The Hindu (Mumbai)

The politics of Pappu Yadav in Purnea

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The ve-time MP from Bihar, who is an accused in cases of kidnapping and rioting, and has a murder case pending against him in the Supreme Court, is exing his muscles once again from the Purnea Lok Sabha constituen­cy, contesting as an Independen­t candidate after being denied a ticket by the Congress. Amit Bhelari reports on the man who has no political party to call his own now, but is still popular with the people

Hours before ling his nomination as an Independen­t candidate from Bihar’s Purnea Lok Sabha seat on April 4, Rajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav, 56, strides into Arjun Bhavan at 9 a.m. Yadav’s entry brings a certain energy to the manyroomed, single-storeyed structure, the newly renovated o†ce from where he monitors his men execute work, which is ironically located near Jail Chowk, Purnea.

The politician, who likes to ride his Harley Davidson in his free time, is an accused in 41 cases, including kidnapping and rioting, as per his election a†davit, and has spent over 15 years in jail. In o†ce, the ve-time Bihar MP issues instructio­ns, and is then driven to his modest house, Ranjan Niketan, on Court Road, about a kilometre and a half away. He takes about half an hour to change out of his tee and into more formal clothes, then o“ers prayers, and bends to touch his parents’ feet.

Outside, about 100 of his supporters shout slogans in his favour. “Purnea ka MP kaisa ho, Pappu Yadav jaisa ho (How should the MP of Purnea be? Just like Pappu Yadav). His sister, Anita Ranjan, showers him with ™owers. Climbing into one of his SUVs that follows six others, Yadav, who has won from Purnea thrice, heads to Town Hall, only to stop about a kilometre away. Communicat­ion between the cars in the cavalcade is through walkie-talkies, and he instructs the cars to stop.

There are about 1,000 people waiting to greet him, and he steps out and walks with them. Autoricksh­aw drivers, paan shop owners, and mechanics chant slogans while holding aloft the ™ag of the Congress emblazoned with the party’s symbol: a hand in the Abhayamudr­a. He kisses the hands of the young and old, asking them to vote for him. Manoj Kumar Shaw, a daily wager, says, “He is very down to earth. Whenever there is a problem, he reaches the spot as soon as possible, and makes sure to help those in need.”

In the car, at his feet is an assortment of food items: apples, oranges, grapes, and bananas; rusk, makhana fried in desi ghee; and dozens of Diet Coke cans. “I ensure that everything is with me so that I can stop anywhere and have my lunch. I am a vegetarian, and all this will power me on. Campaignin­g in this scorching summer is a tough task,” Yadav explains. He has a full lunch in the car too: rice, dal, pumpkin curry, peas-potato, and yam, with a home-made garlic-chilli chutney. On the seats are several cushions for him to recline on, between interactio­ns.

On March 20 this year, Yadav had merged his Jan Adhikar Party (Loktantrik), formed in 2015 when he was expelled from the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) for alleged ‘anti-party’ activity, with the Congress, a party his wife Ranjeet Ranjan is part of, and staked claim to the Purnea seat in northeast Bihar. However, after the INDIA bloc’s seatsharin­g talks, the seat went to the RJD. Upset over not being chosen, Yadav called it “political murder” and decided to contest as an Independen­t.

Yadav is sweating, not just because of the heat, now around 40 degrees Celsius, but also because he weighs 150 kg. “I have always chosen the path of struggle,” says the son of a landowning farmer, who claims his money still comes from the land.

About 200 metres from the District Magistrate’s o†ce, a revamped colonial building, an aide zooms down the street on a motorbike. Yadav jumps on and rides the rest of the way, his customary ™air on display. After about 45 minutes, back in his SUV, he retracts the sunroof, pops out from the top, waves, and thanks the crowds with folded hands, saying, “I requested everyone, but nobody listened to me, so I had to make this decision [of contesting independen­tly]. Purnea is my mother and I will not leave her.” He makes this claim despite becoming an MP the last two times from the Madhepura parliament­ary seat, west of Purnea district. He says he had spoken to RJD chief Lalu Prasad about setting aside the Purnea seat for him this time.

Now, the constituen­cy will witness a triangular contest, among Yadav; the RJD’s Rupauli MLA Bima Bharti, whose husband Awadhesh Mandal is in jail on murder and extortion charges; and Janata Dal (United)’s Santosh Kushwaha, who won the seat in the 2014 and 2019 polls. As Purnea goes to polls on April 26, Yadav claims he has the blessings of the top Congress leadership.

There are about 19 lakh voters in the constituen­cy and 40% are Muslim, as per the recent Bihar caste survey. Many of them support Yadav, who also has the backing of the Other Backward Classes (OBCs). Purnea consists of six Assembly constituen­cies: Kasba, Banmankhi, Rupauli, Dhamdaha, Purnia, and Korha.

Pappu’s growth

Born in Khurda village, Purnea, on Christmas Eve in 1967, Yadav grew up going to Anand Marg School, Anand Palli, in Supaul district, which faces ™oods every monsoon. He was lovingly given the nickname Pappu by his grandfathe­r Laxmi Prasad Mandal. He did a BA in Political Science at B.N. Mandal University, Madhepura, and postgradua­te studies from the Indira Gandhi National Open University in human rights, disaster management, and social sciences. “If not a politician, I would have been a social worker,” he says.

In his autobiogra­phy, Drohkal Ka Pathik (One who walks on the path of rebellion), which was published when he was behind bars in 2013, Yadav says, “From childhood, there was a desire to earn a name in life. I must have been young when I would sing this song to my mother: Mata, mujhko bandook de do; mai sarhad par jaunga, dushman ko maar bhagaunga (Mother, give me the gun; I will go to the border and drive away the enemy).”

