Sunday, January 12, 2014

Amethi LIVE: No more Chacha Nehru or Bitiya Indira, says AAP

2.45 pm: Political conspiracy against me: Kumar Vishwas

A crow of  about 15,000 has  gathered, with the numbers rising.

Vishwas tells the crowd the allegations against him are all old, and politically motivated. "These Youtube videos were lying around for years, nobody protested. How have they emerged now?" he said, hinting at a political conspiracy.

I am here to stay, says Vishwas, in a speech interspersed with poetry and shairi, received with cheers and claps. The black flags, the black ink thrown at some AAP leaders, the protests won't frighten him, he says. This is a land of brave people, I expect them to attack me in the face, not when my back is turned.

"Priyanka Gandhi's birthday is being celebrated to disrupt my rally. She is my sister, I wish her a happy birthday. I have not come on Priyanka's birthday. I have come on Vivekanand's jayanti day.... From tomorrow I want trains to Amethi filled up. Ask people whether the king will win or the fakir will win in Amethi," he says.

2.30 pm: Kumar Vishwas starts his speech, promises to lift broom against corruption

Kumar VIshwas goes for the jugular. In Rahul Gandhi's constituency, he says he doesn't want to eat at the home of a Dalit while being guarded by the SPG. "I will live with them. I will see blood with them. I will get beaten up with them."

2.20 pm: Modi tea stalls serve 'corruption-free' tea

It's a cold winter day in Amethi and tea vendors organised by the Bharatiya Janata Party to counter Kumar Vishwas's rally in Amethi found themselves doing brisk business.  Set up by the BJP, the tea stalls were christened 'Modi Tea Stalls' in keeping with the new rush to brand items of daily use after the BJP's prime ministerial candidate.

The tea was being advertised well too: Corruption-free chai.

1.45 pm:  Enough of Chacha Nehru, Bitiya Indira, says AAP's UP chief

Sanjay Singh, chief of the AAP in Uttar Pradesh, speaks first. The focus is clearly on taking potshots at the Nehru-Gandhi parivar and on dynastic politics. From Kashmir to Maharashtra to Tamil Nadu, from the Badals of Punjab to the Pawars and the Yadavs, Singh spared no name as he rattled off a long list of politicians who were catapulted into positions of leadership based on their surnames instead of merit.

The sharpest barb, of course, was reserved for the Gandhis. "Enough of Chacha Nehru and Bitiya Indira," he told the people of Amethi who burst out in laughter and cheered.

Having spoken about the BPL cutoff line of Rs 26 per day, Singh also said the NREGA wages of Rs 12,000 per year per family were a mockery. "Can you look after a dog in your family in that much money?" he asked, directing the question to the area's MP, Rahul Gandhi.

While issues of corruption did not feature in his speech, he also surprisingly did not make a mention of Muzaffarnagar and the humanitarian crisis there.

12 noon: The roads from Lucknow to Amethi were a sea of Aam Aadmi vehicles as hundreds of AAP supporters flocked to the constituency of Congress vice-presdent Rahul Gandhi on Sunday morning. People also joined in large numbers from the neighbouring districts of Jagdishpur and Pratapgarh in Uttar Pradesh to attend what could be a historic rally by Aam Aadmi Party leader Kumar Vishwas.

AAP leader Kumar Vishwas. Image courtesy ibnlive

AAP leader Kumar Vishwas. Image courtesy ibnlive

Vishwas has challenged Gandhi to en electoral duel and has called upon the people of Amethi, earlier represented by Rajiv Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi, to cast off the yoke of dynastic rule and vote the Congress out in the 2014 Parliamentary elections. In a move of some overconfidence and some political bravado, Vishwas has also requested Bharatiya Janata Party's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi to contest from the same constituency.

As the cavalcade of about 1,000 cars reached Amethi, Congress supporters flocked on either side of the road. All rickshaw pullers in the locality could be seen carrying a tricolour on their carriage, complete with Sonia Gandhi stickers. "In Delhi, autowallahs made Kejriwal win, here the rickshaw pullers will make Rahul Gandhi win," said Dharmender Ram, a rickshaw puller in Amethi.

En route, all along the highway, in villages and small, dusty towns, there was  a great deal of curiosity about the Aam Aadmi Party. Confused by the sheer number of cars passing, villagers were flocking to the roadsides to see what the fuss is all about.

"Kejriwal's party is new but it's amazing that thousands are going to the rally of a party that no one even knows properly," said Gordhan Singh from Jagdishpur.

In Jagdishpur, Kumar Vishwas was greeted with black flags, heckling and sloganeering as his cavalcade made its way through the town en route to Amethi. The protestors were  in small groups, less an outburst of rage than a planned political mobilisation.

Most Muslims in these areas have refrained from taking part in the rally but have not really spontaneously opposed it either. As Zulfikar Aslam from Bhoi village in Jagdishpur said, "The people who are protesting are all supporters of a political party. I have no clue even who Kumar Vishwas was leave alone what his comments about Islam were. But recently AAP was campaigning here and so were other political entities who were running anti AAP campaigns."

Kumar Vishwas has found his way into the headlines rather early on in his political career, with the controversy over his comment about a Muharram procession refusing to die down.

On Saturday, at a press conference in Lucknow, Vishwas was heckled and had an egg thrown at him by an angry Muslim youth.

The young man, who identified himself as Saif Zafri, was overpowered by Aam Aadmi Party activists and handed over to police. Zafri identified himself as a member of the Mulayam Youth Brigade and belongs to Bijnor in Uttar Pradesh. He was apparently angry at Vishwas's reported comments on Islam and a Muharram procession.

 


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