Monday, January 27, 2014

BJP will win all 7 Lok Sabha seats in Delhi: Vijay Goel

Jaipur: Claiming that the people have lost faith in the Aam Aadmi Party due to "its own problems", BJP's Delhi unit chief Vijay Goel today said his party was likely to win all seven Lok Sabha seats in the national capital.

The AAP, since it formed the government in Delhi around a month ago, had suffered a number of disputes and none of the promises made in its manifesto could be implemented so far, said Goel who was here after being selected as a party nominee for the February 7 Rajya Sabha polls from Rajasthan.

Vijay Goel. Ibnlive

Vijay Goel. Ibnlive

"There is a difference between 'kathani and karni'... AAP has done so before and after assembly polls and formation of the government with outside support of Congress. Public's faith in AAP is now broken. It is facing various problems," Goel told reporters after a meeting with Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje.

The former Union minister said BJP would have a mission to win all 25 Lok Sabha seats in Rajasthan in the 2014 elections, and 272 seats at the national level, and added Narendra Modi would be the PM and eradicate corruption, and control prices of essential commodities.

PTI


Telangana issue: Reddy seeks clarity on status of AP Reorganisation Bill

Hyderabad: Countering Union Minister Jairam Ramesh's claim that the "draft Bill" and the "Bill" (related to AP Reorganisation) were the same, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy today questioned if it was the former's personal opinion or that of the Centre.

N Kiran Kumar Reddy. AFP image

N Kiran Kumar Reddy. AFP image

"If the draft Bill and the Bill are one and the same, the Centre should specify that in writing," the Chief Minister told reporters after the Assembly was adjourned for the day. The state Legislature could express its views only if the Bill, that would eventually be tabled in Parliament, was referred to it, Reddy said.

"If the Bill doesn't contain all relevant information, on what issue will we express our views? If a proper Bill is sent to us, we can give our opinion and also propose amendments. Parliament may or may not consider them," he observed. The Chief Minister had on Saturday last questioned the validity of the AP Reorganisation Bill-2013 saying it was violative not only of Parliamentary procedures but also the Constitution of India.

"The Bill, referred to the state Legislature by the President, is full of mistakes and lacunae. In fact, the Centre itself is not clear whether it is a draft Bill or the (actual) Bill," Reddy had said in the state Assembly, asserting that it could not be discussed in the present form.

"The Bill does not contain the 'objects and reasons', the scope of proposals or the financial memorandum. It has not been specified in the Bill why are they (the Centre) seeking to divide the state," Reddy pointed out. "How could we (state Legislature) express our views on the Bill without the Centre stating its views," Kiran wondered.

"Initially they said it's the Bill. When we sought clarifications, objects and reasons and financial memorandum, the Union Home Secretary replied it's only a draft Bill," he said.

Reacting to this, Jairam Ramesh, who was a member of the Group of Ministers that drafted the Bill, reportedly said in New Delhi today that the draft Bill and the Bill were the same.

"It's not right to say the Bill is unconstitutional," he noted.

The Legislature could only express its views on the Bill, he said, adding, "The GoM will meet again after the state Legislature returns the Bill and discuss the amendments proposed, if any."

PTI


Not alone, many AAP members unhappy with Kejriwal: Binny

A day after being expelled from the Aam Aadmi Party, Delhi MLA Vinod Kumar Binny said there were many more members within the party who were upset with the party's leadership and policies.

Expelled AAP MLA Vinod Kumar Binny. PTI

Expelled AAP MLA Vinod Kumar Binny. PTI

"I have been told that there are many members who are upset with the party's policies and are backing me," Binny told reporters this morning.

Binny will be meeting Lt Governor Najeeb Jung later today to discuss the controversy surrounding Delhi Law Minister Somnath Bharti. He is also likely to go on a hunger strike at Jantar Mantar to protest against the government's failure to fulfil its promises made to the people.

When questioned about the expulsion, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said his party was in power to govern and not to play politics.

"No government has done as much as we have in the last one month... we don't indulge in the politics of number crunching to stay in power," he said.

