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Showing posts with label Mayawati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mayawati. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Why BSP lost in Uttar Pradesh Election-2012

Vivek Kumar


Ms.Mayawati, Former UP Chief Minister

"Voters were against BSP, not for anybody"

This election is historical because, once again, upper castes have been kept out of power. This has been the trend in the state for the past two-and-a-half decades. Secondly, this election can also be seen as a backlash of upper castes against the consolidation of Dalit power in Uttar Pradesh. Dalit workers and a number of officials have told that upper castes were heard saying that, “anybody should win, but not the BSP; the Dalits have lost their sense and gone mad”. But the irony is that they did not have any political party led and dominated by upper castes to which they could vote. Hence, wherever they found that someone is defeating BSP, they voted for the SP, BJP and Congress respectively. This is why we have upper caste votes spread across the upper caste parties.

This election has broken the myth of Dalit-Brahmin and rainbow coalition victory of Mayawati in 2007 state elections in UP. Now it has become clear that that was a negative vote for BSP. The upper castes voted for the BSP just to save themselves from the violence of “goonda raj’ of SP. In this election also, one cannot rule out a clandestine give and take between BJP and SP.

Another fact which comes out of this election is that caste and communal cards were played to the hilt. The epitome of that reached when Sam Pitroda, a high profile technocrat, had to come and advertise that he belongs to a backward caste — Vishwakarma. Secondly, the BJP had to organise OBC and Dalit rallies. Backward Muslim reservation and Batla-like issues were also raked up in UP by the central ministers. The distribution of tickets also took place strictly on the basis of caste and religious lines. Two political parties on religious lines — Peace Party and the Ulema Council — spoiled BSP’s game.

Although people, pollsters and media persons have blamed BSP government for mis-governance and lack of development, facts and data suggests otherwise. If we really stick to four years and eight months of government in UP, the development indicators are at par with many developed states of India. The growth rate in 2007 when the BSP government began, the GDP was only 5.2%; now it is 7.6%. It has become a revenue surplus state. Food production has been highest in the country. Four universities and same number of medical colleges were built during this period of four years and eight months. NCERT’s report declared UP’s quality of education as being equal to Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra. There were more than two dozen welfare schemes.

However, the irony is that the BSP government, which avoids media, could not take all the aforesaid works to people. Government’s image was spoiled again and again by media reports on parks, NHRM and MNREGA scams. The party functionaries could not tell the general public that it is not all. Hence, BSP government got a bad name.

The caricaturing of Mayawati as the arrogant leader, who is not accessible to masses and her own leaders further angered the voters. Inspite of all the criticism, canards and controversy, BSP has not lost its ground. It still has around 28% of poll. This means it has not lost popularity. One has to congratulate Ms Mayawati for holding its party together amidst all round attack from every class, media and political parties. It is down, but definitely not out and will remain a force to reckon with for long. In this way we can argue that although change looks inevitable in UP, but qualitatively there is not going to be any change in UP politics. It will remain bipolar only with BSP and SP as two main contenders in the state. The state has also crystallised into split politics; voting differently at the state and national level.

But one thing is sure that UP politics has kept the two national political parties in the state at bay, telling them that they do not have any role. On the other hand it has been proved that public memory is very short. Just five years back, the very same population, which had rejected SP, has now chosen it with a thumping majority. SP has never gained so many seats in its history. Now, it is to be seen how the SP functions. People are really keeping their fingers crossed. The questions before them: Have they repeated their mistake by electing the SP? Or, has the SP changed itself totally?

The author is Visiting Associate Professor (Department of Sociology) at the University of Columbia, US

Hindustan Times
New Delhi, March 07, 2012

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Mayawati issues full-page Buddha Purnima ads in 150 dailies


Lucknow, May 17, (IANS):

On the occasion of Buddha Purnima on Tuesday, the Uttar Pradesh government has splashed in media Chief Minister Mayawati's achievements in developing Buddhist pilgrimage sites and propagating the message of Lord Buddha.

