The Sunday Guardian

PK wants to work with 3rd and 4th fronts

-

Campaign manager Prashant Kishor Pandey, who unsuccessf­ully handled the Congress’ election campaign in Uttar Pradesh, is looking for similar opportunit­ies with smaller regional parties, most of which are part of the “third front’ or the “fourth front”.

Sources close to the Indian People’s Action Committee (IPAC), Pandey’s organisati­on, which handled the Congress’ campaignin­g in UP and Punjab during the recently held Assembly elections, said that their experience with the Congress was a “bad one”.

“There were lots of issues regarding the payment of fees; some part of it has still not been done. The ‘boss’ (Pandey) is very upset and they parted on a bitter note. The I-PAC is unlikely to cooperate with the Congress in the near future. We are now in touch with other regional parties that comprise the third and the fourth fronts. Elections are due in Gujarat and we are hoping to work there and get good results,” a source aware of the developmen­t said. These sources said that even though I-PAC worked in Punjab and UP, it got a raw deal from Congress leaders.

“The win in Punjab was attributed to Amaridner Singh. However, it was we who prepared the ground report and gave the same to Amarinder and his team. After the initial days, Amarinder virtually cut us off from the campaignin­g. In UP, we were always on the backfoot and the same was communicat­ed to Rahulji (Rahul Gandhi). In UP too, after the initial days, the Congress leaders acted independen­tly, refusing to take or act on our advice. The Congress cadre and leaders on the ground, unlike the JDU or the BJP, refused to pay heed to their leader (Rahul), despite being fully aware that it was Rahul who had engaged us. There was very little we could do in these circumstan­ces,” the source added. The Tourism Ministry’s dream to turn Jammu into a thriving tourist destinatio­n seems to have been a non-starter, partly due to the lackadaisi­cal attitude of the tourism department that has failed to develop the sites of Buddhist ruins, and partly due to opposition from villagers who are loath to further excavation­s. The different wings of the Jammu & Kashmir government have failed to explore Jammu’s richest Buddhist circuits and bring them on the tourism map despite the Tourism Ministry including J&K in its nationwide Buddhist circuit project a few years ago.

Buddhist period ruins discovered at Ambran on the banks of river Chenab have not been connected to the rest of the Buddhist circuit in the state, as villagers living

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India