Meanwhile, the BJP has come out in support of the disgruntled MLA saying the issues he has raised are crucial and the government must answer them.

"What he has raised are the same questions people across the country want answers from... the AAP government must answer," BJP leader Harsh Vardhan told reporters today.

Another BJP leader VK Malhotra said the BJP had its doors open to Binny and he could join them at anytime.

"If he (Binny) comes to BJP, we will welcome him," Malhotra told a news channel.

On Sunday night,  Binny described his ouster from the party as 'unfortunate', and claimed that the ruling party in Delhi "wants the government to fall" to escape the promises it has made to the people.

"It cannot be more unfortunate than the fact that you need somebody to make you realise the promises you have made to the public and you end up expelling that person from the party," the Laxmi Nagar MLA told reporters soon after he was expelled from the party.

Before evicting me you (AAP) should have ousted those people from the party who talked about dividing the nation, those who misbehaved with women, those who made fun of the laws of the land and disobeyed the rules, he said.

On being asked why he was expelled from the party, he said, "I feel they want that the government falls and they are saved from the people whom they promised many things. I want to say that Vinod Kumar Binny will vote on those issues that the party is hiding from."

"I would not allow them to run away from the promises they made to the public," he said.

The party had announced Binny's expulsion in a brief statement.

"This disciplinary committee has decided to expel Vinod Kumar Binny and terminate his primary membership from the party, for publicly making false statements against the party and its leadership, thereby bringing disrepute to the party," the party said in a statement.

The committee was headed by Pankaj Gupta and other members included Ashish Talwar, Illyas Azmi, Yogendra Yadav and Gopal Rai. The party said Binny has been sent a letter informing decision of the party.

39-year-old Binny, a former Congressman, had held a press conference on 16 January in which he had attacked Kejriwal and the party leaders, accusing them of "deviating" from the core principles of the party.

Subsequently, AAP had issued a showcause notice to him for violating the code of conduct under Section 6(1)(a) of the party constitution.

In his press conference, Binny had slammed the leadership on a range of issues and said taking support of Congress to form the government was a "compromise of the party's principles".

He had said the party has "forgotten" its ideologies and become "an opportunist outfit" after coming to power. "They are using policy of use and throw. First, they have used Anna Hazare, Kiran Bedi and still many people in the party are being exploited," he had said.

Binny said though the party during the election campaign had promised to provide 700 litres of free water to each household, the government "very cleverly" announced that those exceeding the limit will have to pay for the full amount.

Rubbishing the MLA's criticism, Kejriwal had said that Binny had come to him for ministership and later he wanted to contest the Lok Sabha polls.

Binny had termed Kejriwal's statement on his seeking Lok Sabha ticket as the "biggest lie".

Binny had alleged that AAP "does not function democratically" and four-five people take all the decisions in the party.

He had claimed that Kejriwal gets angry if people do not agree with him.

With PTI inputs


Being a criminal in my own country: Vikram Seth on Sec 377

"The law is the foreign law. It's homophobia that came into India (from outside), not homosexuality."

Vikram Seth donned the role of outspoken activist, this time clean-shaven unlike his India Today cover avatar, at the Kolkata Literary Meet on Sunday to protest the Supreme Court judgement on Section 377.

Actually it was a double mother-and-son whammy. The Times of India carried a column that same day written by his mother, Leila Seth protesting the same ruling both as a mother and as a former chief justice.

"We know that (my children) are hard-working and affectionate people, who are trying to do some good in the world," writes Leila Seth. "But our eldest, Vikram, is now a criminal, an unapprehended felon. This is because like many millions of other Indians, he is gay."

Vikram Seth at the Kolkata Literary Meet. Sandip Roy/Firstpost.

Vikram Seth at the Kolkata Literary Meet. Sandip Roy/Firstpost.

On Tuesday January 28th two judges of the Supreme Court will consider the review petition filed by the Government of India against the judgement. One of the two judges who will consider the review petition wrote the original judgement that recriminalized "sex against the order of nature." They will meet in camera and go over the review petition and decide what to do.

