Sunday, February 16, 2014

Meera, Medha, Ashutosh in AAP’s first list for LS polls

New Delhi: Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) today released its first list of 20 candidates for Lok Sabha elections, pitting Kumar Vishwas from Amethi, Rahul Gandhi's seat, and former banker Meera Sanyal and social activist Medha Patkar from Mumbai.

The list, which came two days after AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal quit as Delhi chief minister, carries names of candidates from Delhi (2), Uttar Pradesh (7), Maharashtra (6), Haryana, Arunachal Pradesh, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh and Punjab -- one each.

Medha Patkar. PTI

Medha Patkar. PTI

AAP has not, however, announced any candidate in Rae Bareli, the pocket borough of Congress President Sonia Gandhi.

TV journalist-turned-politician Ashutosh will contest from Chandni Chowk seat in Delhi held by Union Minister Kapil Sibal.

AAP has given ticket to former scribe Mukul Tripathi for Farukhabad seat in Uttar Pradesh, the constituency of another Union Minister Salman Khurshid.

Advocate HS Phoolka will contest from Ludhiana, currently held by Information and Broadcasting Minister Manish Tewari, while activist Hardev Singh has been given ticket in Mulayam Singh Yadav's stronghold Mainpuri.

AAP has fielded anti-corruption activist Anjali Damania from Nagpur against former BJP president Nitin Gadkari.

"Our main motto is to send honest people to Parliament. We do not want to send criminals, people with dynastic background. We will soon release the list of candidates for other seats," senior party leader Manish Sisodia told reporters in New Delhi.

Somendra Dhaka, a peasant leader, will contest from Baghpat in Uttar Pradesh, a seat represented by Union Minister and Rashtriya Lok Dal chief Ajit Singh.

Sanyal, former CEO and chairperson of RBS India, will contest from South Mumbai, a seat currently represented by Union Minister Milind Deora.

Social worker Medha Patkar has been fielded from North East Mumbai, an NCP seat.

PTI


Khurshid calls Kejriwal as runaway groom

Farrukhabad, Uttar Praesh: Taking a dig at Aam Aadmi Party, Union External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid today said that Congress supported Arvind Kejriwal and gave him eight MLAs in "dowry" but what could be done if the "groom" fled away.

"We have supported Kejriwal and gave him eight MLAs in dowry...What can we do if the 'dulha' (groom) fled away," Khurshid said in Farrukhabad.

Union External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid. AFP

Union External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid. AFP

He dismissed the allegation that Congress collided with BJP against Kejriwal government in Delhi.

"There is no understanding with BJP against Kejriwal... For protecting Constitution, all parties used to unite...," Khurshid told reporters in reply to a question.

When asked about the recent meeting of US Ambassador Nancy Powell and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, Khurshid said it was a routine affair and he would not like to comment on it.

In reply to a question, Khurshid said that as India had become polio free country, those coming from outside (foreign countries) would have to take polio vaccine.

PTI


Meera, Medha, Ashutosh in AAP’s first list for Lok Sabha polls

New Delhi: Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) today released its first list of 20 candidates for Lok Sabha elections, pitting Kumar Vishwas from Amethi, Rahul Gandhi's seat, and former banker Meera Sanyal and social activist Medha Patkar from Mumbai.

The list, which came two days after AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal quit as Delhi chief minister, carries names of candidates from Delhi (2), Uttar Pradesh (7), Maharashtra (6), Haryana, Arunachal Pradesh, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh and Punjab -- one each.

Medha Patkar. PTI

Medha Patkar. PTI

AAP has not, however, announced any candidate in Rae Bareli, the pocket borough of Congress President Sonia Gandhi.

TV journalist-turned-politician Ashutosh will contest from Chandni Chowk seat in Delhi held by Union Minister Kapil Sibal.

AAP has given ticket to former scribe Mukul Tripathi for Farukhabad seat in Uttar Pradesh, the constituency of another Union Minister Salman Khurshid.

Advocate HS Phoolka will contest from Ludhiana, currently held by Information and Broadcasting Minister Manish Tewari, while activist Hardev Singh has been given ticket in Mulayam Singh Yadav's stronghold Mainpuri.

AAP has fielded anti-corruption activist Anjali Damania from Nagpur against former BJP president Nitin Gadkari.

"Our main motto is to send honest people to Parliament. We do not want to send criminals, people with dynastic background. We will soon release the list of candidates for other seats," senior party leader Manish Sisodia told reporters in New Delhi.

Somendra Dhaka, a peasant leader, will contest from Baghpat in Uttar Pradesh, a seat represented by Union Minister and Rashtriya Lok Dal chief Ajit Singh.

Sanyal, former CEO and chairperson of RBS India, will contest from South Mumbai, a seat currently represented by Union Minister Milind Deora.

Social worker Medha Patkar has been fielded from North East Mumbai, an NCP seat.

PTI


Nitish slams surveys projecting BJP’s surge in Lok Sabha polls

Patna: Miffed by survey reports suggesting that JD(U) may perform poorly in general elections, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar today slammed pollsters for projecting NDA's impressive performance at hustings, saying it amounted to nullifying the election process itself.

"If that's what is going to be the outcome (BJP-led NDA's imminent victory in the general elections), then what is the need for holding elections," he said at the JD(U)'s 12th and final 'Sankalp rally' at Deedarganj on the outskirts of the state capital.

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. Image courtesy PIB

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. Image courtesy PIB

Mocking the reports further, Kumar said, "If BJP thinks that it has won the general elections on the basis of the opinion polls then what's the need to contest the polls altogether?.....it should go ahead and form the next government at the Centre.