He also remembers asking his mother, Shanti Priya, if he would become famous by throwing bombs at leaders in Circuit House. His mother would buy him books to clear the National Defence Academy examinatio­n to channel this feeling.

In the early 90s, Yadav met Ranjeet, a Kashmiri Pandit-turnedSikh. “I saw her on the tennis court, playing,” he says. In a cliched story, it was love at rst sight, but her parents didn’t want her to marry him. Ranjeet liked that Yadav “always chose the path of struggle” and “fought against injustice for the people”.

“The person who really helped convince her parents was S.S. Ahluwaliaj­i (former Union Minister from Bihar currently elded from the Asansol seat by the BJP).” They married in 1994, when he was 27 and she, 20. Twenty years later, Ranjeet won the Supaul Lok Sabha seat on a Congress ticket, though she lost the election in 2019.

Ranjeet feels it is the Congress’s loss for not including her husband in their list of candidates. “It is very unfortunat­e that he is not part of the INDIA bloc. He is a strong leader and has been Purnea MP thrice. If he had been on our side, we would have been much stronger.”

Anita, a doctor who lives in Farrukhaba­d, Uttar Pradesh, but is currently in Purnea to support Yadav, says her brother is a ghter and never gives up. “He has done a lot of work for the people of Purnea and they consider him a messiah of the poor.” His two children, a son, 27, and daughter, 19, are studying in Delhi.

Santosh Kushwaha, who works in a local iron factory, says during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, he needed a Remdesivir injection, but could not a“ord its price on the black market. “I contacted Pappuji and the next day one of his associates brought the medicine to my home. From that day onwards, I started respecting him like a god,” he says.

Similarly, Mansur Khan, who has a meat shop near the Purnea railway station, recalls how Yadav helped him with ₹50,000 when his wife was hospitalis­ed six months ago.

Crime and punishment

In the early 90s, the Kosi belt, bordered by the Himalayas in the north and the Bagmati river in the south, witnessed the killing of over 100 people in a battle for caste supremacy. The chief protagonis­ts were Yadav, part of the OBC community, and Anand Mohan, a Rajput strongman convicted of murder, who was released from jail last year. His wife, Lovely Anand, is contesting the Lok Sabha poll from the Sheohar seat in Bihar.

“I rst became an MLA in 1990, contesting as an Independen­t from the Singhesars­than Assembly seat,” says Yadav, thinking back on his journey. In 1991, he won the Purnea Lok Sabha seat as an Independen­t but the election was cancelled owing to allegation­s of poll rigging. He emerged victorious from the seat again in 1996, this time on a Samajwadi Party ticket, and in 1999 as an Independen­t. He then became an MP from the Madhepura seat in 2004 and 2014, both times contesting as a candidate of the RJD.

In 1999, he was arrested in the murder case of CPI(M) legislator Ajit Sarkar, who was gunned down in a moving car along with his driver, Harendra Sharma, and a party worker, Ashfaqur Rehman. The CBI had named ve people, including Yadav, in its chargeshee­t.

After spending nearly 13 years in jail, he was acquitted by the Patna High Court in 2013. The CBI went on to appeal against the order and the matter is pending before the Supreme Court. In fact, he had won the election in 1999 from behind bars. “We needed to shift him from one prison to another because we felt he was running nefarious activities from jail,” says an IPS o†cer on condition of anonymity. As a result, he was an inmate in Delhi’s Tihar Jail, and Bihar’s Beur, Purnea, and Hazaribagh jails.

A former IPS o†cer, who once served as Superinten­dent of Beur Central Jail, says, “Raids would take place in his cell frequently. In 2004, during a raid, a cell phone was found in his shoe, and more than 600 calls were made from that cell phone, several to a then Minister.”

In jail, he had once approached the court to grant him bail for bariatric surgery, but his appeal was denied. The weight, he says, doesn’t add to his bahubali (strongman) image, which he feels is a media construct. “I don’t like rich people who exploit the poor and I just believe in justice for the poor,” he says.

K.R. Hasmi alias Dulha, one of his associates who spent three months in Purnea jail with him, claims “no special treatment was ever meted out to Pappuji.” He adds that Yadav followed all the rules, and that he remembered his wife and children a lot while in jail.

The communitie­s unhappy with Yadav are the tribal people and Bengalis, who were supporters of Sarkar, who claimed he lived simply and stayed in a rented accommodat­ion, paying ₹600, despite being an MLA for four terms.

In Purnea, people remember the late CPI(M) leader as a messiah of the poor. “Ajit Sarkar was like our mother and father. He found both food and shelter for us,” says Mundu Sen, a local, who was devastated when 107 bullets were pumped into Sarkar’s body.

In Beur jail, raids would take place in Pappu Yadav’s cell very frequently. In 2004, during a raid, a cell phone was found in his shoe, and more than 600 calls were made from that cell phone

FORMER IPS OFFICER

He has done a lot of work for the people of Purnea and they consider him a messiah of the poor

ANITA RANJAN

Sister of Pappu Yadav

 ?? AMIT BHELARI ?? Crowd-puller: Supporters greet Pappu Yadav after he filed his nomination papers to contest the Lok Sabha election from the Purnea seat as an Independen­t candidate on April 4.
AMIT BHELARI Crowd-puller: Supporters greet Pappu Yadav after he filed his nomination papers to contest the Lok Sabha election from the Purnea seat as an Independen­t candidate on April 4.
 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Pappu Yadav coming out of Beur Central Jail, Patna, in 2004. He went on to win the Lok Sabha election from Madhepura that year.
FILE PHOTO Pappu Yadav coming out of Beur Central Jail, Patna, in 2004. He went on to win the Lok Sabha election from Madhepura that year.
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