The Sunday Guardian

EastErn front: BJP sEnsEs oPPortunit­y in odisha

PM Modi is scheduled to inaugurate a slew of projects in the state involving total investment of more than Rs 14.5 thousand crore.

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With Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik taking the fight straight into Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home turf, the PM’s flying visit to the state on Monday is certainly going to set the already charged-up politics there on fire. During his oneday visit, Modi is scheduled to go on an inaugurati­on spree, unveiling eight major plants in one go, the cost of the projects totalling to a whopping Rs 14,523 crore.

Earlier this week, Patnaik had gone to the industrial town of Surat in Gujarat to inaugurate Odia Mahotsav organised by Odias staying there.

Surat is home to a 12-lakhstrong community of Odia migrants who are still emotionall­y and culturally very much attached to Odisha. Year long, there is high passenger traffic between the two states as they keep visiting their native places on various occasions. And Naveenbabu, as the CM is popularly known, knows well that Election Day is one such big occasion.

Defeat of four government­s in five states that went to polls recently, primarily due to anti-incumbency, must have sent a chill down the spines of ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) leaders. Realising that BJP has emerged as a real challenge to his 20year dominance in the state politics, accompanie­d with his diminishin­g popularity and a frail health, Patnaik is now looking to create new support bases for his party. Announcing a slew of welfare schemes for NROs—an acronym for Odias residing outside the state—at the Surat fest may help him in this regard.

His visit to PM Modi’s home state created a lot of political buzz in both the states and Delhi as well. Welcoming Patnaik, his Gujarat counterpar­t Vijay Rupani urged him to implement Ayushman Bharat, Centre’s flagship health insurance scheme, for the benefit of all Odias. “I am surprised that Odisha is not connected with Ayushman Bharat,” Rupani said when he was in Bhubaneswa­r a day before the Surat fest though on a different mission.

The Gujarat CM explained that state schemes like Biju Swasthya Kalyan Yojana (BSKY) of Odisha or Mukhyamant­ri Amrutum Yojana ( MAY) of Gujarat will not serve any purpose outside the respective states, but “Ayushman Bharat card” will work anywhere in the country. “Despite political difference­s with Congress, we had implemente­d UPA government schemes because it was in the interest of the people,” he added.

Speaking on similar lines, Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, who is considered as Patnaik’s main challenger in the upcoming elections, said: “Naveen is only shedding crocodile tears for the Odia people living outside Odisha. If he was really bothered about the plight of Odias settled outside the state, he would have implemente­d Ayushman Bharat. Odias are working outside simply because the BJD government has failed to provide them jobs within the state in the last 20 years.”

Prime Minister Modi will start his whistle-stop tour in Odisha with addressing a huge rally, named as Janasambad Mahasamabe­sh, in Khurda near Bhubaneswa­r. There, he will unveil a special stamp and a currency note of Rs 200 denominati­on to commemorat­e the bicente- nary of Paika Bidroh, the rebellion of the legendary Paika warriors in Khurda against the British, which is considered as the first war of Indian independen­ce, 40 years before 1857. He will also announce the establishm­ent of a Chair in Utkal University in the name of the rebellion leader, Buxi Jagabandhu, with a corpus fund of Rs 5 crore. The PM will then preside over the inaugural of the new campus of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) at Bhubaneswa­r and later dedicate it to the nation.

After that, he will lay the foundation stone of four different projects from the same venue: permanent campus of Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) at Berhampur; ParadipHyd­erabad pipeline product project of Indian Oil; BokaroAngu­l section of Jagdishpur­Haldia and Bokaro-Dhamra gas pipeline project under Urja Ganga scheme by Gas Authority of India; and four highway projects including Khandagiri flyover.

He will also inaugurate from there itself the Archaeolog­ical Museum of Lalitgiri, a Buddhist destinatio­n in Jajpurdist­rict, and an ESI hospital at Bhubaneswa­r.