"Modi should go ahead and take oath as the prime minister straightaway if he and BJP think that they have won the general elections on the basis of the survey reports," the chief minister said.

Kumar lashed out at pollsters for suggesting that his government in Bihar was popular even today to the extent that 68 percent people have reposed faith in it, but yet they will vote for the BJP-led alliance in the general elections.

"How come it's possible that the people surveyed by the pollsters are happy with this government's performance and yet they desire to vote for another alliance at hustings? The assessment is an outright contradiction," he said.

Kumar also expressed unhappiness with the local media for giving inadequate converge to him and activities of his party of late and said that the JD(U)'s eleven Sankalp rallies held so far had not been reported adequately.

"I ask you (local media) if I or my government are not visible in Bihar then, who else are?" Kumar questioned.

PTI


Kejriwal acted in haste to quit over Jan Lokpal Bill: Omar

Gulmarg: Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister today said AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal acted in a haste by submitting his resignation over the Jan Lokpal bill, and hinted that it was probably the "aim".

Kejriwal resigned as the Delhi chief minister on Friday after suffering a defeat in the Assembly on the Jan Lokpal Bill after Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung had advised the Speaker against transacting the Bill which, he said, should have prior clearance of central government.

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah. Image courtesy PIB

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah. Image courtesy PIB

"If he (Kejriwal) wanted to bring the Jan Lokpal Bill, he could have waited for Lieutenant Governor's assent. He acted in a hurry to submit resignation," Omar told reporters on the sidelines of a function in Gulmarg.

Omar said there was a set procedure on legislations followed by all states and the AAP chief should have followed it.

"When we have finance bill, which we call money bill, we send it to the Governor for assent. Only after that, it is introduced. This is the procedure we follow in all the states, and he could have done the same," he said.

The chief minister said perhaps it was by design that Kejriwal wanted to stage a drama so that he could resign.

"Probably, it was the aim to create some drama before parliamentary elections so that he can resign," Omar said.

PTI


Manmohan Singh led most corrupt govt in free India: Advani

New Delhi: BJP leader LK Advani today launched a scathing attack on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, saying as his decade-long tenure draws to a close, he would have presided over the "most corrupt" government in independent India.

"Manmohan Singh began his tenure with a clean personal reputation. But as his decade-long tenure is coming to a close, he would leave behind him a record of having presided over the most corrupt government in independent India," Advani said in his latest blog.

BJP leader LK Advani. Reuters

BJP leader LK Advani. Reuters

Attacking the Congress-led UPA government, the veteran BJP leader alleged that it had driven Parliament to an "all-time low", recounting the February 13 mayhem in Lok Sabha which saw a Congress MP using pepper spray in the House and ministers joining anti- Telangana protests in the Well.

"Most members were shocked one day to see as many as half-a-dozen ministers... totally disregarding the presence of the PM and Soniaji in the House, rushing into the Well and joining the ugly ruckus... when amidst shouting of slogans for and against division of Andhra Pradesh, parliamentary papers were being torn and thrown all around," he said, blaming the UPA for coalition mismanagement.

"The limits of unsavoury behaviour were crossed when... a Congress party MP pulled out a black pepper spray and started spraying it all around so that several MPs, including Sushma Swaraj, had tears in her eyes and many others were seen coughing in acute discomfort," Advani said.

Terming the pepper spray incident as the "lowest point" of UPA-II, Advani drew a parallel with the cash-for-vote scam under UPA-I, saying whistleblowers, including three BJP MPs, were jailed instead of being rewarded for exposing it.

The BJP veteran said that "no less shameful" for the prestige and reputation of Parliament than the cash-for-episode scam that occurred under UPA-I was the ugly scenes witnessed under UPA-II and recalled that under NDA led by Atal Behari Vajpayee, three new states were created "without even a ripple of disturbance".

The BJP leader said, "With the present government, session after session has had to be adjourned due to chaos created over Telangana between the supporters and opponents of division."

Accusing the UPA government of being "most corrupt", he referred to the Commonwealth Games scandal in Delhi, followed by the 2G Spectrum scam, saying, "Most of the scams under the Congress governments were exposures made by CAG or the judiciary and related to bribes allegedly received by ministers/officials. But I hold that the most disgraceful scam during UPA-I was the cash-for-votes scam."

PTI


Modi takes on Sonia, Kejriwal and Virbhadra in Himachal

BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi today launched another round of attack on Congress vice president Sonia Gandhi and AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal besides focussing on the future roadmap of Himachal Pradesh at a rally in Hamirpur in the state.

"Among the other things Madam (Sonia Gandhi) said, she questioned our statue of unity but says next election will be fought on unity. The nation knows very well who is sowing the seeds of poison. This politics of hatred and untouchability is not good for a democracy. Congress is a dynastic party and this is the opposite of being a democratic party," Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi said in Hamipur.

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. PTI

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. PTI

He then trained his guns at former Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal: "To develop and rid the country from corruption you need a wholesome approach. People who are used to accounting are not the best people to do it. And for whom should I be corrupt. I have no family. This mind and body is totally devoted to the nation," Modi said indirectly aiming the jibe on Kejriwal.

The AAP leader is a former Indian Revenue Service officer who had challenged Modi to come out in the open over his alleged closeness with Reliance Industries chairman and managing director Mukesh Ambani.

In course of his address, the Gujarat chief minister also took on Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh. The Himachal Pradesh chief minister has been in the news of and on for alleged financial irregularities during his stint as the country's Union steel minister.

"If we need freedom from corruption we need freedom from the corrupt. Congress leader and Himachal Pradesh chief minister said his assets have risen 14 times and this was written in his affidavit. The prime minister says money does not grow on trees but your own chief minister became 14 times richer after money from trees," Modi said.

