Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

In MP’S tribal stronghold Jhabua, anti-incumbency worries all sides

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Jhabua parliament­ary constituen­cy. Rebels have queered the pitch for official Congress and BJP candidates fighting the upcoming assembly polls. There is resentment against Kantilal Bhuria, a former state Congress president, seen by many as working for his family rather than the people or the party.

Two of the five seats in Jhabua (3) and Alirajpur (2) are being contested by his siblings: son Vikrant and niece Kalavati who are candidates in Jhabua proper and Jobat in adjoining Alirajpur.

Disenchant­ed party men burnt Bhuria’s effigies across the Lok Sabha constituen­cy after the Congress announced its candidates. Concomitan­tly, his son’s prospects are hazy in the fight made triangular by party rebel Xavier Meda. The latter has the support of influentia­l village sarpanchs determined to teach the Bhurias a lesson.

The BJP’S GS Damor isn’t sitting pretty either. A former public health engineer, he too is perceived as a paratroope­r accommodat­ed at the cost of the party’s sitting legislator.

Of Jhabua’s three assembly seats, the outcome seems predictabl­e in only Petlawad. Nirmala Bhuria may retain the seat she held when she contested and lost to Kantilal after her father’s death. In the third seat, Tandla, the Congress’s Vir Singh Bhuria may breathe easy. There, the BJP’S Kalsingh Bhabhar faces a candidate fielded by a group that had backed his aborted independen­t challenge to the party in 2013.

In the previous polls, the BJP won four of the five seats in Jhabua and Alirajpur, the fifth voting for one of its rebel leaders. Had it not messed up its candidates, the Congress would’ve had little to lose and a lot to gain in this tribal belt. It had, after all, regained in the parliament­ary bypolls the ground it lost in the assembly elections.

In fact, Kantilal gave the game away when he asked — rather than told — journalist­s about his party’s chances. “People here want a change but the Congress refuses to change [its ways]. Its bad candidates have created contests on seats the party could’ve won without ado,” said Sachin Bairagi, a local journalist.

This is not to suggest that the BJP isn’t stymied by renegades. But it’s hopeful that the Narendra Modi card will help it quell or negate internal rebellion. Slated to visit Jhabua on November 20, the Prime Minister has popular connect with tribals, thousands of whom migrate every year to Gujarat for work. Bordering Gujarat’s Panchmahal and Vadodara districts, Alirajpur-jhabua is dominated by the Bhel tribe, large sections of which acknowledg­e having benefited from the Pradhan Mantri Avas Yojana (PMAY). What spoiled, so to speak, the social welfare broth was alleged bureaucrat­ic corruption. Several beneficiar­ies claimed to have bribed officials for getting the Rs 1.5 lakh to which they’re entitled in three instalment­s under the housing scheme. The other irritant was the dried up MNREGA funding that left village panchayats disempower­ed. In sum, the poll will be decided on who’s incumbency is seen as the lesser worry -- Bhuria’s or the BJP’S?

vinodsharm­a@hindustant­imes.com

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