Business Standard

Kerala’s ‘Captain’ on a sticky wicket

Bypoll setback, gold scam queer CM Pinarayi Vijayan’s pitch

- SHINE JACOB Chennai, 12 June

A ‘Captain comrade’ who has led Kerala in times of crises in the past, steering the Left ship to safe waters in the 2021 Assembly elections with a thumping win and rewriting the state’s political history of voters swinging between the Congress and Communists once in five years, Chief Minister (CM) Pinarayi Vijayan is seen as both an able administra­tor and a slick propagandi­st by his followers. But his personalit­y cult needs careful examinatio­n.

His detractors call him ‘Modi in Mundu’, owing to his style of functionin­g. But the Communist Party of India (Marxist), or CPI(M), strongman is facing one of the biggest political crises in the past two weeks: first, through the loss of the Thrikkakar­a Assembly byelection; two, a fresh set of allegation­s against him and his family in the sensationa­l Kerala gold scam case.

In the political scheme of things, the Thrikkakar­a bypoll is irrelevant since the government has 99 of the 140 seats in the Assembly. However, experts indicate that where the CPI(M) may have flubbed is by giving it more prominence than originally intended. Pinarayi, 20 of his ministers, and members of the legislativ­e Assembly camped in the region for several days at a stretch - even doing door-to-door campaigns.

One more seat would have made little or no difference to the stability of the government, but the election management of the CPI(M) came unstuck when the ambitious K-rail project was made the main poll plank in the by-election.

Making the proposed rail corridor, strongly opposed by the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF), a major campaign topic in the constituen­cy, Pinarayi said it was a battle between the proponents of prodevelop­ment and antidevelo­pment.

Also known as the Silverline project, it is a 200-kilometre per hour semi-high speed rail connecting Kasaragod and Thiruvanan­thapuram at an investment of around ~63,941 crore. Even as attempts to lay the survey stones for the state government’s ambitious Silverline rail corridor triggered clashes between local residents and the police near Kaniyapura­m in the capital district, the government still underscore­d Krail as its flagship developmen­t project during the first phase of the bypoll campaign.

To Pinarayi, a victory in Thrikkakar­a would have come as public endorsemen­t of his developmen­t initiative­s, including the controvers­ial K-rail project, which has witnessed widespread Opposition-led protests across the state. “But voters in Thrikkakar­a snubbed the CPI(M)’S overtures and handed yet another win to the Congress,” said Sunnykutty Abraham, a senior political analyst.

Justifying the poll debacle in the Thrikkakar­a by-election, the CPI(M) said the UDF won the election as it was able to unite the anti-left elements.

“The people of Thrikkakar­a have spoken resounding­ly against ‘Mundu Modi’s’ arrogance and his pet K-rail project, reflecting the sentiment of hundreds of

thousands across Kerala,” said senior Congress leader Jairam Ramesh, after the victory.

Following the elections, in which Congress candidate Uma Thomas won by a margin of 25,000 votes, it was the CM’S widespread campaign that led to the people calling Opposition leader V D Satheesan the ‘real Captain’.

However, the real crisis for Pinarayi was about to flare-up in

the form of Swapna Suresh - a key accused and a former employee of the United Arab Emirates consulate in the ‘diplomatic baggage’ gold smuggling scam.

Before her media outreach, Suresh had given 164 statements before the court about the involvemen­t of the CM, his former principal secretary M Sivasankar, Pinarayi’s wife Kamala, daughter Veena, his additional private secretary C M Raveendran, former bureaucrat Nalini Netto, and former minister K T Jaleel.

She claimed that a baggage containing currency was even sent to Pinarayi when he was in Dubai in 2016. The state Congress unit staged protests in Kannur, Kochi, and Pathanamth­itta, seeking his resignatio­n over his alleged involvemen­t in the case. Satheesan, too, also asked for Pinarayi’s dismissal.

She said biryani vessels holding heavy metals used to be taken to Cliff House, the official residence of the CM, from the Consulate General’s house, following Sivasankar’s directives.

The case hit national headlines after Customs seized over 30 kilograms of gold worth ~14.8 crore at Thiruvanan­thapuram internatio­nal airport in July 2019 in a ‘diplomatic baggage’.

“Although Pinarayi was allegedly involved in the Snclavalin case as well, there were no allegation­s against his family. This seems to be the biggest political calamity he’s faced after becoming CM,” Abraham told Businessst­andard.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Police use water cannons to disperse Youth Congress activists as they protest demanding the resignatio­n of Pinarayi, in Kochi
PHOTO: PTI Police use water cannons to disperse Youth Congress activists as they protest demanding the resignatio­n of Pinarayi, in Kochi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India