Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

VHP’s list of contributo­rs grows longer as donations pour in

- Pawan Dixit Pawan.Dixit@hindustant­imes.com :

LUCKNOW From President Ram Nath Kovind to vice president Venkaiah Naidu to Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s list of contributo­rs for the Ram temple is growing longer as the fund-raising campaign for constructi­on of the temple in Ayodhya moves ahead.

Contributi­ons are pouring in from all walks of life — the political class, government employees, Bollywood stars and common people.

“People from all walks of life across the country from Leh to North- Eastern states are contributi­ng for the Ram temple,” said Champat Rai, vice-president of the VHP. Rai is also general secretary of the Shri Ram Janmabhoom­i Teerth Kshetra Trust.

“Politician­s, chief ministers, MPs, MLAs and even government employees are coming forward in large numbers to contribute for constructi­on of the Ram temple,” said Sharad Sharma, VHP’s regional spokespers­on, who operates from Karsevakpu­ram, Ayodhya.

The VHP launched its nationwide 44-day fund raising campaign, Shri Ram Janmabhoom­i Ram Mandir Nidhi Samarpan Abhiyan, on January 15. The drive will continue till February 27.

“In the first three days of the campaign, we collected Rs 100 crore for the Ram temple,” said Rai

The President was the first VVIP to donate for constructi­on of the temple. He handed over a cheque for Rs 500,100 in his personal capacity to a delegation comprising the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s internatio­nal working president Alok Kumar, treasurer of the Ram Janmabhoom­i Teerath Kshetra Trust Govind Dev Giri, Ram temple constructi­on committee chairman Nripendra Misra and Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh leader Kulbhushan Ahuja.

The chief ministers of 12 BJPruled states, governors, 302 BJP MPs in the Lok Sabha, 93 BJP MPs in the Rajya Sabha and the party’s 1373 MLAs across the

country and its MLCs have come forward to contribute for the Ram temple.

Prominent among them are Uttar Pradesh chief minister

Yogi Adityanath (Rs 2 lakh), Uttarakhan­d chief minister Trivendra Singh Rawat (Rs 1.51 lakh) and Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan (Rs 1 lakh).

Shiv Sena chief and Maharashtr­a chief minister Uddhav Thackeray has directly transferre­d Rs 1 crore into the Trust’s bank account in Ayodhya. This donation was on behalf of his party, the Shiv Sena.

Long before the VHP’s campaign started, Adityanath donated Rs 11 lakh for constructi­on of the Ram temple on March 25 last during the shifting of the idol of Ram Lalla from the makeshift temple to a prefabrica­ted temple at the Ram Janmabhoom­i.

Uttar Pradesh governor Anandiben Patel has donated Rs 2 lakh to the Trust. As the nationwide campaign continues, West Bengal governor Jagdeep

Dhankar and his wife contribute­d Rs 5 lakh. Rajasthan governor Kalraj Mishra has also contribute­d.

Bhojpuri cinestar and Gorakhpur MP Ravi Kishan is spearheadi­ng the fund collection drive in his constituen­cy, which is also Adityanath’s political and spiritual turf.

Bharatiya Janata Party leader Kalyan Singh, who was the Uttar Pradesh chief minister when the Babri Masjid was demolished on December 6, 1992, has donated Rs 1 lakh.

Former Nagaland chief minister TR Zeliang also made a contributi­on. Among Congress leaders, former Madhya Pradesh chief minister Digvijaya Singh

streamed into the site. Police also diverted traffic on arterial roads connecting Delhi to UP and Haryana, and closed several checkpoint­s, such as Auchandi and Piau. “We served him (Rakesh Tikait) the notice under section 133 of CrPC (conditiona­l order for removal of nuisance) for eviction from the site and he was also to be arrested later on. But he seems to have played a ploy and unexpected events unfolded in which he refused to leave the site,” said Singh.

But the farmers refused to move, with Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) spokespers­on Rakesh Tikait saying he may approach the Supreme Court.

