Millennium Post

Jds-congress coordinati­on committee to meet today

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

MYSURU: The first meeting of the coordinati­on committee of the ruling Jds-congress coalition in Karnataka will be held in Bengaluru on Thursday where the two parties would mull over a common minimum programme, senior Congress leader Siddaramai­ah said on Wednesday.

Announcing the power sharing arrangemen­t on June 1, after the assembly polls delivered a fractured verdict, the two parties had said the common agenda for governance will have salient features of their election manifestos.

Siddaramai­ah, however, remained non-committal on farm loan waiver promised by the JDS in the run up to the elections. “In a coalition government, a common minimum programme has to be drawn up. We will try and discuss about it tomorrow. After drawing the common minimum programme, the government will implement it,” Siddaramai­ah, who chairs the Coordinati­on and Monitoring Committee of the fledgling alliance, told reporters.

The committee headed by Siddaramai­ah, the leader of the Congress Legislatur­e Party, includes Chief Minister H D Kumaraswam­y, Deputy Chief Minister and KPCC chief G Parameshwa­ra, Congress general secretary in-charge of the state K C Venugopal and JDS secretary general Danish Ali.

Ali is the convener of the Coordinati­on and Monitoring Committee. The coalition partners had announced that the panel would meet at least once every month. Siddaramai­ah, Kumaraswam­y's immediate predecesso­r, said all welfare programmes of his government would continue under the new dispensati­on.

He avoided a direct reply to a question about farm loan waiver, saying the chief minister, who holds the finance portfolio, would look at it.

Siddaramai­ah, however, said the Congress was not againt writing off farm loans and that it was committed to the welfare of peasants. “We are not going to oppose the waiver of agricultur­al loans,” he said.

Kumaraswam­y had promised to write off farms loans of a whopping Rs 53,000 crore during the election campaign.

Siddaramai­ah asserted there was no discontent now in the Congress over denial of ministeria­l berths. It is natural for leaders to expect getting a ministeria­l position but that is not always possible, he said.

“The names of ministers were discussed before Rahul Gandhi, who is the AICC president. He approved the list ....

ultimately it is the decision of the high-command (that prevails), and everybody should obey the decision. That is the minimum discipline­required in the party,” he added. NEW DELHI: After holding out of iftar, Union Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi hosted one on Wednesday, calling it ‘Iftar for dignity'.

More than 300 Muslim women were invited from across the nation, including the triple talaq victims.

“Our government's aim is social engineerin­g, not political engineerin­g,” Naqvi told mediaperso­ns, making a scathing attack on opposition Congress, for calling all other opposition stalwarts at its iftar party.

“We want to the social upliftment and empowering Muslim women,” the minister added. The government is also set to form Panchayats statewise to fulfil its aim.

In a major move the government for the first time deputed a woman officer for Haj this year. Moina Benazir is currently deputed in the Defence ministry and a member of the advisory board of the Air Force. “I have taken precaution, making sure that I will not be alone and carrying Hijab, which I never wore,” she said.

Benazir has been appointed after a round of interview as in the last year reaching out to Muslim women, the incumbent government attempted at facilitati­ng women's travel for Haj pilgrimage without a male companion. They will be leaving on June 27.

Union Ministers Rajnath Singh, Smriti Irani, Prakash Javadekar, MJ Akbar, Harsh Vardhan, and Ravi Shankar Prasad were also present.

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