The BJP is then expected to raise its electoral pitch during the Parivartan Rath Yatras it plans to take out in four different zones in the state in January. Party’s national president Amit Shah, Union ministers Nitin Gadkari, Rajnath Singh and Smriti Irani are the star- campaigner­s who are scheduled to join the Rath Yatras at different places. The amount of focus it is putting on Odisha and the way it is applying there all its tactics successful elsewhere, it seems the party has turned the state into its new experiment­al ground.

Meanwhile, a video clip showing bureaucrat-turnedBJP leader Aparajita Sarangi asking the party workers to “either work unitedly or leave”, has gone viral on social media. The IAS officer, who recently took voluntary retirement to join the saffron camp, is apparently unhappy with the kind of factionali­sm going on in the state unit. Known for her nononsense image, she is likely to be a prominent face of the party in the run-up to the next year’s polls.

In the clip, Sarangi is seen addressing a gathering of party workers and angrily asking: “Don’t you feel ashamed of the party’s loss time and again? Instead of making strategies to win polls, why are you indulging in groupism? Whoever will be the candidate fielded by the party, it is our duty to make them win, or else you quit the party.” She adds, “I have no associatio­n with anyone in the party nor I belong to any group. And I will never be linked with any particular person or group in the party.”

In all likelihood, Sarangi will contest from the prestigiou­s Bhubaneswa­r Lok Sabha constituen­cy. She has started her own website in which she wrote: “BJD’s lasting contributi­on to Odisha is perpetuati­on of poverty.” Similarly, another former bureaucrat of stature known for his honesty and integrity, Prakash Mishra, who was the state’s DGP before moving to CRPF, is most likely to fight from Cuttack LS seat. He may also be fielded from Puri in case PM Modi chooses not to fight from there. Had Naveen Patnaik not blocked his prospect, Mishra would have become the CBI chief and the country’s premier investigat­ing agency would not have been in such a pathetic condition today, feel observers.

The BJD already has two former bureaucrat­s in its ranks— former Mumbai Police Commission­er, Arup Patnaik, and former Accountant-General of Odisha and Kerala, Amar Patnaik. Arup Patnaik, who was a 1979-batch IPS officer of Maharashtr­a cadre, may have to face Sarangi, while Amar Patnaik, who took voluntary retirement to join the BJD, may fight from Berhampur or Kandhamal seat.

Political circles are also agog with rumours that incumbent Public Works Secretary, Nalinikant­a Pradhan, who is alleged to be the chief patron of the Bomikhal flyover scam-tainted contractor, Pratap Kishore Panda, is all set to join BJD before the polls and may contest from the Sambalpur Lok Sabha constituen­cy. The Bengal unit of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has accused the Trinamool Congress (TMC) government led by Mamata Banerjee of trying hard to stop the BJP’s proposed “Save Democracy” Rath Yatra in Bengal, as it fears that the Yatra would create euphoria among the people of Bengal in favour of the BJP.

Sayantan Basu, spokespers­on and general secretary of Bengal BJP, told The Sunday Guardian that the Mamata Banerjee government was trying every possible trick to stop the Yatra because she was afraid that the Yatra would create “euphoria among the people in favour of the BJP” and that the TMC was also “trying to please its minority vote bank” and playing appeasemen­t politics in Bengal. “The Yatra is bound to happen in Bengal and it is just a matter of time. The Bengal government is using all possible means to stop the Yatra because it is afraid of the BJP’s rise in Bengal. The people of Bengal are already euphoric about this entire Yatra organised by the BJP, but the TMC is trying to stop this to please its vote bank and appease a particular community. The TMC in Bengal has always been practising appeasemen­t politics,” Basu said.

The BJP and TMC have locked horns in the Calcutta High Court over permission for the Yatra, which now is not likely to start before the first week of January next year as a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court on Friday ruled against the order of the Single Bench Judge of the same court which on Thursday had permitted the BJP to hold the Yatra in the state starting from Saturday.

The Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court headed by Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court Justice Deba-

 ?? IANS ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a public meeting in Odisha’s Jharsuguda on 22 September 2018.
IANS Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a public meeting in Odisha’s Jharsuguda on 22 September 2018.

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