"Yesterday one leader asked how many BJP leaders are in jail. I ask him to see what their telecom ministers did. Till when will the Congress keep saving itself? The root cause of corruption in this nation is the Congress party. If Congressmen are not corrupt then what is their worry in getting black money back? Black money stashed abroad belongs to the people of India. These people have looted poor and put money there," he said.

Continuing his offence on the Congress party, the BJP prime ministerial candidate said, "Congress leaders are going across the nation talking about greats of past but what about price rise. Congress leaders are not willing to tell the people that we were unable to bring down prices despite promising to. Congress arrogance is sky high and due to that they are not willing to answer the people."

Not stopping there, Modi said, "I want to ask you if you have any faith in the Congress government. Do you trust their leaders, their promises and what they say? If not then why do you tolerate them? This is perhaps the first government which is not trusted by the people. Governments need trust of people to function."

The BJP prime ministerial candidate also spelled out his agenda for developing the hill state but not without making regular attacks on the Centre.

"We need a paradigm shift for our development journey. We will need to change our perspective of looking at things. Solutions in one place cannot be used in other places. We need to understand issues and then solve them. By calling chief ministers' meets and asking chief ministers to speak for 10 minutes will not help. The prime minister must come to the Himayalan states and sit with chief ministers," Modi said.

"BJP will give special focus to the development of the Himalayan states. What did not happen in these states for 60 years will happen in 60 months, I assure you. You will see the change. First and foremost we need to bring those ahead who have been left out of the development journey. For Himachal Pradesh's development we need to give the youth jobs and need to promote tourism," he said.

The Gujarat chief minister also took on the Centre for allegedly neglecting Himachal Pradesh's railway network.

"Rail connectivity in the hill areas has been important even from tourism point of view. Sadly we have not thought on those lines. Such a small state but the time is spent in bus tragedies. Should Himachal not get a good rail network? Railway is an asset for our nation we can give new strength to our development but in Delhi things are sad, there is no vision," Modi said.

The BJP prime ministerial candidate not only welcomed former soldiers from the state who have joined the party but also saluted the brave contribution in the military by the troops and officers of Himachal Pradesh.

"I welcome all the brave retired soldiers who have joined the BJP. There is nothing like membership in the BJP. We have a relationship of blood and a relation for generations. I have seen soldiers at the battlefield. When Kargil happened we had gone there, we saw the soldiers fighting bravely. It is time we bravely stand up to our neighbours unlike the present Central government. Will you accept other nations bullying us? Do we want to get bullied like this?" Modi asked.


Sheila Dikshit accuses Kejriwal of witch-hunt against her

New Delhi: "My dream of Delhi has gone for a toss," Sheila Dikshit said today, two months after the three- term Chief Minister of Delhi was ousted from power by AAP's Arvind Kejriwal whom she accused of indulging in a witch-hunt against her.

The 75-year-old Congress leader has just moved to a modest private apartment she has rented in the heart of the capital in sharp contrast to the sprawling government bungalow that was her home for about a decade. She now gets time to watch movies and is planning to work on interiors of the apartment herself.

Dikshit is careful with her words but her bitterness at the rout of her party and her own defeat comes through clearly. She recalls her achievements in terms of power, education, roads and hospitals, pointing out that the pass percentage in the government school was about 97 percent, highest in the country.

"My dream of Delhi has gone for a toss already," she says after accusing Kejriwal of promising the impossible to win votes. Aam Aadmi Party had made promises of free water, cheap electricity, housing, jobs only to "backtrack from them".

Sheila Dikshit in this file photo. AFP

Sheila Dikshit in this file photo. AFP

Dikshit accused the AAP government, which was in power for just 49 days, of "witch hunting" by filing cases against her.

Kejriwal had ordered Anti-Corruption Bureau of Delhi government to file FIR into the alleged corruption in the street light project of the 2010 Commonwealth Games in which CAG had indicted Dikshit.

"I have done nothing wrong. It is witch hunting," she said.

On another case pertaining to allegations of her misusing the public funds ahead of 2008 Assembly polls, she said, "The FIR was filed following BJP leader Vijender Gupta's complaint which has already been decided by the President of India, who said there is no case" since she was a chief minister.

"Now, they (AAP) have brought it from chief minister to an individual" thereby forcing her to defend herself, Dikshit said, expressing her anger over AAP's move.

The AAP government on Friday had moved the Delhi High Court to withdraw the appeal of previous Congress dispensation against a lower court order to register an FIR against Dikshit in the case.

PTI


Why voters should back AAP now, if only to fight it later

Hate him, love him, but give it to him. Martyrdom was his since the day he decided to form the minority government in Delhi. But when the hour came, he succeeded in playing victim of not merely one political party or the other but the entire establishment of the power elite.

Arvind Kejriwal can now tell voters how the Congress and the BJP came together to stall his noble bill. He can tell them how his government was forced off the cliff just two days after it ordered an FIR against Mukesh Ambani. The AAP could not have dreamed of pressing the eject button from a more righteous high.

AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal. Reuters

AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal. Reuters

Nobody can tell how well that campaign will resonate with the masses but, in a series of political masterstrokes, Kejriwal can now claim to have exposed how little there is to differentiate between the country's two principal political alternatives and how blatantly both protect corporate interests.

This tells us at least two things about Arvind Kejriwal. Whatever is the contour of the new order he envisions, he is in a hurry to change the system. His ultimate goals may be uncertain but there is no ambiguity about his means. A shrewd new entrant, he has no qualms about playing the old political game by its populist rules and playing it, spectacularly, to the gallery.

