Local issues take back seat in RK Nagar
DROWNED OUT High decibel campaigns focus on clinching Jayalalithaa’s legacy instead of solving residents’ woes
J Jayanthi is a resident of Chennai’s RK Nagar, considered a VIP constituency that was represented by former CM J Jayalalithaa till her death. But the problems the 36-year-old teacher faces are not out of the ordinary.
Mountains of uncollected garbage make it difficult for Jayanthi to live in the Kodungaiyur neighbourhood of the constituency set for a bypolls on April 12.
As rival parties lock horns over what is being billed a prestige contest dramatised further by a fight over Jayalalithaa’s legacy among rival factions of her AIADMK, the stench from the dump has got stronger.
The dump breeds mosquitoes and flies and Jayanthi battles them round the clock. “Just open your mouth, you will be forced to swallow many,” she says. But the hazard notwithstanding, she has now chosen to raise her voice against what she says is a lack of amenities, ranging from inadequate supply of drinking water to the absence of a flyover at the Korukkupet railway crossing.
Jayanthi is contesting on a ticket of the My National My Right Party, an outfit floated by those behind January’s Jalllikattu protests.
Though lack of development is a pressing issue, politicians with their high-decibel campaigns in RK Nagar have pushed local problems down the priority list. The contest with 50-odd candidates in the fray is primarily on appropriating Jaya’s legacy.
Radhakrishna Nagar has been a fortress for the AIADMK since 2001. The party had won from the seat even when the rival DMK swept the rest of Tamil Nadu. Jayalalithaa’s association with the seat that fell vacant after her death last December has raised the stakes for her erstwhile party’s members. A victory for the AIADMK faction led by her jailed confidant Sasikala would help in consolidating her grip over both party and government, currently headed by chief minister EK Palaniswami. Sasikala’s nephew, TTV Dinanakaran, is the party candidate.
A victory for the AIADMK faction led by former CM O Panneerselvam, will throw up political prospects pregnant with possibilities.
The split within the AIADMK has emboldened rival DMK which is hoping to reap political dividends by fishing in troubled waters. The party hopes it candidate NM Ganesh will win as feuding AIADMK factions battle each other. “Although the DMK candidate is not a high-profile one, the splitting of the AIADMK vote gives the opposition an edge,” says professor Ramu Manivannan of the Madras University.
Even the BJP is looking to make inroads into the state by wresting the seat. It has fielded music composer Gagain Amaran – brother of musician Ilaiyaraaja – as its candidate.
Also in the fray to stake claim over Jayalalithaa’s legacy is her niece, Deepa Jayakumar. She is contesting on behalf of MGR Amma Deepa Peravai Party, promising to free her aunt’s AIADMK from self-seekers .
Back in the lanes and by lanes of RK Nagar, there is a growing sense of being let down by the politicians who seem preoccupied by their own political necessities. “If there is a credible alternative, we will surely consider. But for the present, it is either the AIADMK or the DMK,” says S Prakash, a medical representative.