Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Agitation fire spreads, singes UP

- Navneet Sharma ■ navneetsha­rma@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: Haryana chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar has been crisscross­ing the country to tout his state as an “ideal and peaceful” investment destinatio­n, but the ongoing state-wide threatens to derails his well-laid plans.

Promoting the state with the ‘Happening Haryana’ tagline, Khattar, whose first year in power was lacklustre, had finally started to show the first signs of being in control.

But when the Jats took to the streets to press their longstandi­ng demand for reservatio­n in jobs and education, the Khattar government failed to realise the gravity of its first major political challenge. The top brass, both administra­tive and political, first took time to react to a fastdevelo­ping situation and then responded in the now-familiar lumbering manner.

The agitation that started from Rohtak and some adjoining areas spread to the entire Jat heartland. The ruling party’s Jat leaders such as Birender Singh, Capt Abhimanyu and Om Prakash Dhankar, who never cloaked their political ambitions, either lay low or tried to punch above their weight and failed.

The offer to double the economical­ly backward quota, which the agitators rejected instantly, too revealed that the CM’s camp lacked political rigour and manoeuvrin­g talent. And the fact that there is no one clear leader in command of the violent stir has only added to the troubles of the government.

“The l eadership cannot absolve itself of responsibi­lity for the current situation. It is a prisoner of indecision and cannot escape the blame for doublespea­k of its leaders on quota,” a political science teacher said requesting anonymity.

The result: The happenings of the week gone by are not just threatenin­g to upset its plans to market Haryana as the most suitable investment destinatio­n, but also sharpened caste fault lines.

“The paradox... is that a microscopi­c minority has an economic edge whereas a large section, mostly marginal farmers, is facing pauperisat­ion due to shrinking land holdings and constant failure of crops. And those who are agitating may not be beneficiar­ies of reservatio­n, if and when it is granted,” said prof (retd) Ranbir Singh of Kurukshetr­a University.

 ?? RAVI CHOUDHARY/HT ?? Road and rail traffic was massively hit as Jats protested in Bahadurgar­h on Saturday.
RAVI CHOUDHARY/HT Road and rail traffic was massively hit as Jats protested in Bahadurgar­h on Saturday.

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