Yet, Arvind Kejriwal's ideologically uncertain and methodically opportunistic politics has raised hope. Classical exponents of social (or political) reforms and those dirty revolutionaries have always claimed that true change is not easy, true change takes time. Because they are not wrong, the vast majority of non-reformers and non-revolutionaries rarely fancies such an arduous task possible.

For all the criticism it attracts, the AAP has shown that it is possible to make a dent in the power monolith in what must be a blink in the political timeframe. Till now, most disenchanted voters thought the power politics sponsored by deep pockets was unshakable. With every viable political option conforming to the system, there was simply no room for a political alternative.

Arvind Kejriwal has proved otherwise. To break the monolith, he resorted to unconventional moves—call it chaos and anarchy—often to peddle gimmicks, a la old politics, to voters. The more they buy into his histrionics and dreams, the more the salesmen of the older business-as-usual politics (including a section of the media and civic societies) feel threatened. And, in all of this unsettling nautanki, he is providing the energy needed to break the great inertia so that the process of change can roll.

Thankfully, there is more to the AAP brand of politics that is not so much about the AAP itself. All new politics flourishes (or perishes) around a single grand idea. For the BSP, it has been Dalit pride. For the Shiv Sena, it has been Marathi pride. For the RJD, it was the Muslim-Yadav revival. The AAP played the anti-corruption card, and proved that people are willing to be mobilised beyond caste or religious stereotypes.

But then, Delhi was easy. Identity politics has never worked in the only truly cosmopolitan city of India where no single community has the numbers to decisively swing the polls. But other metros, with significant numbers of those we call sons-of-the-soil, may make it difficult for the AAP. The challenge will get still tougher in the hinterland where caste-religion divides are much more entrenched and more often than not decisive.

Nevertheless, the next elections are open to an unprecedented possibility. With more than 30 seats, a less-than-two-year-old outfit may well emerge as the third largest party in the next Lok Sabha ahead of Mamata, Mayawati and Jayalalithaa. That in itself may not decide how India will be ruled in the next five years. But that will certainly push the limits of possibilities further.

Granted, there is no shortcut to true change. Granted, Kejriwal's dramatic methods, irrespective of his ulterior motives, may not achieve any change at all. But politics and democracies must continuously evolve. Complacency and sheer inertia had been standing for too long before Kejriwal attempted to stir the pot.

If Arvind Kejriwal turns out to be sincere in his pursuit, he will deserve all help from civil society. If he turns out to be autocratic, he will have to be replaced by other forces to complete the process of change. Hopefully, we will see fresh political participation even as the old outfits reinvent themselves.

In this context, it is important to weigh the two biggest promises of change, however unevenly matched, in the coming elections. Compared to Arvind Kejriwal, Narendra Modi has exhibited more pronounced streaks of authoritarianism in the past. And there is no real bargain with Modi because he represents the same political monolith. With Kejriwal, it's perhaps worth the risk because he is making room for (if not offering) an alternative.

Therefore, it makes sense to back the AAP now, if only to fight it later. If Delhi was Kejriwal's stepping stone to national politics, Kejriwal can well be India's stepping stone to real change.


Rahul woos women voters in Karnataka, promises empowerment

Tumkur (Karnataka): Wooing women voters, Rahul Gandhi today said the party's aim was to bring more women forward in the election process.

"India can't be a superpower until we empower women. Wherever women are being empowered and given a chance, those states are progressing rapidly," the Congress Vice-President told a rally here.

"We want to give women an equal chance in politics... In panchayats, in the Assembly, in Parliament, more women should be visible," he said.

Rahul Gandhi in this file photo. PTI

Rahul Gandhi in this file photo. PTI

In an apparent attack on BJP and RSS, Gandhi said that the "opposition does not respect women and their 'ideological sangathan' doesn't have a place for women."

Appealing to women, who constitute more than 40 percent of the electors, he said, "We want to use your strength in the progress of this country. We want to open doors for women, doors of schools, hospitals and Parliament, as without you, there is no progress."

PTI


15th Lok Sabha lost max hours due to disruptions: Digvijaya

Bhopal: Congress General Secretary Digvijaya Singh has said that the present Lok Sabha has created a record for losing maximum hours of work due to repeated obstruction of proceedings.

He also urged the Members of Parliament to behave properly so that people do not lose faith in democracy.

"15th LS creates record for maximum hours lost as Members obstruct proceedings. If people lose confidence in Democracy who is responsible?" Digvijay said in a tweet recently.

Digvijaya Singh in this file photo. AFP

Digvijaya Singh in this file photo. AFP

"Parliamentarians please behave else we are putting Democracy at peril. Hope Parliamentarians behave so that people don't lose faith in Democracy," he tweeted.

In its last session before the general elections, the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha have witnessed repeated disruptions over separated Telangana statehood and other issues.

PTI


Sonia pacifies Chandy over Sudheeran being named Kerala Cong chief

Thiruvananthapuram: Congress president Sonia Gandhi settled a peace between the party's Kerala unit cheif VM Sudheeran and Chief Minister Oomen Chandy, who was upset over Sudheeran being named to head the state party, said a party source.

Chandy was upset because neither he nor the outgoing president Ramesh Chennithala was informed about the decision of the party's national leadership on Sudheeran's candidature.

According to the party source, tempers appeared to have come down after a closed door meeting between Sonia Gandhi and Chandy. Later, she also met Sudheeran to settle the issue. Taking a dig at media in the presence of Sonia Gandhi, Chandy at a party convention said on Saturday these days his absence is more of news than his presence.

Kerala CM Oomen Chandy in this file photo. PTI

Kerala CM Oomen Chandy in this file photo. PTI

On the controversy that the chief minister did not receive Sonia Gandhi at the airport on her arrival on Saturday, Chandy said he had informed the party president that he was preoccupied with government programmes in three districts.

