Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Rahul’s US visit a turning point: Overseas Congress unit chief

- Manraj Grewal Sharma

CHANDIGARH: “The Congress is all set to come out of the wilderness, and Rahul Gandhi’s visit to the United States in September marks the turning point.” Shudh Prakash Singh, president of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA, says this with conviction.

He should know, for he presented the party vice-president with a baseball bat on his last day in the US, exhorting him to go back and hit the home run. “He is doing just that, be it in Gujarat or Delhi,” says the soft-spoken businessma­n based in New York with roots in Abohar in Punjab’s Fazilka district, who is now here to deliver the bat to Gandhi.

Contrary to the political observers back home who think the Gandhi scion is the biggest liability of Congress, IOC members, says Singh, believe he can swing the party’s fortunes.

“We have suggested that he should have more public interactio­ns, especially with youngsters. People should be able to experience Rahul,” says Singh, who was “floored” by Gandhi in 2014 when he visited New York all by himself. “I had recently bought a Maserati, and wanted to ferry Rahul in that, but he insisted on standing in a queue and riding a cab.” on an army of trolls the BJP has unleashed on him. “He told the gathering at Berkeley how the BJP had employed an army of 1,000 people led by none other than Prime Minister Narendra Modi to run him down. They twist whatever he says,” fumes Singh.

An apolitical person until 2001, Singh joined the IOC when party chief Sonia Gandhi came on a visit to the US in 2001. “I was introduced to her by my mentor, a former Indian ambassador, and I was touched by her sincerity. I wanted to name a school after her, but she said she didn’t want anything in her name,” he recounts. (Indira Gandhi) but also a friend in the gunman who used to play badminton with him (and shot her), he says.

The NRIS, claims Singh, are not really political. “What is good for India is good for us. The NRIS are ready to support anyone who they feel is taking India in the right direction. If Modi’s BJP had done well for India, they would have supported it.”

‘FEAR OF BECOMING PAKISTAN’

The biggest fear the NRIS have, he says, is of India turning into another Saudi Arabia or Pakistan with limited freedom for its citizens. “We want it to be a free, democratic and secular country.” The NRIS, he claims, are sore with Modi for pushing economic policies without adequate planning and foresight. “Demonetisa­tion hasn’t worked anywhere in the world, yet he implemente­d it,” Singh makes a point.

Rahul Gandhi, he hopes, will prove to be wiser.

 ?? HT FILE ?? Congress VP Rahul Gandhi holding a bat presented by Shudh Prakash Singh (left), president of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA, and policy adviser Sam Pitroda (right).
HT FILE Congress VP Rahul Gandhi holding a bat presented by Shudh Prakash Singh (left), president of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA, and policy adviser Sam Pitroda (right).

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