The Borneo Post

Modi boosts grip on power with alliance in scandal-hit India state

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NEW DELHI: A former archrival of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi aligned with the Hindu nationalis­t leader yesterday to form a new government in Bihar, one of the country’s most populous states.

The outspoken Nitish Kumar took the oath as Bihar’s chief minister just hours after standing down in protest at corruption allegation­s against his last coalition partner.

The link up between Kumar’s Janata Dal United party and the prime minister’s right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP) further tightens Modi’s grip on power ahead of national elections in 2019.

Kumar had been considered a potential challenger to Modi for India’s top job.

The BJP, which this month easily won the presidenti­al election for the first time, now rules 17 of India’s 29 states either directly or in alliance with regional parties.

Bihar, with a population of 100 million people but impoverish­ed and frequently scandal-tainted, has seen a titanic power struggle in recent years.

In 2013 then- chief minister Kumar pulled his party out of a 17-year- old alliance with the BJP over Modi’s appointmen­t as party leader.

He had called Modi a ‘ fascist’ and ‘Hitler’ over his alleged antiMuslim and hardline Hindu views.

After stepping down in 2014 as chief minister after a poor showing in elections, Kumar forged a ‘grand alliance’ with another ex-rival and former chief minister, Lalu Prasad Yadav, to thwart Modi in the following year’s state polls.

The alliance, which also involved the Congress party, was seen as a possible prototype for a national bid to stop Modi getting reelection. — AFP

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