The Uttar Pradesh government has released a full-page advertisement, bearing the ruling Bahujan Samaj Party's characteristic blue hue, in 150 newspapers across the length and breadth of the country, detailing whatever Mayawati has done during her tenure to spread the message of Buddha.

“Uttar Pradesh: the cradle of Buddhism, A glimpse of  initiatives taken by Hon’ble Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Ms. Mayawati Ji, during the span of her regime so far to propagate the humanistic message of Tathagat Gautam Buddha and develop and beautify the ‘Buddhist circuit and other important Buddhist historical places in the state”, goes the headline with the advertisement, which is ostensibly meant to greet people on the occasion.

The message makes it a point to convey how Buddha had spent a major part of his life in  Uttar Pradesh and the list of schemes, programmes named after him by the present chief minister. Yet another column lists out the new districts and tourist spots created by Mayawati to commemorate Lord Buddha.

Buddha Purnima is one of the eight occasions when the Mayawati government released such advertisements in some 150 dailies across the country.

Besides this, almost similar advertisements about her government’s achievements are also issued on the same scale on Mayawati’s own birthday on Jan 15, BSP founder and her mentor Kanshi Ram’s birth anniversary on March 15, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar’s birth anniversary on April 14, Kanshi Ram’s death anniversary on Oct 9, Ambedkar’s death anniversary on Dec 6,  and on May 13 to mark the installation of Mayawati government on its own strength in 2007.

This eight-day blitzkrieg has cost the state exchequer about Rs.64 crore over the past four years. Nearly the same amount had also been spent on publicity through giant-sized  hoardings, with long details of her achievements.

http://www.deccanherald.com/content/162085/mayawati-issues-full-page-buddha.html

Friday, 13 May 2011

Anna Hazare is anti-Dalit, says CM Mayawati


Lucknow: Social activist Anna Hazare has laid bare his anti-Dalit mindset by not including even one member from the community on the anti-graft Lokpal Bill drafting committee, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati said on Friday.

Addressing a special function to mark the completion of four years of her government here, she said: "Just as the Congress-led central government displayed its anti-Dalit approach by not caring to include a Dalit in the Lokpal Bill draft committee, so did Anna Hazare, by not bothering to have a Dalit on his civil society panel, which reflects his anti-Dalit mindset."

According to her, "the exclusion of Dalits from the draft committee as a whole is a betrayal of the entire Dalit population of this country.”

The chief minister said "While I welcome the various anti-corruption movements across the country, I am intrigued about the intent behind Anna Hazare's move to use Uttar Pradesh as a launch pad for his movement.”

"Even though Anna Hazare belongs to Maharastra, where there is no dearth of scams, and likewise, there are scams in several other states too, yet he launched his anti-corruption campaign in UP, where not a single scam has taken place.”

She said "It appears that some people in Anna Hazare's civil society were politically motivated and they had chosen UP as a battleground for their campaign only under the influence of certain political groups.”

"No wonder, the much hyped anti-corruption campaign is fast getting reduced to an anti-Dalit exercise.”


http://daily.bhaskar.com/article/UP-anna-hazare-is-anti-dalit-says-cm-mayawati-2101403.html

Sunday, 8 May 2011

‘Will Brahmins share temple wealth with us?’

