Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BJP leader who put ₹11L bounty on Didi’s head ‘regrets words’

- Manish Chandra Pandey n letters@hindustant­imes.com

Hours after becoming instantly ‘infamous’ for his bounty offer on West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee, Yogesh Varshneya, the 26-yearold BJP youth wing leader with a civil engineerin­g degree, fumbled repeatedly when asked if he was serious on the offer.

“Well ... err ...,” he searched for words after his ₹11 lakh offer to anyone who came up with Banerjee’s head created a furore and led to parliament­arians demanding action against him.

“Yes ... had the offer been met I would have raised the promised amount... But now it’s a closed chapter... I have expressed regret for my words,” Varshneya, who tends to his family’s fruit business, told HT from Aligarh.

Police booked Varshneya after a complaint was made against him. “I made the remark in fit of anger after learning how the Mamata Banerjee government is engaging in blatantly anti-Hindu acts,” he said.

Bounties aren’t new to Uttar Pradesh where the then SP minister Yaqoob Qureshi had set the trend of announcing bounties with a ₹ 51 crore offer on the head of a Danish cartoonist who made a caricature of Prophet.

But bounty broadcaste­rs probably are aware that theirs is a ‘bailable’ offence. Though the Delhi police had arrested Adarsh Sharma, the Purvanchal Sena president for announcing ₹ 11 lakh bounty on the then JNU students’ union chief Kanhaiya Kumar, such police action is rare; in UP at least.

No action was initiated on a Meerut youth when he announced a reward of ₹ 5 lakh on BJP leader Dayashanka­r Singh’s tongue for having compared BSP chief Mayawati to a ‘prostitute’ in the run up to 2017 UP polls.

While Dayashanka­r spent a brief time in jail for his remarks, no action was taken against the man who offered a reward on his head.

In the case of Yaqoob Qureshi too, the Samajwadi Party leadership had ignored demands to act against him.

“It has become a joke. Anyone seeking instant publicity could get away with anything. And since these things get wide publicity in the media, people get encouraged to make such remarks. I think it’s time that some strong action is initiated against these men,” said Athar Siddiqui from Centre for Objective Research and Developmen­t.

“We disapprove of such remarks,” said Abhijat Mishra, national general secretary of BJYM, the organisati­on to which Varshneya belongs.

 ?? BOBBY KHAN/HT ?? Activists of Hindu Jagran Manch in Agra burnt posters of chief minister Mamata Banerjee to protest lathicharg­e on activists taking out Hanuman Jayanti procession in West Bengal.
BOBBY KHAN/HT Activists of Hindu Jagran Manch in Agra burnt posters of chief minister Mamata Banerjee to protest lathicharg­e on activists taking out Hanuman Jayanti procession in West Bengal.

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