"So the happiness of millions of Indians will be decided in a matter of half an hour by two judges," says Vikram.

The other solution is a parliamentary one and that is even a longer shot, especially in an election year. After some studied silence on the issue the BJP has decided to support Section 377. Rajnath Singh has made that clear though Narendra Modi has maintained radio silence about it.

"Modi has tweeted about everything else in the world," says Vikram. " But here he's very clear he wants to be the modernist. He's hiding behind the pallu of these other people."

Vikram has certainly not been hiding. He is an unlikely activist because he has guarded his privacy quite fiercely. He's never shown any inclination until now to become a role model for anyone. He's gently but firmly re-directed interviews that seemed to veer too far away from his writing and too much into his personal life. That's why his unshaven post-377 mugshot on the cover of India Today made such a media splash, mostly supportive, even, he says, from people from his parents' generation.

It has also garnered him some criticism. The government is hardly likely to swoop down and arrest a writer who was just anointed among the 25 greatest global living Indians the other day by the President of India. Some found the cover too sensational, a writer of great privilege, "acting" criminal for the camera after a late night and a few drinks.

"The last thing I want to be is the poster boy for anything. But you have to get the attention of the people," he responds. The portrait of the writer as the faux-felon was, simply put, meant to be arresting.

"My first reaction when I saw the takes was no one will ever sleep with me again," he jokes.

The other issue is one of priorities. In a country bristling with injustices was Section 377 really such a burning issue? "Our republic has a lot of other problems," admits Vikram. "But to borrow an American saying, we can walk and chew gum at the same time."

He knows that as a writer who has shunned the soapbox he has not been the God of Other Small/Big/Medium Causes. "One has a short life and one cannot protest everything," says Vikram. "One has to husband one's energies where one things one can do best. If you just become the standard marcher of a hundred protests, to some extent you are diluting the efficacy of what you can do."

He says he decided to speak up because the judgment was "not just ethically hollow but intellectually shallow" marred by "poor and shoddy argumentation." Leila Seth, for example, wonders how the judges can dismiss the fundamental rights of LGBT Indians because in their opinion it only affects "a miniscule fraction."

"It would be like saying that the Parsi community could be legitimately imprisoned or deported at Parliament's will because they number only a few tens of thousands."

Yet ultimately it's unclear whether Vikram's very public stand will penetrate the private chambers of the Supreme Court where the judges will meet in camera. Vikram admits that a review petition is a "long shot" and a curative petition is an even longer shot. Judges rarely like to admit they have made a mistake.

His mother Leila seems to be telling her judicial colleagues exactly that fairly bluntly in her op-ed. As a former judge addressing sitting judges that's quite an astounding smackdown, couched though it is in genteel prose.

"I began by saying that Premo and I had brought up our children to believe in certain values. I did not mention some others which we have sought to inculcate in them: to open their hearts and minds; to admit their errors frankly, however hard this may be; to abjure cruelty; and to repair in a willing spirit any unjust damage they have done to others."

On Tuesday, the two judges of the Supreme Court will have to show far more courage than Vikram did by speaking up or Leila Seth did by writing her op-ed. They will have to decide if they want to just be judges, infallible and august, or ensure justice even if it means overruling themselves.

However one thing is clear. Whatever the court decides to do or not to do, there's no closet big enough for millions of Indians who are already out.

"I am not happy to be a criminal in my own country," says Vikram. "But I certainly plan to continue being a criminal in my own country if it should come to that."


Vote for those who will bring back black money: Ram Jethmalani

Thane: Former Union Minister and eminent lawyer Ram Jethmalani today urged people to vote for that party in the coming elections, which will commit itself to bring back the black money stashed abroad.

Inaugurating the 21st Rashtriya Kavi Sammelan here during the weekend he said, "citizens should demand only one thing from political parties, which ever it is, that they should bring back the black money lying in Swiss banks."

Ram Jethmalani. Reuters

Ram Jethmalani. Reuters

This commitment should be included in their manifesto and nothing else, he said.

Citing lack of political will on the part of the Centre to act on the black money issue, the former BJP member said, "this is the money robbed from the poor of the country by big industrialists and politicians but the government has turned a blind eye to it."