By Kancha Ilaiah
BSP has defended the inclusion of Brahmins in keeping with its larger vision of Sarva Samaj
MUMBAI: The Dalit movement today has diversified and assumed a political character. The proof of this lies in the emergence of an RPI, a DMK or a BSP. It is in this context that Mayawati has emerged as the new Dalit political icon.
There are two factors which catapulted Mayawati to an iconic status. First, she doesn’t subscribe to the average Hindu woman’s appearance. Maya, unlike her counterparts — a Sushma Swaraj or a Brinda Karat — is never seen in a sari or with a bindi. She sports short-hair, an image that Dalit women have come to love and admire. In short, she has come to symbolise the modern Ambedkarite woman.
Second, in a country where Dalits are not allowed to sit on chairs, Mayawati rules like a queen with Brahmins sitting by her feet every time she addresses a rally. In this sense, Mayawati has emerged the leader of Dalits and also of upper-castes to some extent. Though BSP members have defended the inclusion of Brahmins in keeping with their larger ideology of Sarva Samaj, the BSP-Bahujan coalition has been forged for vote-bank politics. Maya is vulnerable at this point as power does corrupt and that is why it is necessary for the media and her critics to watch her steps. A lot depends on her performance in the next five years and if the Brahmins want to be a part of this, there are certain issues that need to be addressed.
At one point, when Brahmins ruled this country as CMs and PMs, the Dalits were mere voters. Today, when there is the rise of the Dalit power in politics Brahmins want a share in it. If this is the case, an arrangement needs to be arrived at. Are Brahmins ready to give up their religious control, will Dalits be allowed to officiate in temples, will they share the Hindu gods with Dalit-Bahujans and are they ready to share the wealth generated from various temples (towards which Dalits also contribute) among the weaker sections?
Once these issues are addressed, Hinduism transforms from a spiritual fascism to a spiritual democratic religion. Brahmins will then earn the right to share the political platform.
As told to Lakshmy Ramanathan. Dr Kancha Ilaiah is the author of Why I am not a Hindu and the founder of the first Dalitbahujan journal, Nalupu. He teaches at the Osmania University, Hyderabad.

http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report_will-brahmins-share-temple-wealth-with-us_1137546

'For us, Ambedkar is father of the nation'

Pronoti Datta, TNN, Jul 12, 2009, 02.55am IST
In India there are probably as many holy cows as there are gods in the Hindu pantheon. Say a critical word against them and you're likely to be besieged by protesting hordes. At the top the totem pole are the Prophet, Shivaji, Bal Thackeray and B R Ambedkar. Given his famous aversion to hero worship, the Dalit leader would have gagged at being so memorialised. One wonders what his reaction would be if he toured Uttar Pradesh where statues of Mayawati's holy trinity-Kanshi Ram, Ambedkar and herself-grace public parks or took a stroll through Mumbai, which is scattered with statues and busts of him.
Ambedkar was well aware of the dangers of idolatry. In 1949, he warned the Constituent Assembly that hero worship is a straight path to decline and ultimately to dictatorship. But his cautionary advice seems to have been cast to the winds. Politicians erecting shrines of personal political heroes in every park and chowk is widely censured. However, in the case of Ambedkar, most academics and scholars of caste defend the desire of the ordinary Dalit to idolise him.

According to writer-professor Kancha Ilaiah, the Ambedkar statue is the only way for illiterate Dalits to know the statesman. "Their father of the nation is Ambedkar,'' he said. For Dalits, that one of their own acquired a foreign education and later became one of the architects of the Constitution was simply fantastic. "To create a statue was a claim that he could be counted among leaders such as Nehru and Gandhi,'' observed Gyan Prakash, who teaches history at Princeton University.
Ilaiah, who teaches politics at Osmania University, went so far as to reason that if statues of Rajiv Gandhi have been erected across the country at the expense of the state, how can one blame Mayawati for spending over Rs 2000 crores on commemorating Dalit icons?
For sociologist Meera Kosambi, statuary is a colonial inheritance that serves little purpose. However she said, "If statues are to be erected, then (Ambedkar) is to, my mind, somebody really worth commemorating.'' Kosambi pointed out that the desire to honour Ambedkar must be understood in the context of his "contribution to the mobilisation of Dalits and giving them a pride in themselves''. It's difficult for members of upper castes to fathom this level of devotion as they have never faced the sort of degradation Dalits have, she said.
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2009-07-12/mumbai/28199393_1_ambedkar-statue-dalit-icons-hero-worship

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

BSP terms Agnivesh's statement as anti-dalit

LUCKNOW: The Bahujan Samaj Party on Monday described Swami Agnivesh's statement on inclusion of a dalit member in the joint drafting committee of the Jan Lokpal Bill and corruption in Uttar Pradeshas anti-dalit and unfortunate. 

