Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Defections flavour of the season in Odisha

- Debabrata Mohanty letters@hindustant­imes.com

POWER PLAY To bolster their poll prospects, Naveen Patnaik’s ruling BJD and Oppn BJP are busy poaching leaders from rival parties

As the spokespers­on of the Congress party in Odisha, Sulochana Das made her political career by criticisin­g the state government headed by chief minister Naveen Patnaik. But earlier this week, she was all smiles and praise for Patnaik as she stood next to a bemused chief minister for a photo op on the portico of his sprawling Bhubaneswa­r home.

However bizarre, the volteface by Das is the flavour of the season in the state where elections are just a year-and-a-half away.

To bolster its poll prospects, Patnaik’s ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) is busy poaching leaders from rival parties.

So is the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), nurturing hopes of wresting power for the first time in the state in 2019.

There is barely a week when Union petroleum minister Dharmendra Pradhan — the party’s chief ministeria­l aspirant — is not seen welcoming ‘deserters’ from other parties into his own at public functions.

“Aya Rams Gaya Rams are in demand,” scoffed political analyst Rabi Das, referring to the unending stream of political opportunis­ts changing sides.

By the last count, the BJP has already inducted more than 100 leaders from the BJD and Congress.

The BJD remains a close second, welcoming dozens of leaders primarily from the Congress. The BJP by far remains the favoured destinatio­n of deserters. Ever since it won 297 seats in the zilla parishad elections earlier this year and overtook the Congress as the main opposition party, there is an expectant buzz about the BJP in Odisha.

Inducting leaders from other parties does help in projecting the right optics, creating an impression that the party is getting stronger and is poised for a strong poll showing.

On Wednesday, Pradhan welcomed Gokulanand­a Mallik, a veteran Congress leader of Ganjam district, into the party.

“We need more people like Mallik who can steer us to victory in the assembly polls,” Pradhan told party men later.

Roping in leaders from other parties will expectedly help chief minister Patnaik in dispelling doubts about his declining mass appeal. But the BJP stands to gain more from the poaching game.

“The BJP all along has been a party weak in coastal and central Odisha. It is desperatel­y seeking to strike roots there and lead- ers from other parties are helping them to do that,” analyst Das explained.

Every time the BJP wins over some rival leaders, it leaves no stone unturned in making it a big event so that people take notice.

The party organises ‘Mishran Parva’ (joining festival) and this month, three top BJD leaders, including former BJD MP from Koraput Jayram Pangi, were publicly rolled out the red carpet. If speculatio­ns are to be believed, the party is also readying to welcome BJD MP Baijayant ‘Jay’ Panda.

The MP has reportedly had a bitter fall out with chief minister Patnaik and if he decides to cross over, he would be the biggest catch for the BJP.

The worst hit by the political poaching is the Congress.

None is giving the party any realistic chance in the 2019 polls and its leaders are leaving in droves.

Last week, its Nayagarh district president Lala Manoj Ray joined the BJP.

“Many have realised that the Congress is a sinking ship, while BJD is on its way out. BJP is the natural choice,” said Sajjan Sharma, BJP spokesman.

SeniorCong­ressleader and former defence minister AK Antony is among 40 opposition politician­s and former bureaucrat­s whose security has been downgraded or withdrawn after a threat perception analysis by intelligen­ce agencies.

Antony’s security has been downgraded from Y Plus to Y category. Prominent among former bureaucrat­s include three former chiefs of Indian Space Research Organisati­on — Dr Madhavan Nair, Dr Kasturiran­gan and Dr K Radhakrish­nan — whose security has been downgraded from Y to X category — the lowest. All three are being protected by the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) as central protectees.

A home ministry official termed the decision a ‘routine review’.

As part of the review, the Centre has asked the Bihar government to take care of the security of Pappu Yadav, a Lok Sabha member from Madhepura. Yadav was being guarded by the CRPF under Y Plus category security till now.

Similarly, the Gujarat government has been asked to provide security to former state Congress chief Arjun Modhwadia. He was a Y category protectee of the CRPF till now.

Another Congress leader to lose CRPF protection is Bihar minister and state Congress chief Ashok Chaudhary.

Other prominent politician­s who have lost their central security cover include former Union minister Beni Prasad Verma (Y category), ex-MP Seema Upadhyay (Y category), ex-MP Saleem Shervani (Y category), two former ministers of home Sriprakash Jaiswal (Y category) and RPN Singh (X category) and DP Singh — the Congress MLC from Raebareli.

The X category CRPF protection provided to Kapil Mishra, son of senior BSP leader Satish Chandra Mishra, also stands withdrawn.

Other Congress leaders whose security stands downgraded include Ajay Maken, Shashi Tharoor, Shakeel Ahmad and Vijay Inder Singla. The government provides security under five categories — Z Plus, Z, Y Plus, Y and X. HTC We want a working informatio­n commission that is staffed. We want a commission that works for the Act and not the government; for transparen­cy and not secrecy; and does not function under political pressure. All government­s have delayed appointmen­t of commission­ers. In addition, the kind of commission­ers being appointed is also questionab­le. They get people from department­s like intelligen­ce bureau and police, who are used to seeing people as enemies

Aya Rams Gaya Rams are in demand. The BJP all along has been a party weak in coastal and central Odisha. It is desperatel­y seeking to strike roots there and leaders from other parties are helping them to do that.

There are two kinds of emergencie­s. The first one was a constituti­onal emergency, so everybody knew there was an emergency and people were jailed. Today, we have another kind of emergency in which constituti­onal rights are being suspended. What

 ?? ARABINDA MAHAPATRA/HT ?? CM Naveen Patnaik with Congress spokespers­on Sulochana Das after she joined the BJD. The volteface by Das is not surprising, considerin­g polls are just 18 months away.
ARABINDA MAHAPATRA/HT CM Naveen Patnaik with Congress spokespers­on Sulochana Das after she joined the BJD. The volteface by Das is not surprising, considerin­g polls are just 18 months away.

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