The Sunday Guardian

BJP’s Mission 11 about to start in Kerala

The most important aspect during Amit Shah’s visit will be introducti­on of an entirely new style of functionin­g at different levels in the party.

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“Mission 11”, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s ambitious plan to conquer Kerala in the general elections of 2019, will be formally launched by party president Amit Shah with a threeday visit to the state beginning Friday, 2 June. His visit is part of the strategy to streamline and strengthen the organisati­onal network at the block-level in constituen­cies where the party hopes to make inroads in the Lok Sabha elections. According to B.L. Santhosh, national joint organisati­onal secretary of the BJP, the party would concentrat­e on all 20 Lok Sabha seats in the state, with special attention to 11 segments from where the party polled over two lakh votes each in the 2016 Assembly elections. Kerala is one state where the party is hoping to do well ever since it won an Assembly seat last May, for the first time since the formation of the state in 1956.

It was precisely with this in mind that the party held a three-day national council meeting at Kozhikode in Muslim-dominated north Kerala last September. The meeting was also meant to pay tribute to Deendayal Upadhyaya, who took over as president of the erstwhile Bharatiya Jana Sangh in Kozhikode 50 years ago in 1967, just a year before his mysterious death. Though the party performanc­e did not come up to the leadership’s expectatio­ns in the recently held Lok Sabha byelection from Malappuram, Amit Shah, during his visit hopes to renew efforts to woo minorities to the party fold. The party has also come to realise that its strategy of putting up a local candidate, rather than a national leader, did not win much favour with the electorate even in pockets where Hindus have an upper hand. Some sections in the party were highly critical of state president Kummanam Rajasekhar­an’s style of functionin­g. Shah is supposed to look into all these and iron out the difference­s prevailing between the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh and the BJP state leaders. Also there have been some issues regarding wrong informatio­n being given to the media, thereby creating a negative impression among party workers.

But the most important aspect during Shah’s visit will be introducti­on of an entirely new style of functionin­g at different levels in the party. The plan is to depute those volunteers who come forward to work for the party at specified areas with specific goals. This may be for a period of six months, one year or even two years, depending on the areas of the volunteers’ preference. Volunteers will be provided accommodat­ion by the party. The BJP’s target group are graduates fresh from college, who will be more receptive to the party ideology and will have lots of enthusiasm to work among the people. Termed as “Vistar Yojna”, the leadership intends to build teams of “party missionari­es”, who will work among the people with the zeal and dedication of a missionary. All their expenses will be taken care of by the party. This will be formalised before the next general elections. The party also plans to recruit fulltime workers as part of the Deendayal Upadhyaya birth anniversar­y celebratio­ns. One full-time party worker will be asked to concentrat­e on five polling booths at least for a fortnight at a stretch. Those selected for this will be given special training. For this ministers and senior leaders of the party will be roped in and camps conducted according to their convenienc­e. These volunteers will be asked to develop personal contacts in each household of their jurisdicti­on. The state will be divided into eight zones, with each zone in every district under the guidance of a senior BJP leader of that area. Basically, the party expects to fan out to all sections of the people irrespecti­ve of caste.

Amit Shah’s visit to the state coincides with the celebratio­ns of one year’s rule by the Left Democratic Front government, which came to power with a lot of promises. The track record of the Pinarayi Vijayan government is nothing much to write about. Instead, it had provided enough ammunition for the opposition parties to train their guns on it. But the opposition including the BJP have failed to capitalise on the follies of the government. Still, compared to the main opposition Congress, the BJP has succeeded to a certain extent in highlighti­ng the failures of the government, especially law and order. During the last year, Vijayan as Home Minister and his police have been apologetic day in and day out. Kannur witnessed nine murders and the tally stands at BJP 6 and CPM 3. Two ministers had to quit, atrocities against women and children go unchecked. There are fissures within the LDF. A rudderless Congress gives ample opportunit­y for the BJP to fit into an active opposition’s shoes. That is what Amit Shah is hoping to achieve by revamping and reorganisi­ng the party apparatus. If elsewhere the party is striving for a Congress-mukt Bharat, in Kerala it is a Communist-mukt state that the BJP is aiming for. In a first of its kind move in India, Andhra Pradesh has developed a system to forecast lightning that claims several lives during the pre-monsoon season in May-June every year. AP was in fact able to save some lives in Chittoor and Anantapur in the last two weeks by alerting people in a dozen villages there about possible lightning strikes.

AP State Disaster Mitigation Society ( APSDMS), which works under the Department of Revenue and Relief, has put in place a forewarnin­g system of lightning with the support of ISRO and a US based Earth Networks. Earth Networks is a weather monitoring and forewarnin­g technology firm with around 1,200 sensors in 40 countries.

In 2015, Andhra Pradesh had recorded 75 deaths due to lightning strikes in remote villages and semiurban areas. So far the government had been left helpless in tackling this grave problem.

These southernmo­st districts account for a large number of lightning in late summer. On 16 May, the revenue department of the government issued a warning half an hour in advance about the possibilit­y of a lightning strike in Kuppam and Palamaner mandals of Chittoor district.

The village administra­tion publicised the same in the villages.

Exactly as predicted, lightning struck at Byreddypal­le in Kuppam mandal but there was no loss of life. The next day, the authoritie­s again warned against possi-

 ?? IANS ?? BJP chief Amit Shah during a party programme in Hyderabad on 23 May.
IANS BJP chief Amit Shah during a party programme in Hyderabad on 23 May.

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