Gandhi publicly made it clear that it is time to rise above the factional feuds in the party. She also reminded party workers that the only group in the party should be the Congress party.

With Gandhi intervening, all eyes are on Sudheeran on how he takes the party forward with his clean image and no-nonsense approach.

"...if there were some issues between Chandy and Sudheeran and with Gandhi herself playing the peace broker, I feel things will now be smooth between the two," remarked a senior Congress leader who did not wish to be identified.

"The onus is more on Sudheeran than Chandy because the biggest disadvantage for the former is that he is not a practical politician, while the latter (Chandy) is a master at it. The coming days are crucial for both Sudheeran and the party," added the leader.

IANS


Sonia takes on Left and BJP in Kochi rally

Kochi: Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Saturday slammed the Left and the BJP and asked the mammoth gathering at a rally here "to vote for a party which strives for a united India". Gandhi also did not spare her partymen, who are known for their factional feuds and said, she does not belong to any group.

"For me, there is no 'this' group or 'that' group...for me there is only one group and that's the Congress party and we all should belong to that group only," she said.

As far as the opposition was concerned she said, "The choice is very clear... to vote for a party which strives for a united India or vote for one which is trying to divide our country." She said their rivals were asking people to vote for a change, but don't specify what change.

"We have been here for more than six decades and we have done lots. They wear a mask and hence we must resist them with all our might as we have to protect our secular ethos and the future of our country," said Gandhi, who arrived here on a day-long state visit.

Sonia Gandhi in this file photo. PTI

Sonia Gandhi in this file photo. PTI

Kerala has 20 Lok Sabha seats and in the 2009 polls, the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) won 16 and the principal opposition party (CPI-M)-led Left Democratic Front won four, while the BJP is yet to open its account in the 140-member Kerala assembly.

Taking on the CPI-M, Gandhi questioned what the principal opposition party had done here. "All that they have done is to oppose all that the UPA government does and the choice before the people of Kerala is to vote for a party which is strong on its ideologies," she said.

"While we practice non-violence, they are engaged in brutal killings and murders," Gandhi said, which was received with a huge applause.

IANS


I have no ambitions to be PM, says Arvind Kejriwal

A day after Arvind Kejriwal quit as the chief minister of Delhi and said that his resignation is part of the party's fight to remove corruption from the country.

In an interview to CNN-IBN's editor-in-chief Rajdeep Sardesai, Kejriwal defended his 49-day old Delhi government, the decision to confront Delhi Police and the FIR against Reliance Industries chairman and managing director Mukesh Ambani. 

When asked if AAP was trying to quit on Jan Lokpal bill and it was well-thought out pre-scripted exit for Lok Sabha elections, Kejriwal said it was not so. He said, "Which chief minister quits to do campaign for Lok Sabha elections. Modi has not left the post of CM for Lok Sabha campaigns. I too would have done such campaigns."

When asked about whether Lok Sabha elections was his next target he said, "AAP is not ready to find Lok Sabha elections. But the voters are ready. They want change, they want to fight the elections." On the issue of whether he intends to fight the Lok Sabha elections, Kejriwal said, "I'm not sure about fighting Lok Sabha elections. I don't wish to wish to fight the elections. I have no ambitions to become PM. The public will give us 50 seats in the Delhi this time."

The former Delhi CM also refuted charges that his government had failed on the issue of governance and had only taken part in confrontations. Kejriwal said, "Who would we have formed consensus with me? BJP or Congress? We can't form consensus with corrupt people. People keep saying we don't know governance. For five years Sheila Dikshit kept saying, I want to do an audit for discoms and we managed to do it in five days. In 65 years, no government has been able to get rid of corruption. Independent surveys have shown that in Delhi corruption has gone down. The biggest English newspaper says that in the transport department in Delhi all the dalals have disappeared. Government hospitals never had medicines, they are now easily available. And they say we don't know any governance."

Arvind Kejriwal says he has no ambitions to be PM.

Arvind Kejriwal says he has no ambitions to be PM.

On the issue of registering an FIR against Ambani, Kejriwal insisted that it was not a political strategy to grab media headlines. "When I registered an FIR against Ambani, they ask me not do this, do governance. Isn't governance taking on the corrupt as well? From 1 April, the gas prices are going to rise in India. If gas prices go up, CNG prices, electricity, fertilisers prices will all up. It will affect the economy badly."

He also insisted that the party's popularity has not gone down. "Our popularity has not gone down, it has increased with the middle class. It has however gone down with the media," the former Delhi chief minister said.

However, Kejriwal also admitted that the party should not have called the Lt Governor as politically motivated.

On the issue of former Delhi law minister Somnath Bharti, he said, "The way the issue was reported, even we felt that he had done something wrong. Our party even called a meeting and we were ready to ask him to resign. However, we looked at all the tapes and video recordings from the night of the incident and realised he had done nothing wrong. However he did make two wrong statements. The one that he said he would spit on Jaitley and the other on media being paid by Modi was wrong, and we told him that he was wrong."

Watch full video interview below:


Candidates can file nominations online in Lok Sabha 2014

Ranchi: Candidates for the Lok Sabha elections would be able to e-file their nominations and affidavits, in a move aimed to bring about faster dissemination of information about the candidates, Election Commissioner HS Brahma said on Saturday.

The e-filing, a web-based form, would be in addition to filing the nomination in paper form. The Election Commission will soon ask the government to modify the current rules to make e-filing mandatory.

"This move of the ECI holds the potential to accelerate the process of dissemination of information regarding the criminal, financial, educational and other background details of candidates contesting elections," said a press release of the 10th Annual Conference on Electoral and Political Reforms.

