The Asian Age

Tuki’s autocratic decisions led to dissidence in Cong

- MANOJ ANAND Former Arunachal CM Nabam Tuki emerges after a meeting with Sonia Gandhi on Wednesday.

The problem for the Congress government led by Nabam Tuki had started in December 2015 with the resignatio­n of Pema Khandu, minister of tourism and urban developmen­t, who accused Mr Tuki of “miserably failing” in governance.

Mr Khandu’s resignatio­n had come close on the heels of the dismissal of four senior ministers by Mr Tuki for their alleged involvemen­t in dissident activities. Mr Tuki had also expelled present chief minister Kalikho Pul from the Congress party accusing him of engineerin­g dissent in the party. The dissident camp in the Congress party got a fresh lease of life after governor J. P. Rajkhowa advanced the state Assembly session in which Opposition legislator­s, including the rebels, removed Mr Tuki and Speaker Mr Nabam Rebia.

The Congress government headed by chief minister Nabam Tuki was dismissed after 21 of the 47 MLAs rebelled against the chief minister. The Assembly proceeding­s took place in a community centre with a different speaker so that “bias” could be avoided, as per the governor’s direction. On February 19, the leader of the dissident faction, Kalikho Pul, was sworn in as chief minister, supported by 20 Congress rebels and 11 legislator­s of the BJP. However, the apex court on Wednesday said these proceeding­s were unconstitu­tional.

Mr Tuki first became chief minister in November 2011 by replacing Jarbom Gamlin after a three- monthlong bitter infighting within the Congress party.

The dissidence in the Congress party took an ugly turn only after Congress high command refused to replace Mr Tuki who was accused to have been trying to marginalis­e most of the senior party leaders, including the son of former chief minister Dorji Khandu, who died in a helicopter crash in Tawang.

 ?? — PTI ?? Mumbai Congress president Sanjay Nirupam celebrates with party leaders in Mumbai on Wednesday after the Supreme Court restored the party’s government in Arunachal Pradesh.
— PTI Mumbai Congress president Sanjay Nirupam celebrates with party leaders in Mumbai on Wednesday after the Supreme Court restored the party’s government in Arunachal Pradesh.
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