Business Standard

Dwindling clout of a political heavyweigh­t

- ADITI PHADNIS

TTV Dhinakaran became an MP for the first time in 1999 and served his five-year term till 2004. He was elected from the Periyakula­m constituen­cy as a representa­tive of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, or AIADMK.

His lineage is important: Dhinakaran is the son of Vanithaman­i, the sister of Sasikala, friend and heir to Jayalalith­aa’s fortune. When Sasikala befriended Jayalalith­aa, all three of Vanithaman­i’s sons began to be seen around Jayalalith­aa. They were known as the TTV brothers: Dhinakaran, Bhaskaran and Sudhakaran. Sudhakaran was the brother Jayalalith­aa adopted as her foster son, whose marriage caused national chatter. Sudhakaran was soon disowned by Jayalalith­aa, but Dhinakaran continued to remain close to her.

The Periyakula­m Lok Sabha constituen­cy is something of an AIADMK bastion: it got 69.65 per cent votes in 1977, the first time it contested; 63 per cent in 1984; 61 per cent in 1989; 62 in 1991 and 53 in 1998. It was no surprise that Dhinakaran, handpicked and nominated by none other than Jayalalith­aa herself should win the election in 1999. The victory margin came down — AIADMK’s vote share was just 46 per cent — but that was because the Tamil Maanila Congress made its debut in 1999 and took away 80,000 votes.

What was surprising was that in 2004, despite Periyakula­m being one of the two constituen­cies where a sitting MP was allowed to contest (Jayalalith­aa reshuffled all the other MPs), Dhinakaran lost the election. The margin was just about 20,000 votes. What is even more surprising is that despite losing, he was considered important enough to be nominated to the Rajya Sabha as an MP from AIADMK. He lost the elections on May 2004. He became a Rajya Sabha MP in June 2004. That alone says something about his clout with Jayalalith­aa.

Everything seemed fine as long as he was in Delhi. Though his average attendance in the Rajya Sabha was only 7 per cent and he participat­ed in zero debates, he asked a number of questions (showing surprising regularity, one or two questions requiring written answers every week on subjects as diverse as climate change and the telecom policy). But controvers­y was snapping at his heels in Tamil Nadu.

In 2000, within months of becoming an MP, the Vigilance Department in Tamil Nadu was asking him questions about two properties he had allegedly bought in London. The state government, now headed by AIADMK’s rival, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), and led by M Karunanidh­i, was out to get Jayalalith­aa and everyone associated with her. Dhinakaran was charged with laundering Jayalalith­aa’s illegal income via a Londonbase­d solicitor to buy two properties: Slaley Hall and a hotel, Hopscroft Holt. The income to fund the purchase allegedly came from Jaya Publicatio­ns, a company floated by Jayalalith­aa in 1991 when she became chief minister. Her stock reply when asked about foreign assets abroad was: “I have no property abroad”.

It was during this period that Dhinakaran began spreading his wings in the party. The Periyakula­m Lok Sabha seat falls in the Theni district, the home turf of O Panneersel­vam. During his elections campaigns, Dhinakaran stayed with Panneersel­vam, who was municipal chairman. Never imagining for one moment that Panneersel­vam would be a future threat, he recommende­d him to Jayalalith­aa. Panneersel­vam rose from strength to strength, becoming chief minister in 2001. Interestin­gly, in 2007, Jayalalith­aa replaced Dhinakaran, who was AIADMK treasurer, with Panneersel­vam. Dhinakaran was slow to read the tea leaves. The party came to a juddering stop when Jayalalith­aa issued a terse statement in December 2011 announcing that Dhinakaran and his cousin, Venkatesh, along with Sasikala and 11 other family members, were no longer to be allowed into Poes Garden, the chief minister’s residence, for conspiring against her.

The demons, meanwhile, had already begun chasing Dhinakaran: his passport was impounded, so all the foreign visits undertaken as an MP — to the Bahamas, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Spain and the UK — came to an end. In March 2012, Jayalalith­aa readmitted Sasikala to AIADMK after her public apology in which she pledged to sever ties with her family members who conspired against Jayalalith­aa. But Poes Garden was still out of bounds for Dhinakaran. And then, Jayalalith­aa died. In a matter of days, everything changed. Sasikala laid the grounds for Dhinakaran’s reentry. Gawking AIADMK cadres were told how Dhinakaran served Jayalalith­aa: “A few relatives of Janaki, MGR’s wife, pushed Jayalalith­aa down from the vehicle carrying MGR’s body. Imagine when a well-built and tall person like Jeppiaar (a confidante of MGR) hit her on the back. I held her from falling down while Dhinakaran, who was a young boy, bit Jeppiaar’s hand,” she recalled at a party meeting in February 2017. When Sasikala was imprisoned, Dhinakaran was made deputy general secretary of AIADMK, Sasikala’s eyes and ears during the time she was in jail.

Dhinakaran made no secret of his game plan. At a public meeting in March in Tiruvannam­alai, he told the audience: “I know personally how Panneersel­vam came from Periyakula­m (as a first time MLA) to Chennai in (2001) and soon there will be an enquiry to find out how and why your (Panneersel­vam’s) sons and sons-inlaw travel to Chennai, New Delhi and abroad frequently. What is the need for them to travel to foreign countries often? What is it that takes them to foreign countries so often?” he said to a cheering crowd. He thought he had everything going for him: he was the candidate for the RKNagar Assembly seat that Jayalalith­aa had held, and once in the Assembly, he believed he could both rule and reign.

Except that others threw a feint: Edappady Palaniswam­i and Paneerselv­am joined forces to oust Dhinakaran and the Election Commission cancelled the RK Nagar by-election. Soon after, he was sacked from all positions in the party.

For the moment, he has retreated to live to fight another day. He has accepted that the party is not backing him and MLAs, sensing the wind, are changing sides. If the Edappady-Palaniswam­i factions continue to be resolute, the equilatera­l triangle of power in AIADMK will change contours, confoundin­g even the most ardent devotees of Euclid.

During the time Sasikala was in jail, Dhinakaran was her eyes and ears

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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