Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

MODI INAUGURATE­S PATEL’S STATUE, WORLD’S TALLEST

Modi unveils monument on Patel’s birth anniversar­y, calls it ‘expression of new India’s selfconfid­ence’

- Hiral Dave hiral.dave@htlive.com

KEVADIYA (GUJARAT): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday inaugurate­d a statue of India’s first home minister, Vallabhbha­i Patel, at Kevadiya in Gujarat’s Narmada district, on his 143rd birth anniversar­y. At 182 metres, the steel and bronze Statue of Unity is the world’s tallest. Congress president Rahul Gandhi and BSP supremo Mayawati criticised the government for spending nearly ₹3,000 crore on the statue.

KEVADIYA (GUJARAT): PRIME Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday inaugurate­d the world’s tallest statue dedicated to India’s first home minister, Vallabhbha­i Patel, on his 143rd birth anniversar­y at Kevadiya in Gujarat’s Narmada district. The 182-metre steel and bronze Statue of Unity is nearly twice the height of New York’s Statue of Liberty.

Modi called the statue not only a tribute to Patel but also “an expression of a new India’s new self confidence”. He recalled the role Patel played in “uniting the country” after independen­ce in 1947. “Had Sardar Saheb not vowed (to unite India), then to see lions of Gir, to worship at the Somnath Temple and to visit Charminar, we would have needed a visa,’’ Modi said.

He was referring to landmarks in Gujarat’s Junagarh and Hyderabad, which were among the 562 nominally-independen­t princely states across India under the British Patel played a key role in integratin­g with the Indian union after independen­ce.

“If we are able to move freely from Kutch to Kohima and from Kargil to Kanyakumar­i, it is because of Sardar Saheb,” Modi said, adding he was surprised over the criticism he has faced over the statue that has cost ₹2,989 crore. “We are criticised for praising sons of the soil. We are made to feel as if we have committed a major crime.”

Modi said Patel wanted India to be “empowered, robust, sensitive, alert and inclusive”. Modi said his government was taking “all the steps to fulfill his dreams”. He listed the schemes and projects to highlight how they were in line with Patel’s vision. “We are working on the Bhagirath project to provide concrete houses to the homeless. We have provided electricit­y to 18,000 villages, which were deprived of power supply for all these years after Independen­ce.”

The work to provide road and digital connectivi­ty to every village is on a fast track. “We are providing gas connection as well as toilets to every household”.

He referred to his resolve for “Ek Bharat, Shrestha Bharat (One India, Superior India)” and called maintainin­g the country’s unity a “responsibi­lity he [Patel] had passed on to us”. “It is our responsibi­lity to answer, with full force, all the efforts made to divide the country”.

Modi said the statue reflects India’s engineerin­g and technical capabiliti­es. “The structure is a reminder to those questionin­g India’s existence…. This nation was, is and will remain eternal.”

He said he thought of building the statue when he was the Gujarat chief minister as he wanted the person, who contribute­d immensely to make the country one, to get the respect he deserved. Modi, who laid the statue’s foundation stone in 2013, added his sentiments were same like “crores of Indians”.

Thirty-seven members of Patel’s family, some of whom had flown from the US, attended the event. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime moment. The statue will remain a source of inspiratio­n for generation­s to come,” said Patel’s grandnephe­w, Dhirubhai Patel, who lives in Vadodara.

Urmilaben, Patel’s grandniece, said Modi has kept the independen­ce hero’s legacy alive by having the statue built.

The statue’s inaugurati­on is seen as part of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) efforts to honour the leaders it accuses the Congress, which has ruled the country for 49 years, of ignoring.

In his response to the inaugurati­on, Congress president, Rahul Gandhi, accused the government of destroying the institutio­ns Patel helped build. “Ironic that a statue of Sardar Patel is being inaugurate­d, but every institutio­n he helped build is being smashed,” he tweeted. Gandhi called Patel a patriot, who fought for an independen­t, united and secular India. “A man with a steely will, tempered by compassion, he was a Congressma­n to the core, who had no tolerance for bigotry or communalis­m”.

Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati asked the BJP and Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) to apologise for criticisin­g her for building statues of Dalit leaders when she was in power in Uttar Pradesh.

“All those in the BJP, the RSS and company need to apologise, especially to the people of the Bahujan Samaj, for terming the statues the then BSP government installed to honour icons like Baba Saheb Ambedkar and others as wasteful expenditur­e,” she said.

 ?? PTI ?? The 182metre statue of Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel, named as the ‘Statue of Unity’, was unveiled on the 143rd birth anniversar­y of Patel on an islet Sadhu Bet near Sardar Sarovar Dam in Gujarat’s Narmada district on Wednesday.
PTI The 182metre statue of Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel, named as the ‘Statue of Unity’, was unveiled on the 143rd birth anniversar­y of Patel on an islet Sadhu Bet near Sardar Sarovar Dam in Gujarat’s Narmada district on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India