The Free Press Journal

NPR row: Uddhav is made to mellow down

Forms ministeria­l committee to study its implementa­tion and way forward

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Sensing the threat to the newly formed government under his leadership on the issue of National Population Register, Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray took an abrupt Uturn on Sunday and mellowed down his stand.

Buckling under pressure from the Congress and the Nationalis­t Congress party, Thackeray has formed a committee of senior ministers to take a call on the issue.

After meeting PM Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah at New Delhi, Thackeray had come out in support of NPR and CAA (the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act). In his Konkan tour, too, he had asserted that there is nothing objectiona­ble in the NPR, as it is a part of the census.

The unequivoca­l stand turned the spotlight on the fissures in the Maha Vikas Aghadi government and highlighte­d its vulnerabil­ity.

Thackeray’s statements also ignited speculatio­n that Sena may desert the MVA and join the BJP.

In the fluid situation, the NCP was seen trying to find a middle path by suggesting that they should frame the questionna­ire as per the Common Minimum Programme of the MVA government.

But the Congress adopted a tough posture on both the NPR and CAA and Mallikarju­n Kharge stated that there will be no compromise. The strident stand had put a question mark on the fate of the MVA government in the state.

"On the face of it, there seem to be no problems in the NPR. Nonetheles­s, we will form a committee of senior ministers representi­ng the three allies to discuss the possible complicati­ons in its implementa­tion and the way forward", CM Thackeray said, answering a question on this issue.

"The people will decide how they wish to live," was his terse and cryptic response when attention was drawn to the claim made by Opposition leader Devendra Fadnavis that the NPR questionna­ire will be finalised by the Union government. When asked about the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) taking over the investigat­ion into the 2017 Elgar Parishad case, the CM said he didn't hand it over to the Central agency. "The Centre took over the probe; but we have conveyed our displeasur­e to the Union government on this issue, as it is doubting the State police’s capability to investigat­e into this matter," he said.

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