The election commissioner also launched a citizen reporting tool - Election Watch Reporter, an android based application developed by the National Election Watch.

Election officials in this file photo. PTI

Election officials in this file photo. PTI

Brahma recommended that it be used by the election commission in the upcoming polls to keep a check on malpractices like bribing of voters (by liquor distribution, cash etc)and excessive spending by candidates.

The tool will enable citizens to capture photographic evidence (with precise GPS location and time) of any wrongdoing in and around elections and report it instantaneously to the nearest election commission observers, said the statement.

There are around 1,600 registered political parties in the country, but only a few have contested elections regularly. The conference was organised by National Election Watch (NEW) and Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR).

IANS


Kejriwal says resignation has nothing to do with Lok Sabha elections

New Delhi: The former Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday denied his move to quit was with an eye on the general elections, and said he was undecided about contesting the Lok Sabha polls.

In an interview to NDTV, Kejriwal, who submitted his and his council of ministers' resignation Friday, also refuted arguments that his government failed.

Kejriwal also said he was ready to face legal proceedings launched by Reliance chairperson Mukesh Ambani in the wake of the Aam Aadmi Party government filing a police complaint against him over the gas pricing row.

The 45-year-old chief minister, whose resignation is yet to be accepted, said he was not in a hurry to resign. "I wasn't in a hurry to resign. It was a message to the voters that we wanted to keep the corrupt out," said Kejriwal.

Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal. Reuters.

Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal. Reuters.

The chief minister also refuted allegations by the Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that they were not given enough time to study the Jan Lokpal bill.

"They are lying. We were ready to give them more time," he said.

The Congress and the BJP voted against introduction of the bill, a key poll promise of the AAP government. In the voting, 42 members voted against the introduction of the bill, while only 27 MLAs - all AAP leaders - voted for it. The Delhi assembly has a total strength of 70.

Kejriwal had said that if his government was not allowed to pass the Jan Lokpal bill, he would resign as the fight against corruption was more important.

On the reported move by Ambani to file a legal case against him, he said: "I am ready to face legal proceedings over the FIR against Mukesh Ambani. I can even go to jail for the country."

He also proposed that the AAP will write to both Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi and to BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi on the issue of gas prices.

Earlier this week, Kejriwal had ordered filing of a police complaint against Oil Minister M. Veerappa Moily, Reliance Industries (RIL) and its chairman Mukesh Ambani for creating an artificial shortage of gas in the country and raising prices.

Asked by the channel about accusations that the AAP government failed in governance, Kejriwal said that because of the anti-corruption helpline and asking people to conduct sting operations on officials demanding bribes, many officers had stopped asking for bribes and touts had disappeared.

He said surprise inspections at hospitals led to government hospitals stocking up on medicines and other essentials. "And you say we failed in governance? We achieved this in the short period we have been in the chair," the chief minister said.

IANS


Sonia, Narasimha Rao’s relations were strained: KV Thomas in new book

New Delhi: Sonia Gandhi and late Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao had strained relations when he was the Prime Minister as she was unhappy over the slow pace of progress in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination probe, says a book written by union minister K V Thomas.

And when Gandhi chose to go public with her unhappiness over the probe in August 1995, it was a build up to what she would choose two years later to enter active politics, says Union Food Minister K V Thomas in his book Sonia--The Beloved Of The Masses.

The fact that Gandhi and Rao did not share an easy relationship was also confirmed by former minister Natwar Singh, who recollects how Rao called him one night in May, 1995 to say how he was been "insulted" by her.

Referring to a speech made by Sonia Gandhi on August 20, 1995 on the birth anniversary of Rajiv Gandhi, Thomas says in his book that her words had pained the entire nation.

Congress President Sonia Gandhi in this file photo. AFP

Congress President Sonia Gandhi in this file photo. AFP

"That was why Sonia, who was not close to Rao, pointed an accusing finger at the government. Aggrieved about the inordinate delay in the Rajiv's assassination probe, she asked if the investigation related to the killing of a former prime minister was to take so much time, what would be the fate of ordinary citizens who fights for justice?"

Thomas says it could not be construed in a simplistic way as a statement against the slow pace of the process of meting out justice. "When Congress was in power, a broadside from Sonia was indeed a censure of Narasimha Rao," he writes.

Sonia believed so long as Rao remained in power, the probe into Rajiv's death will reach nowhere, says Thomas in the book.

"Her conviction was some other agency might have masterminded the murder and engineered it through LTTE. It was circumstances which pushed Sonia into politics. How could she remain witness when the edifices of the party was crumbling," he says.

Writing in a Delhi daily last week, Natwar Singh recalls from his dairy notings of May 13, 1995 when Rao called him to his Race Course Residence in the night.

"Around 9 pm, PV walked in, he did not sit down. The normally imperturbable PV appeared flummoxed and agitated: 'I have just received her letter to me?' I said I have not seen it. The two were apparently having an epistolary war regarding the trial of Rajiv Gandhi's assassins."

Singh says what Rao said next was so unexpected that he was dumbfounded. "I cannot take her on. I could. I don't want to. What does she expect me to do?", the prime minister had said.

A junior minister in Rao's cabinet with whom he developed differences later, Singh suggested he meet Sonia Gandhi. "How often do I see her? It is a question of my self respect. Her attitude is affecting my health. How many times do I have to be insulted."

Singh told Rao that he had never discussed Rao with Gandhi but he got the impression that she felt the question of trial of her husband's assassination was not proceeding fast enough. He recalls that Rao told him of all the steps taken by the government including making P Chidambaram incharge of the assassination probe subject. "If she thinks my leaving will improve the matter, I am willing to go."

