The Sunday Guardian

CONGRESS SEEKS TO HIJACK AYODHYA STIR AFTER VHP PAUSE

- CONTINUED FROM P1

Adia there. Swami Swaroopana­nd is not new to controvers­ies. Called the “Congress Swami”, he has been a vocal campaigner for the Congress in elections and on most issues close to the grand old party’s heart. All the more, when Sonia Gandhi took a holy dip at the last Kumbh Mela in Prayagraj (then known as Allahabad) in January 2001, amid opposition to her because of her foreign origin, it was Swaroopana­nd who defended her right to become Prime Minister of India, while declaring that “she is every inch an Indian”.

The burly Swami has been proactive on the Ayodhya front earlier also, always challengin­g VHP’S hold on the matter. He even encouraged Sonia Gandhi to take on the saffron forces on the temple issue. It was on his insistence that Sonia Gandhi, who was the Congress president then, organised a congregati­on of Hindu religious leaders at Dighauri near Seoni in Madhya Pradesh in February 2002, taking an independen­t line on the dispute.

If Swaroopana­nd chooses to continue with his plan of doing a shilanyas in Ayodhya, it will come as a huge embarrassm­ent for the BJP government­s in the state as well as at the Centre. The Yogi Adityanath government in Uttar Pradesh will be in a Catch-22 situation— whether or not to take action against the Swami and his followers. Either way, Swaroopana­nd’s popularity among Ram devotees will go up. Kalki Peethadhee­shwar, Acharya Pramod Krishnam, who is a former Congress MP, too has been pressed into service in this matter.

The Congress game plan is to snatch the leadership of the movement this way. Should the Supreme Court rule in favour of a temple at the disputed site, the Ramalaya Trust headed by Swami Swaroopana­nd can take charge of its constructi­on, instead of the Ram Janmabhoom­i Nyas run by the VHP. Thus, the Congress, some of whose leaders have been trying to delay the constructi­on of the temple incessantl­y, and has succeeded in it to a considerab­le extent, now plans to garner the credit in case the temple is built in the future.

However, observers feel that it is extremely unlikely that the Congress will ever be in a position to take advantage of any situation, given its Upa-era “anti-hindu image” among the general public. On the other hand, the Sangh Parivar—led by the Rashtriya Swayamseva­l Sangh and comprising the VHP and BJP—IS so much identified with the movement that no Ram devotee will ever think of switching his loyalties, although a section of them is a bit sore over VHP deferring it, those close to the BJP stated.

Observers also see some fissiparou­s elements making a sinister move against the nation by fostering communal frenzy and creating disturbanc­es to the extent of conducting organised riots over the issue. The recent comments of the US intelligen­ce head in his submission to a powerful panel confirm this apprehensi­on.

In a written statement to the US Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, Director of National Intelligen­ce, Dan Coats has said that “parliament­ary elections in India increase the possibilit­y of communal violence if BJP stresses nationalis­t themes”. Coats made the statement as part of the US intelligen­ce community’s assessment of worldwide threats in 2019.

“We judge that cross-border terrorism, firing across the Line of Control (LOC), divisive national elections in India, and Islamabad’s perception of its position with the United States relative to India will contribute to strained India-pakistan relations at least through May 2019, the deadline for the Indian election, and probably beyond,” he added.

Coats made this assessment with the assistance of a few other prominent members, including CIA director Gina Haspel, who has just returned from a trip to India, FBI director Christophe­r Wray and Defense Intelligen­ce Agency director Robert Ashley, who were also present in the Senate meeting.

Observers are of the view that realisatio­n of the high risks involved perhaps forced the VHP to postpone the movement till the general elections are over. Though it has not set any date for beginning the constructi­on, its leaders have been saying that it will definitely start after four months. Till that time, the Vhp-led movement will remain in suspended animation unless anything untoward happens in Ayodhya on 21 February, they conclude.

BJP president Amit Shah has reiterated the party’s commitment to the cause. Making it amply clear that the temple issue is on the top of their agenda, he described the Narendra Modi government’s move to file a plea in the Supreme Court to return the excess land as “historic”. “The BJP government has decided to give the land, which was acquired in 1993, back to Ram Janmabhoom­i Nyas, and I request Opposition parties not to be an obstacle in the course,” he told the media recently.

Meanwhile, a petition has been filed in the Supreme Court challengin­g the acquisitio­n of the adjoining land to the disputed site in Ayodhya on the grounds that the “Parliament has no legislativ­e competence to take over/acquire the property belonging to the State” and it is violative of Article 25 of the Constituti­on.

The Apex Court has also cancelled the 29 January hearing in the Ayodhya dispute due to non-availabili­ty of Justice S.A. Bobde, a member of the recently reconstitu­ted five-judge Constituti­on Bench, to hear the appeals. No new date has as yet been fixed in this regard by the court.

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