Deccan Chronicle

Powerful Doval, sore ministers

- Anita Katyal The writer is a Delhibased journalist

Now that Najma Heptulla has been appointed governor of Manipur, there is a mad scramble in the BJP for her Rajya Sabha seat. Although the list of hopefuls are long, party grapevine says former Union minister Syed Shahnawaz Hussain and BJP general secretary Kailash Vijayvargi­ya are among the frontrunne­rs. Mr Hussain is undoubtedl­y a strong candidate but even before the leadership can take a final view, there are murmurs in the party’s MP unit that outsiders are being given preference while the claims local leaders are being ignored. However, Mr Vijayvargi­ya’s candidatur­e has put MP chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan in a fix. On one hand, he cannot openly oppose his name as Mr Vijayvargi­ya belongs to the state. On the other hand, it will be difficult for the CM to endorse him as it is well known that there is no love lost between the two leaders. In fact, Mr Vijayvargi­ya loses no opportunit­y to target Mr Chouhan. Only recently, Mr Vijayvargi­ya had tweeted: “We had promised residents of Indore… a metro but the state government’s speed suggests we will get a bullock cart, not metro.” He followed it up with a fresh attack on Mr Chouhan when he declared that the “ills that come with power are slowly becoming apparent… if we are not careful, we may find the going tough in the next elections.” Given their relationsh­ip, Mr Chouhan is unlikely to be happy if Mr Vijayvargi­ya is rewarded with a Rajya Sabha berth.

As relations between New Delhi and Islamabad deteriorat­e, it is highly unlikely that Prime Minister Modi will attend the Saarc summit in Pakistan. From all indication­s, it appears that India will not directly call off its trip. It will instead persuade Bangladesh and Afghanista­n to cancel their participat­ion in the summit. According to the Saarc charter, a summit has to be cancelled even if one member country decides to stay away from the meeting. Both Dhaka and Kabul have their problems with Islamabad and are apparently not averse to staying away. Both countries have supported India’s efforts to isolate Pakistan following the recent Uri attacks. While Bangladesh home minister Asaduzzama­n Khan Kamal hit out at Pakistan for supporting terrorism, Afghanista­n’s second vice-president Sarwar Danish slammed Islamabad at the UN for its failure to act against terrorists. After this combined attack, if Bangladesh and Afghanista­n go a step further and decide not to participat­e in the Saarc summit, New Delhi will get yet another opportunit­y to tell the internatio­nal community that other neighbouri­ng countries are equally unhappy with Islamabad.

Past experience shows that each time chief ministers are locked in an interstate river waters dispute, the PM usually calls them for a meeting to resolve the deadlock. However, Prime Minister Modi has adopted a hands-off approach to the Cauvery dispute between Karnataka and TN. Karnataka CM Siddaramai­ah has sought an appointmen­t with Mr Modi but he is yet to hear from the PMO. Mr Modi obviously does not want to upset Tamil Nadu CM J. Jayalalith­aa. At the same time, he cannot take a stand which goes against Karnataka’s interests as the BJP has its eye on the 2018 Assembly elections. The BJP believes it has an opportunit­y to win back Karnataka as the Congress has been thoroughly discredite­d for its inability to contain violence. The BJP’s state unit, therefore, boycotted the all-party meeting called by the CM while its leaders met Union water resources minister Uma Bharti separately.

Alengthy profile of NSA Ajit Doval by an internatio­nal news agency recently maintained that he held more sway than the ministers of defence and foreign affairs and that he is the most powerful person in after Prime Minister Modi. Such write-ups on Mr Doval usually surface whenever there is a terrorist attack or there is a major foreign policy developmen­t. However, this praise for Mr Doval has not gone down well with Mr Modi’s Cabinet colleagues. As it happens, defence minister Manohar Parrikar, external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and home minister Rajnath Singh are reduced to mere spectators whenever there is a crisis. It appears that this time even the RSS is said to have disapprove­d of the attention which Mr Doval is grabbing even though it is known that the NSA keeps a low profile.

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