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Congress-RJD alliance with CPI(ML) will revive Naxalism in Bihar: Yogi Adityanath

On the second day of his campaign for the assembly elections in the state, where he held back to back rallies in Jamui, Bhojpur and Patna districts
Last Updated 21 October 2020, 13:04 IST

The Congress-RJD combines poll pact with ultra-Left CPI(ML) in Bihar is deplorable and unfortunate as it can lead to a resurgence of Naxalism in the state which has reeled under Maoist violence for long, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said on Wednesday.

On the second day of his campaign for the assembly elections in the state, where he held back to back rallies in Jamui, Bhojpur and Patna districts, the BJP star campaigner also deftly played the caste card, invoking memories of leaders belonging to communities that dominated the respective constituencies.

He also lavished praise on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah for the resolve they showed in scrapping Article 370, facilitating the construction of Ram temple at Ayodhya, stamping down terrorism and offering help to persecuted minorities of other countries through the Citizenship Amendment Act.

All this is making the people of the country happy. But Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan is visibly frightened and, strangely, leaders like Rahul Gandhi and Owaisi too are perturbed. Try to understand their mindset and beware of such elements, he said.

True to form, Yogi began all his speeches with chants of Bharat Mata Ki Jai and ended with roars of Jai Sri Ram, reminding the people of the state that for him Bihar was the maayka (native place) of goddess Sita.

I would have loved to have at least one representative from all villages of Bihar at the foundation stone laying ceremony at Ayodhya. This could not happen because of Covid-19. But I look forward to receiving pilgrims from Bihar once the temple is complete as I hope that the pandemic will be over by then, he said.

Ending the day with a rally at Paliganj in rural Patna, where he canvassed for sitting MLA Jai Vardhan Yadav who recently quit the RJD and joined Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's JD(U), Yogi accused the opposition of trying to give a fresh lease of life to elements who chant slogans favouring disintegration of the country at premier educational institutions.

The allusion to the student's agitation at JNU was made in the backdrop of the opposition Grand Alliance fielding Sandeep Saurav, a former leader of the JNUSU who is fighting on a CPI(ML) ticket.

The tie-up of Congress-RJD with CPI(ML) is an unfortunate and deplorable attempt (durbhagyapoorna aur kutsit cheshta) to revive Naxalism in a state which has suffered a lot on account of the menace, he said.

The Uttar Pradesh chief minister also remarked that he had a sense of pride over the coincidence that I come from Lord Krishna's birthplace and have landed on Bihar's soil on a day when the birth anniversary of its first, visionary, Chief Minister Sri Krishna Sinha is being observed.

Sinha, who ruled the state till his death in 1961, is hugely popular with upper-caste Bhumihars, traditionally the supporters of the BJP who have a sizeable presence in Paliganj.

The NDA is, however, in a fix in the assembly segment with rebel ally LJP of Chirag Paswan fielding Usha Vidyarthi, a Bhumihar who formerly represented the seat. She quit the BJP after she was denied a ticket.

At Tarari, which falls in Rajput-dominated Bhojpur district, Yogi invoked the memory of 1857 hero Veer Kunwar Singh, the legendary ruler of Jagdishpur.

Beginning his Tarari address with a greeting in local dialect Bhojpuri, Yogi, who hails from Uttarakhand but has been based in Gorakhpur for decades, reminded the locals of their valiant attempts at rooting out Naxal violence.

Bhojpur district had spawned Ranveer Sena, an anti-Naxalite private militia propped up by local landowners which became controversial for its brutality and were, subsequently, outlawed.

In the years since Modi took over, Pakistan-sponsored terrorism has been dealt with and 95 per cent of Naxalites have been rooted out. Wait for some more time and the remaining five per cent too will be finished, he said.

In Jamui, where the BJP has fielded ace shooter Shreyasi Singh, Yogi made an emotional appeal to voters, reminding them of her late father Digvijay Singh, a former Union minister who is held in high esteem by the Rajputs of the area.

A former confidante of Nitish Kumar and George Fernandes, Singh had parted ways with the chief minister in 2009 when he fought the Lok Sabha polls as an Independent from his pocket borough Banka and pulled off a stunning victory. He died a year later and his wife Putul Kumari won the seat as an Independent in the ensuing by-election.

She retained the seat in 2014 when she fought on a BJP ticket but lost it five years later when she jumped into the fray as an Independent after Banka fell into the kitty of the party headed by Nitish Kumar, with whom she and her family seem not very comfortable till date.

The UP chief minister, who is seen as a Thakur leader notwithstanding his association with a caste-neutral monastic order, also cleverly reminded the people in Tarari and Jamui of the disillusionment Raghuvansh Prasad Singh felt towards the RJD, despite being a founding member, which led him to resign from the party a day before his death.

Observing that the rallies in Bihar were well-attended despite the pandemic, Yogi said, Most of you are young. Do remember when your brethren were forced to return from far-off places during migration, they might have faced some ill-treatment in Delhi or Maharashtra (ruled by Aam Aadmi Party and a coalition comprising the Congress, respectively) but they were welcomed with open arms in UP.

Do make it a point to reach out to your near and dear ones and acquaintances with messages over the phone and social media that the NDA must be voted back to power for Bihar's well being.

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(Published 21 October 2020, 13:04 IST)

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