A party spokesperson quoting BSP supremo and chief minister Mayawati said that dalit iconBabasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar drafted the Indian Constitution. But, the civil society and the government did not give him an opportunity to draft the Jan Lokpal Bill. 

UP is the only state in the country, where a minister was removed after being found guilty in an inquiry conducted by the Lokayukt. Further, two ministers resigned taking moral responsibility of corruption in health department leading to murder of two chief medical officers. 

The reaction came after Swami Agnivesh, a member of the IAC and joint Jan Lokpal Bill drafting committee, on Sunday said that he welcomes chief minister Mayawati's suggestion about including a dalit member in the Jan Lokpal drafting committee. But, he want to ask her a question -- "Mayawatiji became chief minister of UP using dalit card, but can she vouch today with full honesty that she has been able to make UP a corruption free state? To my knowledge, corruption has been institutionalised in UP. If chief minister is serious about weeding out corruption, she should replace the present weak Lokayukta Act in UP with an independent and strong one."

Thursday, 28 April 2011

Dalit representative should be a Minister: Santosh Hegde


Bill drafting committeePosted: Sun Apr 24 2011, 16:17 hrsNew Delhi:
Amid Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati's demand for inclusion of a Dalit in the Lokpal Bill drafting committee, Justice Santosh Hegde said if someone from the community should be included in the panel, then it should be one of the Dalit ministers.
Hegde
"If at a Dalit is to be included in the panel, it should be one of the Dalit Ministers from the government," he told reporters here.
His comments came in the backdrop of Mayawati's demand for inclusion of a Dalit representative in the Lokpal drafting committee
Hegde, who is a member of the committee, had yesterday said, "if you have to have any caste-wise representation, then this committee can never be constituted."
Another panel member Arvind Kejriwal also said the government could replace one of the five ministers with a dalit representative.

Mayawati Answers to BJP Allegations


Mayawati Answers to BJP Allegations
Bahujan Samaj Party leader, Mayawati has requested that Dalits should be included in the Lokpal Bill committee. The demand was rejected by Bharatiya Janata Party leader Ravi Shankar Prasad who said that the BSP had a lot to answer to before making requests.
Shankar Prasad called the BSP government anti-Dalit because it has not made any major changes to Dalit welfare in Uttar Pradesh. Furthermore, he said that the state’s government failed to find the murderer of Health Official, B P Singh even 3 weeks after his death on April 2.
The BSP defended itself saying that it reduced crime against women in UP to 11.9% while Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh still reported figures as high as 13.9% and 22.3%, respectively. Mayawati said that her government had filled category posts that lay vacant in the state for years, recruited 20,000 Dalit-caste members as teachers as well as created over 100,000 new jobs for sweepers. Mayawati added that her party remained the only one that took swift action against members that were accused in criminal cases.
The BSP rejected all allegations according to which its government in UP was falling apart and told the BJP to monitor the performance of its own state governments more closely.

Saturday, 23 April 2011

Mayawati demands a Dalit in Lokpal panel

Lucknow/New Delhi, April 23 (ANI): The simmering row over the Lokpal Bill drafting committee turned into a political potboiler after Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati demanded the inclusion of a representative from the scheduled caste community in the panel on Friday. Addressing a news conference at Lucknow, Mayawati strongly lambasted the civil society and central government for their alleged 'bias' towards the scheduled castes, asking why they had not been given suitable representation. Meanwhile, briefing mediapersons in New Delhi, senior Congress leader Digvijay Singh candidly lent support to Mayawati, saying her demand was not unreasonable 


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