Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Assembly turns into a virtual war zone

PANDEMONIU­M Torn shirts, toppled tables & broken mikes bore testimony to the ruckus that ensued in the House during the floor test

- Aditya Iyer n letters@hindustant­imes.com

Tamil Nadu assembly descended into pandemoniu­m on Saturday morning after the Opposition, led by DMK working president MK Stalin, led the charge against CM Edappadi Palaniswam­i and his floor test.

Both Speaker P Dhanapal and Stalin emerged from the House sporting torn shirts, while toppled chairs and broken microphone­s bore witness to a war zone-like situation inside Fort St George as MLAs traded barbs with equal venom.

Though the AIADMK government sailed through vote of confidence with a 122-11 margin, the proceeding­s had to be suspended twice after the DMK caused a ruckus. PAST RUCKUS The turmoil inside the House reminded onlookers of the chaos that ensued the last time the assembly witnessed a vote of confidence in 1988.

At the time, Janaki Ramachandr­an and J Jayalalith­aa were squaring off to decide who would become AIADMK chief in the wake of MGR’s death. The DMK had caused an uproar then too, leading to temporary suspension of the House. The assembly proceeding­s eventually ended with the police lathi charging MLAs inside the assembly. CHAOS ENSUES “I am hurt and ashamed,” Speaker Dhanapal said after declaring the result of Saturday’s vote. “Who will I go to to complain about what was done to me?” he said, adding that the DMK had targeted him because he was an Adi Dravidar, one of Tamil Nadu’s main Dalit communitie­s.

Prior to his statement, for about an hour, the House turned into a virtual war zone after the Speaker ordered the eviction of DMK members. Though 500 marshals arrived, the DMK legislator­s initially resisted them.

Soon, police officials led by the police commission­er arrived and held hectic consultati­ons. The Speaker then instructed the marshals to physically evict the DMK members.

The DMK MLAs resisted the eviction, with Stalin having to be lifted by marshals and taken out of the House. The DMK leader then met Governor Rao at the Raj Bhavan and asked for a second vote of confidence, saying that the Palaniswam­i government had no legitimacy as the vote was conducted without the Opposition. CHENNAI TENSE Stalin subsequent­ly went to Marina Beach to launch a protest. He, along with the other 89 DMK MLAs, were subsequent­ly detained by police.

Journalist­s too had to deal with difficult conditions, with the audio transmissi­on of the assembly proceeding­s being cut for those assembled at the Press Room at the Secretaria­t.

The mood in Chennai remains tense after what happened at the assembly. Though Palaniswam­i comfortabl­y won the vote, he now has to contend with a more significan­t challenge than OPS, as Stalin made it clear that the anti-VK Sasikala campaign would now be led by the DMK.

 ??  ?? DMK legislator­s cause an uproar in the House after the Speaker ordered their eviction on Saturday. PTI
DMK legislator­s cause an uproar in the House after the Speaker ordered their eviction on Saturday. PTI

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