The Sunday Guardian

Rss-bJP coordinati­on missing in chitrakoot

The bypoll, which Congress won, was necessitat­ed following the death of the sitting Congress MLA, Prem Singh.

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Functionar­ies of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), who were given charge of the Chitrakoot Assembly byelection in Madhya Pradesh, did not take BJP leaders and cadre into confidence, resulting in the BJP’s inability to snatch this seat from the Congress, senior BJP leaders in Bhopal told this newspaper. They said that the lack of coordinati­on should be an “eyeopener” for the RSS, as the state goes to the elections in less than a year.

The Chitrakoot seat is a Congress stronghold, with the BJP winning it only in 2008 in the near past, but state Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan had given much focus on this byelection in the hope of snatching it from the Congress.

Party leaders said that the RSS’ decision to give the ticket to Shankar Dayal Tripathi, rather than Surendra Singh Gaharwar, who won the seat in 2008, played a role in the defeat. Tripathi, an RSS functionar­y, was preferred over Gaharwar, who was being pushed by the party and Chouhan personally.

The bypoll, which Congress won by over 14,000 votes, was necessitat­ed following the death of the sitting Congress MLA, Prem Singh (65). Singh won the seat in the 1998, 2003 and 2013 elections, except in 2008 when he lost to Gaharwar. During the entire campaign, which was being managed by Suhash Bhagat, state organisati­onal general secretary, who joined the position last year in April, senior state leaders of the BJP were neither consulted nor were involved in the exercise.

“Bhagat and Atul Rai (an RSS functionar­y who was asked to assist the BJP in June 2016) are still relatively new to the working of the party in the state and are still understand­ing the arithmetic. During this election, senior party leaders and cadre were not ‘involved’ and hence they did not work as they normally would have and decided to ‘sit’ out the election. Secondly, our choice of candidate was not accepted and even though the CM campaigned, he was not able to energise the local workers who wanted Gaharwar,” a senior party source said. Party leaders denied that the loss was a sign of anti-incumbency in the state against Chouhan and BJP which will complete 15 years in power in November 2018. “He remains the most popular face that we have and continues to enjoy immense support among the masses. The loss in Chitrakoot, which has always been a Congress bastion, was because of ‘technical’ reasons and a lack of coordinati­on between the two bodies (RSS and BJP), which sometimes happens during elections. We have discussed all these issues with the relevant people in order to ensure that this does not happen again,” a senior party source said, adding that there was absolutely no chance that the party would replace Chouhan before the election.

This is the second bypoll that the BJP has lost in the state after Ater in Bhind, which the party lost in April. Out of the 12 bypolls held after the 2013 Assembly elections, nine seats have been won by the BJP (Vidisha, Vijayragha­vgarh, Aagar, Garoth, Dewas, Maihar, Ghodadongr­i, Nepanagar and Badhavgarh) and three (Bahoriband, Ater and Chitrakoot) by Congress. A worried Chouhan has now shifted all his focus to the two upcoming bypolls necessitat­ed due to the deaths of the sitting MLAs in Mungaoli and Kolaras seats, both of which were won by the Congress in 2013. Both these seats are in Guna, the stronghold of fourtime Congress MP Jyotriadit­ya Scindia, who is likely to be declared the party’s CM candidate for 2018 elections. It is bad optics if the BJP loses these two Congress seats too.

For the Chitrakoot bypolls, at least 10 ministers were deployed with the CM himself camping in the area for three days and doing over 20 rallies. The BJP has now given the responsibi­lity for managing the Mungaoli and Kolaras campaigns to four ministers each. For Mungaoli, Home Minister Bhupendra Singh, Energy Minister Paras Jain, Higher Education Minister Jaibhan Singh Pavaiya and Public Relations Minister Narottam Mishra have been deputed. In Kolaras, Chouhan has fielded Revenue Minister Umashankar Gupta, Health Minister Rustam Singh, MoS for SC Developmen­t and General Administra­tion Minister Lal Singh Arya and MoS for Cooperativ­es Vishwas Sarang. The private security industry is growing rapidly in the country and the number of private security guards has now become four times the police force. Amidst this growth in the sector, there are voices to outsource the “softer” police functions to private security agencies.

The private security industry is one of the largest employers in India, with 8.5 million people compared to 2.2 million police personnel. Estimates say there are 16,000 private security agencies in the country and they have the potential to employ an additional 3 million people by 2020. As per Bureau of Police Research and Developmen­t, there should be one policeman for 547 people, whereas this number is 712.

A large workforce in the private security space can be utilised to make up for the low police to citizen ratio, and some areas of policing, like senior citizen monitoring, and other government establishm­ents, event security and police verificati­on, could be outsourced to private security agencies, says a report of the Pricewater­houseCoope­rs. The report, however,

 ?? IANS ?? Congress workers celebrate after party candidate Nilanshu Chaturvedi won Chitrakoot byelection on 12 November.
IANS Congress workers celebrate after party candidate Nilanshu Chaturvedi won Chitrakoot byelection on 12 November.

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