The name of late Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi too figures in the list of influential people allegedly holding account in Swiss banks, but nobody is ready to take any step forward, he alleged.

Later talking to newsmen, Jethmalani said, he was highly disappointed with the AAP led by Arvind Kejriwal. "We had high hopes that they will perform but they have failed," he said.

He said that he was among the first who gave donation to the party.

On AAP's decision to contest LS polls, the 90-year-old politician said, "I am disappointed with the party and nothing more."

He said he was happy pursuing other things such as teaching rather than being a lawyer or a politician.

Jethmalani was honoured with the "Lifetime Achievement Award" on the occasion where he was presented with a memento and a shawl at the hands of chief guests Chintaman Wanga, Rajan Vichare and CIDCO Chairman Pramod Hindurao, besides BJP National Council Member Om Prakash Sharma.

PTI


Only Modi can save country from corruption, says Baba Ramdev

Chennai: Advocating for BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, yoga guru Ramdev on Monday accused the Congress of creating economic and social anarchy, and said only Modi can save the country from corruption.

Yoga Guru Baba Ramdev

Yoga Guru Baba Ramdev

"While the country is going through political anarchy, Congress has created social and economic anarchy. Modi will give a strong government and save the country," he said.

Ramdev said from 24 March, his followers would launch a door-to-door campaign in support of 'Modi for PM'.

He claimed Congress will get less than 100 Lok Sabha seats and BJP will get 300 seats while backing Modi for the top post.

The focus was not just Modi, but "issues" like corruption and black money, he told reporters after meeting his supporters in Chennai.

"There will be a big polarisation," and BJP will get the said number of seats. The yoga guru, who had recently shared dais with the Gujarat Chief Minister, said attempts were being made to paint Modi as "anti-Muslim".

"Riots have not happened in which government? Whether Congress, CPI-M or SP, riots have happened. Efforts are being made to paint Modi as anti-Muslim but he thinks of their welfare," Ramdev said in response to query on 2002 riots in Gujarat during Modi's rule.

Muslims have been made "scapegoat" but the community members are intelligent and will vote for Modi, he claimed.

Asked about Modi's pro-Corporate image, he said the BJP leader, if elected as Prime Minister, should work with primary focus on local industries.

Taking a dig at AAP and the expulsion of rebel MLA Vinod Kumar Binny, he said this showed there was no internal democracy and the high command culture has crept into it.

AAP's image has taken a beating, especially following the recent "drama" where party leader and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal took to the streets against the Delhi Police, he said, adding, the party which intends to contest elections from Gujarat, will lose there.

The yoga guru, who was earlier associated with Kejriwal, said the party may get 5-10 seats in the Lok Sabha polls, that too only if the top leadership changes its ways.

Ramdev said a massive Yoga Mahotsav will be held across the world on 23 March with an estimate 12 crore people participating in it.

PTI


With eye on Lok Sabha 2014, AAP sets up panel in UP

Lucknow: AAP has constituted a state-level coordination committee and opened a secretariat in Uttar Pradesh for the Lok Sabha poll preparations, party spokesman Sanjay Singh said here today. "Incharges of every Lok Sabha have been appointed and to decide names of candidates a state level screening committee has also been constituted," Singh added.

Aam Aadmi Party workers. AFP.

Aam Aadmi Party workers. AFP.

He said that Aam Aadmi Party would contest in almost all the 80 seats in UP and would field candidates against every prominent person including SP supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav and BSP chief Mayawati. About ruling SP, Singh said that Mulayam has been exposed among the people due to alleged misdeeds of its workers, who were seen doing hooliganism at toll plaza, beating engineers and also due to communal riots in the state.

"SP and BJP want to communalise atmosphere of the state," he alleged. Asked about poll surveys, Singh said that without finalisation of candidates, AAP was seen getting 18 percent vote share in these surveys and after the declaration of candidates this percentage would further increase.

Replying to a question, Singh said that AAP would contest 350 Lok Sabha seats in the country and would not forge alliance with any other party.

PTI