Hindustan Times (Patiala)

BJPbacked alliance set to rule Meghalaya

CONG LOSES OUT NPP stakes claim to form govt led by Conrad as CM

- David Laitphlang letters@hindustant­imes.com n

SHILLONG: National People’s Party (NPP) leader Conrad Sangma is set to be sworn in as the next Meghalaya chief minister on Tuesday with support from the BJP and regional players, ending the uncertaint­y over who will rule the state after the February assembly polls didn’t give a clear majority to any party.

The NPP, founded by former Lok Sabha speaker PA Sangma, won 19 seats in results declared on Saturday, the United Democratic Party got six, the People’s Democratic Front got four, the Hill State Peoples Democratic Party and the BJP secured two apiece in the 60-member House.

Among the three Independen­t legislator­s, Samuel Sangma is said to have declared his support on Sunday to the 39-year-old NPP leader — one of the three children of PA Sangma active in politics.

Conrad Sangma met governor Ganga Prasad on Sunday evening and staked claim to form the government. He handed a letter of support from 34 MLAs to the governor and his swearing-in is set for Tuesday, said a politician who asked not be named.

The move puts the BJP in power in effectivel­y six of the seven north-eastern states, bar- ring Mizoram, the lone state where the Congress is in power. The Congress, which was ruling Meghalaya, won 21 seats to emerge as the single-largest party, but couldn’t gather the required numbers to retain power.

The Congress had failed to form government­s in Goa and Manipur despite emerging as the single-largest party in both assemblies after elections last year. The BJP came to power in both states with the help of smaller parties and Independen­ts.

Senior BJP leaders KJ Alphons, Nalin Kohli, and the party strategist and Assam minister Himanta Biswa Sarma accompanie­d Conrad Sangma to the Raj Bhavan in Shillong.

“The letters of support that have been received from the UDP, PDF, HSPDP and BJP have mentioned that they will support a government led by me, Conrad Sangma, as chief minister and the NPP has also written the same letter,” Sangma said after meeting the governor.

“A name for the coalition is yet to be decided,” said the NPP national president and Lok Sabha MP for Tura. Sangma has six months to contest and win a seat in the assembly.

Shortly after the meeting with governor Prasad, Assam minister Sarma said one of the two BJP legislator­s will be “a part of the government”. He also stressed that there will be “no deputy chief ministers”.

Sarma took a jibe at the Congress, saying: “The number (of the alliance) is likely to go up. Rahul Gandhi sent four senior party leaders to Shillong without any calculatio­ns on government formation. I don’t see maturity in him.” The buzz is that UDP president Donkupar Roy will get the speaker’s post. Roy told reporters earlier in the day that his party would support the NPP to form a “non-Congress” government.

Congress leader Mukul Sangma, who was chief minister for eight years, submitted his resignatio­n to the governor and taunted the BJP for attempting to form the government with just two members. “They want to fire from the shoulder of other political parties,” the outgoing chief minister said.

week before voting in Tripura on February 18, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath landed in Agartala and conducted a whirlwind tour of the state, campaignin­g for the BJP in seven constituen­cies.

The saffron clad priest-politician, head of the Gorakhnath temple in Uttar Pradesh, addressed public meetings at Matabari, Sabroom, Pabiacharr­a, Jubarajnag­ar, Kanchanpur, Kamalpur and Khayerpur.

When the results were announced on Saturday, and the Left decimated, it emerged that the BJP and alliance partner, the Indigenous Peoples Front of Tripura (IPFT), had won in six of the seven seats where the UP CM had campaigned.

As head of the Nath sect, the UP CM enjoys immense clout among followers in Tripura.

Of the estimated 2.5 million voters in Tripura, nearly a million have direct or indirect links to the sect and have a sizeable presence in at least 10 of the state’s 60 assembly seats.

During his campaign trail, Adityanath also visited two Gorakhnath temples at Padampur and Chandrapur.

Ramani Nath, vice-president of Chandrapur’s Gorakhnath temple, said Adityanath “mesmerised people” with his speeches and it helped the BJP.

“Nath community has its own culture and tradition and there are many followers of Gorakhnath scattered across the state,” the 83-year-old said.

Bikash Debnath, another Nath sect follower, claimed BJP’s landslide win had a lot to do with Adityanath’s campaign.

Bhagaban Das, who won on BJP ticket from Pabiacharr­a, was among those in Tripura for whom the UP CM campaigned.

Incidental­ly, the BJP’s strong show in the north-east comes before the party faces bypolls in UP, including on Adityanath’s political turf of Gorakhpur.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Conrad Sangma (left) hands over a letter of support from 34 MLAs to Meghalaya governor Ganga Prasad at Raj Bhavan in Shillong on Sunday.
HT PHOTO Conrad Sangma (left) hands over a letter of support from 34 MLAs to Meghalaya governor Ganga Prasad at Raj Bhavan in Shillong on Sunday.
 ??  ?? Ramani Nath, vicepresid­ent of Gorakhnath temple in Tripura
Ramani Nath, vicepresid­ent of Gorakhnath temple in Tripura

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