“There is no question of vacating Ghazipur. Police can do whatever they want,” he said, as small groups of people shouted anti-farmer slogans. “The government wants to destroy farmers. If the farm laws are not repealed, Rakesh Tikait will commit suicide,” he told the agitators late evening, breaking down towards the end of the address. As night fell, a large police contingent and protesting farmers were positioned on either side of the Delhi-Meerut Expressway, and Tikait announced a hunger strike. With visuals of Tikait breaking down beamed on television, around 5,000 farmers gathered at his ancestral village of Sisauli, roughly 100km away, and threatened to march to UP Gate.

At the time of going to print, the standoff continued.

Farmers, primarily from western UP, have been sitting in Ghazipur for about two months. Tikait’s brother, Naresh Tikait, announced in Muzaffarna­gar that the agitation will be withdrawn. On Wednesday, at least two other unions had pulled out of the protests and the farm unions called off a march to Parliament on February 1, the day the Union budget will be presented. The unions lost more momentum on Thursday when another union, BKU (Lokshakti), which was camped at Noida, pulled out. Tension has been building at Delhi’s borders since the January 26 violence. Police and the government have accused farm leaders of betraying their trust, vandalisin­g property worth crores, and threatenin­g lives. Farm unions have taken responsibi­lity for the violence, but blamed fringe elements led by Punjabi actorturne­d-activist Deep Sidhu. At Singhu, on the Capital’s northweste­rn border, the biggest of the four sites for farmer mobilisati­on, police increased security, blocked major entry points to the site, installed more concrete barriers using cranes and dug trenches using a JCB machine.

At around 12pm, nearly 50 people gathered and demanded that the protest be cleared. “We had been sympatheti­c to their cause so far because we too are farmers. But when we saw their actions during Republic Day, when they insulted the Tricolour at Red Fort, we knew that they were not farmers,” said Mohan Bhardwaj, 42, a resident of Bawana.The farm unions dismissed this demand and said they will continue their movement against three recently passed laws that they claim will erode their bargaining power and leave them vulnerable to exploitati­on by corporate giants.

“The protests are not about sites but issues of farmers’ livelihood­s. We will atone for the violence with a fast and whoever doesn’t agree with our peaceful goals are free to leave but the protests will continue as they are. They will only expand,” said Avik Saha, the national secretary of the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordinati­on Committee (AIKSCC), a farmers’ organisati­on that plays a key role in the Samyukt Kisan Morcha, the umbrella body leading the protests.Farm unions have called for a day-long fast on January 30, Mahatma Gandhi’s death anniversar­y, as a step towards “atonement” and taking moral responsibi­lity for Tuesday’s violence. Delhi Police have already named senior leaders in their first informatio­n reports, including Yogendra Yadav, Balbeer Singh Rajewal, Buta Singh, SS Pannu, and Darshan Pal. Farm unions said they were prepared to face jail but won’t retreat. “When we began the agitation, we expected repression from the government. We didn’t expect cakes,” Saha said.

The protesters also received political support from Opposition leaders. “Time to pick a side. My decision is clear. I am with democracy, farmers and their peaceful movement,” tweeted former Congress chief Rahul Gandhi. Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) chief Ajit Singh spoke to the Tikait brothers over phone, announced Singh’s son Jayant Chaudhary. “Don’t worry. This is a do or die situation for the farmers. We need to remain together and united,” Singh told the farm leaders, according to a tweet by Chaudhary.Late in the evening, Union agricultur­e minister Narendra Singh Tomar announced that members of BKU (Lok Shakti), which wasn’t a part of SKM, met him and announced their withdrawal from the stir. “BKU (Lok Shakti) condemns the way some elements spread havoc in Delhi,” read a letter to Tomar.

 ?? DEEPAK GUPTA/HT ?? A craftsman carving stones for the Ram temple.
DEEPAK GUPTA/HT A craftsman carving stones for the Ram temple.

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