobilise the US political and business classes to support broader Indian interests. But it was the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government that gave the engagement with the diaspora a significant new twist – by altering the narrative of “brain drain” into one of “political and cultural gain” for “Mother India”. Then came the annual Pravasi Bharatiya Divas. For the nativist BJP, without a traditional internationalist anchor, the diaspora became a powerful new constituency.If the UPA government, which came to power in 2004, turned the PBD into a bureaucratic exercise, the BJP has seized the powerful new possibilities with the diaspora. Rallies with the diaspora have become an integral part of PM Modi’s engagements abroad. Extending support to Indians in trouble abroad had become a principal preoccupation of late Sushma Swaraj who served as foreign minister in Modi’s first term. Rescuing and bringing back Indians caught in danger zones around the world also became a high priority.If PM Modi looms large over the diaspora today, the non-BJP forces in the Indian community hope that Rahul will lay out an alternative vision for India. It remains to be seen though if Rahul Gandhi has the strategic acumen and organisational capacity to break the Modi spell over the Indian diaspora in the US and beyond.The writer is a senior fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute, Delhi and a contributing editor on international affairs for The Indian Express

Rahul Gandhi's US visit: Can Cong break Modi spell on Indian diaspora?Premium Story