PTI


Sonia, Narasimha Rao’s relations were strained: KV Thomas in new book

New Delhi: Sonia Gandhi and late Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao had strained relations when he was the Prime Minister as she was unhappy over the slow pace of progress in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination probe, says a book written by union minister K V Thomas.

And when Gandhi chose to go public with her unhappiness over the probe in August 1995, it was a build up to what she would choose two years later to enter active politics, says Union Food Minister K V Thomas in his book Sonia--The Beloved Of The Masses.

The fact that Gandhi and Rao did not share an easy relationship was also confirmed by former minister Natwar Singh, who recollects how Rao called him one night in May, 1995 to say how he was been "insulted" by her.

Referring to a speech made by Sonia Gandhi on August 20, 1995 on the birth anniversary of Rajiv Gandhi, Thomas says in his book that her words had pained the entire nation.

Congress President Sonia Gandhi in this file photo. AFP

Congress President Sonia Gandhi in this file photo. AFP

"That was why Sonia, who was not close to Rao, pointed an accusing finger at the government. Aggrieved about the inordinate delay in the Rajiv's assassination probe, she asked if the investigation related to the killing of a former prime minister was to take so much time, what would be the fate of ordinary citizens who fights for justice?"

Thomas says it could not be construed in a simplistic way as a statement against the slow pace of the process of meting out justice. "When Congress was in power, a broadside from Sonia was indeed a censure of Narasimha Rao," he writes.

Sonia believed so long as Rao remained in power, the probe into Rajiv's death will reach nowhere, says Thomas in the book.

"Her conviction was some other agency might have masterminded the murder and engineered it through LTTE. It was circumstances which pushed Sonia into politics. How could she remain witness when the edifices of the party was crumbling," he says.

Writing in a Delhi daily last week, Natwar Singh recalls from his dairy notings of May 13, 1995 when Rao called him to his Race Course Residence in the night.

"Around 9 pm, PV walked in, he did not sit down. The normally imperturbable PV appeared flummoxed and agitated: 'I have just received her letter to me?' I said I have not seen it. The two were apparently having an epistolary war regarding the trial of Rajiv Gandhi's assassins."

Singh says what Rao said next was so unexpected that he was dumbfounded. "I cannot take her on. I could. I don't want to. What does she expect me to do?", the prime minister had said.

A junior minister in Rao's cabinet with whom he developed differences later, Singh suggested he meet Sonia Gandhi. "How often do I see her? It is a question of my self respect. Her attitude is affecting my health. How many times do I have to be insulted."

Singh told Rao that he had never discussed Rao with Gandhi but he got the impression that she felt the question of trial of her husband's assassination was not proceeding fast enough. He recalls that Rao told him of all the steps taken by the government including making P Chidambaram incharge of the assassination probe subject. "If she thinks my leaving will improve the matter, I am willing to go."

PTI


Kejriwal says resignation has nothing to do with Lok Sabha elections

New Delhi: The former Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday denied his move to quit was with an eye on the general elections, and said he was undecided about contesting the Lok Sabha polls.

In an interview to NDTV, Kejriwal, who submitted his and his council of ministers' resignation Friday, also refuted arguments that his government failed.

Kejriwal also said he was ready to face legal proceedings launched by Reliance chairperson Mukesh Ambani in the wake of the Aam Aadmi Party government filing a police complaint against him over the gas pricing row.

The 45-year-old chief minister, whose resignation is yet to be accepted, said he was not in a hurry to resign. "I wasn't in a hurry to resign. It was a message to the voters that we wanted to keep the corrupt out," said Kejriwal.

Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal. Reuters.

Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal. Reuters.

The chief minister also refuted allegations by the Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that they were not given enough time to study the Jan Lokpal bill.

"They are lying. We were ready to give them more time," he said.

The Congress and the BJP voted against introduction of the bill, a key poll promise of the AAP government. In the voting, 42 members voted against the introduction of the bill, while only 27 MLAs - all AAP leaders - voted for it. The Delhi assembly has a total strength of 70.

Kejriwal had said that if his government was not allowed to pass the Jan Lokpal bill, he would resign as the fight against corruption was more important.

On the reported move by Ambani to file a legal case against him, he said: "I am ready to face legal proceedings over the FIR against Mukesh Ambani. I can even go to jail for the country."

He also proposed that the AAP will write to both Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi and to BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi on the issue of gas prices.

Earlier this week, Kejriwal had ordered filing of a police complaint against Oil Minister M. Veerappa Moily, Reliance Industries (RIL) and its chairman Mukesh Ambani for creating an artificial shortage of gas in the country and raising prices.

Asked by the channel about accusations that the AAP government failed in governance, Kejriwal said that because of the anti-corruption helpline and asking people to conduct sting operations on officials demanding bribes, many officers had stopped asking for bribes and touts had disappeared.

He said surprise inspections at hospitals led to government hospitals stocking up on medicines and other essentials. "And you say we failed in governance? We achieved this in the short period we have been in the chair," the chief minister said.

IANS


Veteran Congress leader Parasram Maderna passes away

Jaipur: Senior Congress leader and former Assembly Speaker Parasram Maderna died in Jaipur this morning following respiratory failure.

The 92-year-old Jat leader breathed his last at 6 AM, SMS Hospital Superintendent Dr Virendra Singh told PTI here.

Congress leader P Maderna in this file photo. Image from Wikimedia commons,

Congress leader P Maderna in this file photo. Image from Wikimedia commons,

He was admitted to the hospital recently after he complained of swelling in his legs and stomach. He was suffering from diabetes, osteoarthritis and septicaemia.

