Oman Daily Observer

Parrikar takes charge in Goa for 4th time; SC declines to interfere

FLOOR TEST: Supreme Court directed the new govt to prove its majority on Thursday

-

PANAJI/NEW DELHI: BJP leader Manohar Parrikar, who quit as the Defence Minister a day earlier, was sworn in as Goa Chief Minister for the fourth time on Tuesday. The Supreme Court directed his new government to prove its majority via a floor test in the state assembly on Thursday.

The Congress has accused Goa Governor Mridula Sinha of acting unilateral­ly and inviting the Bharatiya Janata Party to form a government in Goa, without even meeting the 17 elected leaders of the Congress, which has emerged the largest party in the 40-member assembly after the state elections.

The Goa Governor administer­ed the oath of office to Parrikar at Raj Bhavan on Tuesday evening.

While Parrikar and his ninemember cabinet were being sworn-in, hundreds of people protested near Raj Bhavan, accusing the newly appointed chief minister and the leader of Goa Forward of trying to subvert the electoral mandate and using unfair means to come to power in the coastal state.

Speaking to reporters after being sworn-in, Parrikar said the support garnered by the Bharatiya Janata Party was for the developmen­t of Goa.

“If there was support, then why did you (Congress) not go to the Governor? The support extended to BJP to form government is only for Goa’s developmen­t,” Parrikar told reporters after the swearingin ceremony. The four-time Chief Minister also said the Congress could not stake claim to form government because “no MLA wanted to support the Congress”.

Parrikar’s cabinet includes two ministers from the BJP, namely Francis D’Souza and Pandurang Madkaikar, three from regional party Goa Forward — namely Vijai Sardesai, Vinod Palienkar and Jayesh Salgaonkar, and two from another, older regional party Maharashtr­awadi Gomantak Party — Sudin Dhavalikar and Manohar Azgaonkar.

Two Independen­t legislator­s Govind Gawde and Rohan Khaunte who joined the BJP coalition bandwagon on Sunday also were rewarded with berths.

The third Independen­t MLA Prasad Gaonkar also joined the BJP coalition on Monday and tendered his letter of support to the Governor.

The 13-member BJP legislatur­e party — the second largest after the Congress’s 17 — has been supported by three MLAs each from the Goa Forward and MGP and three Independen­t MLAs, taking the majority headcount to 22.

Earlier on Tuesday, hectic political developmen­ts played out in Goa as well as the national capital, where the Supreme Court, which was hearing a petition filed by the Congress challengin­g the Governor’s invitation to the BJP to form government, directed Parrikar to prove his majority on the floor of the Goa assembly by Thursday.

Governor Sinha while inviting Parrikar on Sunday to form the government had directed him to prove his majority in the assembly within 15 days from being sworn-in.

The apex court on the Congress petition, however, refused to interfere with the Governor’s decision to appoint Parrikar as the Chief Minister.

Before the Supreme Court hearing, the Congress camp met at the state party headquarte­rs, from where its 17 newly-elected legislator­s, in presence of Congress General Secretary Digvijaya Singh, were ferried to Raj Bhavan in a bus.

After meeting Sinha, state Congress President and Navelim MLA Luizinho Faleiro said the party had requested her that the Congress should be allowed to form a government as the single largest party with 17 MLAs as against the BJP’s 13.

In the evening, when Parrikar and his cabinet were being sworn in several hundred civil society members protested with black flags around Raj Bhavan, claiming both the BJP and Sardesai had hijacked the people’s mandate.

Sardesai’s Goa Forward had led an anti-BJP campaign in the run-up the February 4 elections, accusing the party of destroying Goa and corruption.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Devotees take part in “Huranga”, a game played between men and women a day after Holi, at Dauji Temple near the northern city of Mathura on Tuesday.
— Reuters Devotees take part in “Huranga”, a game played between men and women a day after Holi, at Dauji Temple near the northern city of Mathura on Tuesday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman