Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

V Muraleedha­ran is BJP in charge in Andhra Pradesh

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NEW DELHI : BJP president Amit Shah on Monday appointed Rajya Sabha member V Muraleedha­ran as party’s in-charge in Andhra Pradesh, and brought in three new faces in the team of national office bearers, a party release said.

P S Sreedharan Pillai will be the BJP chief in Kerala where the post was lying vacant after appointmen­t of Kummanam Rajasekhar­an as Mizoram governor in May this year.

P S Sreedharan Pillai, a lawyer by profession, served as Kerala BJP chief between 2003 and 2006.

BJP’S Scheduled Caste Morcha’s former chief Dushyant Kumar Gautam has been appointed vice president, and Sunil Deodhar and Satya Kumar as national secretary. Dushyant Kumar Gautam is the only SC leader in the current BJP’S team of office bearers. Sunil Deodhar, who had an uneasy relationsh­ip with Tripura chief minister Biplab Kumar Deb, has been shifted out of the north-eastern state and sent to Andhra Pradesh as co in-charge.

Andhra Pradesh will have simultaneo­us assembly and parliament­ary election in 2019. NEWDELHI: When then Army Chief Gen Dalbir Singh arrived with his then Vice Chief Lt General Bipin Rawat to assess the attack of Pakistan based terror group Lashkar-e-tayyeba (LET) on the Uri Brigade on September 18, 2016, he noticed immaculate­ly manicured grass at the golf course near the post as compared to the wild foliage elsewhere in the camp that had provided cover to the infiltrati­ng terrorists earlier that day.

Angry at the loss of 19 of his men at the hands of jihadists, Gen Dalbir told Gen Rawat to issue instructio­ns that golf would not be allowed at army posts in the Valley. A year later, Gen Rawat, now Army Chief, was waiting for bodies of his fallen comrades to arrive at 15 Corps Badami Bagh headquarte­rs helipad in Srinagar when he noticed caddies waiting at the adjacent golf course.

Learning that the golfing was to begin once the bodies had been taken care off, Gen Rawat reminded the local commander of the previous chief’s written instructio­ns to get the entire course dug up using heavy earthmover­s. The local commander, once he understood that Gen Dalbir’s order was for the entire Valley and not just the Uri Brigade, banned golf and got a running track with open gym prepared instead.

Taking a leaf out of that, Gen Rawat has also issued instructio­ns that golf will not be allowed in operationa­lly active areas of Jammu and Kashmir as well as the North East, army officials said. While not every one in the army has taken kindly to this diktat, Gen Rawat is in no mood to budge; his argument is that his officers and men are welcome to play football or tennis, but that there is no scope for leisurely sessions of golf and beer when soldiers are dying in cross-border firing on the Line of Control or facing terrorists in the Valley hinterland or in the jungles of Moreh in Manipur. The men should be prepared for war, Gen Rawat believes, according to army officials familiar with the matter. It is not that Gen Rawat does not like golf, these officials add. Indeed, he used to play golf with a decent handicap till he was a captain/instructor at the Indian Military Academy. Legend has it that the Army Chief swore not to play golf after his commanding officer at the academy ticked him off for not making to the PT session for cadets in time as the then young captain was more focused on a hole-in-one.

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