His elder son and former Congress minister, Mahipal Maderna, who is in jail in connection with Bhanwari Devi's murder case, was given interim bail to attend to his ailing father by a court on 12 February.

PTI


AAP cuts losses in 49 days, in position to change game again

Arvind Kejriwal may be a smarter man than we have given him credit for. His resignation as Chief Minister, after messing around with government for 49 days, may seem like a defeat to you and me, but the real point is all his failures will be forgotten over the next two months as we head into election season. What will be left, Kejriwal must be hoping, is the halo of the outsider taking on the establishment.

This is thus a good time to take note of the Aam Aadmi Party's (AAP's) gains or losses from running Delhi (or rather, running away from it). I believe he has not only rectified his strategic errors, but also made some gains from being in government. So Congress and BJP should brace for an all-out onslaught.

Here are my takeouts.

#1: Arvind Kejriwal's only mistake was to take the referendum route to deciding whether he should join government or not. He thought the people would say no, but they didn't. His own inclination was to occupy the entire opposition space and rule the streets with the minority BJP in government. The BJP didn't oblige, and the Congress unexpectedly did. Kejriwal went for the referendum – which too unexpectedly asked him to become CM. It was a mistake, and he has now exited – bruised in image, but he has cut his losses.

#2: Kejriwal & Co did not sit idle in government. While we were busy excoriating Somnath Bharti for his antics, the AAP ministers were busy collecting information and files for future use once out of government. The Congress and the BJP (which runs three municipal corporations in Delhi) should expect a series of incriminating documents and allegations to surface in Delhi.

AAP_protest_Naresh

Rejuvenated? A file picture of AAP volunteers staging a protest

#3: It is not clear if the Lt Governor, Najeeb Jung, will recommend dissolution of the assembly or call for fresh elections. At the time of writing, he seemed to have recommended keeping the assembly in suspended animation. The politically wise decision (for Congress) would be to leave it like this, since the BJP also looks likely to decline an offer to form the government again. This would obviate the need for holding the Delhi elections along with the Lok Sabha polls. This would, in a way, suit both the Congress and the BJP, but if we assume the Congress' aim is to damage the BJP, it would make sense to let both elections happen simultaneously. AAP will be waiting eagerly to know which was the Lt Governor will decide.

#4: The BJP temporarily has the advantage with AAP in Delhi, given its poor governance record in Delhi, but in the general elections all bets are off. An AAP unleashed as a street-fighting force which makes daily allegations about corruption is a different proposition from an AAP stuck in government. Freed from the constraints of office, AAP will be a more ferocious fighter.

#5: The interesting question to ask is what will happen to Congress now. While it is AAP's gameplan to equate Congress and BJP as the same and pretend to be the only non-corrupt force, the fallout is difficult to predict: one part of the Congress votebank (the underclass and the minorities) could gravitate towards AAP and the rest towards BJP. The stability-with-change vote will go to BJP and the radical, anti-establishment vote could move towards AAP in Delhi. It could mean either a complete rout for the Congress, or a serious mauling. Unless Rahul Gandhi pulls off a miracle – which no one is betting on.

#6: The AAP's real gains will come only if it manages to decimate the Congress. This will make it the main Left-wing national force by 2019, but of course a lot would depend on what happens in Delhi and Haryana in 2014.

#7: Any significant AAP gains in 2014 will lead to a new realignment of regional and national parties, since AAP's anti-corruption avatar is inimical to regional parties more than national parties. The state parties are more corrupt than the national ones – but this is not visible right now as we treat AAP as national just because it won Delhi. AAP's real battle will be in the states – but that is another story, for another time.

#8: If AAP makes a dream debut in 2014, a new centrist party will have to emerge around either the Congress or BJP. Which one it will be depends on the damage done to either by AAP and other parties in the general elections -  if any.

#9: The big casualty will be crony business – whatever happens in 2014. AAP's sudden discovery of Mukesh Ambani as villain is suspect, but the fact is India Inc's image has been sullied and it won't find it easy to restore respect without a serious soul-search. One can be certain that AAP will keep targeting business in the elections – and unless businessmen take this threat seriously, they will be in deep trouble. As Shekhar Gupta notes in his column today in The Indian Express: "The political class ….will look after itself. It's the corporates who need to be careful. They cannot repair the damage done to their image by spending a little more on corporate social responsibility. They need to embrace the equivalent of what your doctor would call lifestyle changes." The good thing about the rise of AAP is crony capitalism will be exposed. But the bad thing is it will set corporate confidence back by at least a few years – just when you need to restore it.

The ultimate takeout: Governance is not what AAP is about. Its real role is that of a changer of status quo - and for this, getting out of government was vital. In government, no party can fail to compromise.


AAP had no option but to quit, says Prashant Bhushan

New Delhi: AAP leader and senior Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan said on Saturday that the party had no option but to quit after the Jan Lokpal bill was rejected in the Delhi assembly. Bhushan said the bill was the first promise made to the public of Delhi.

"Our biggest responsibility was to form a corruption-free government and run it, but if the BJP and the Congress are not letting us pass the bill, then what is the point of us staying in power," he said.

AAP leader Prashant Bhushan. PTI

AAP leader Prashant Bhushan. PTI

He said that as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Congress were unlikely to form a coalition, Lt. Governor Najeeb Jung has no option but to dissolve the assembly.

On Kiran Bedi's statement that AAP was trying to hype the Jan Lokpal bill to ensure good results in Lok Sabha election, Bhushan said Bedi had become a mouthpiece of the BJP. Arvind Kejriwal resigned as Delhi chief minister Friday after the Congress and the BJP combined did not allow the bill to introduced in the assembly.

IANS