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Written By Unknown on Senin, 16 Februari 2015 | 07.20
In pics: Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
01
Aam Aadmi Party convener Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday took oath as the eighth chief minister of Delhi, promising to make Delhi the first corruption-free state in five years. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
02
Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) president Arvind Kejriwal (R), with fellow AAP minister Manish Sisodia, address supporters. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
03
Supporters of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) watch leader Arvind Kejriwal being sworn in as Delhi chief minister by Delhi Lieutenant Governor Najeeb. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
04
Lieutenant governor Najeeb Jung administered the oath of office and secrecy to Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia and five other ministers at the historic Ramlila Ground here, exactly an year after Kejriwal quit after a short 49-days regime. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
05
Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) president Arvind Kejriwal (2R) and fellow AAP ministers Asim Ahmed Khan (L), Satyendra Jain (2L) and Manish Sisodia greet supporters. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
06
The AAP had won 67 of the 70 seats in Delhi decimating Congress and leaving only three seats for the BJP. (TOI photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
07
Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal alongwith Manish Sisodia leave his residence in Kaushambi to take oath at Ramlila Maidan on Saturday. (TOI photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
Rahul wanted a Kejriwal-type campaign: Digvijaya
Does the rise of AAP spell the death knell of the Congress, now reduced to zero seats in Delhi? Some party leaders have been lately speaking out about the rot within. Now senior leader Digvijaya Singh tells Sagarika Ghose that Rahul Gandhi's attempts to change the Congress are being blocked by the party 'establishment'
The rise of the Aam Aadmi Party is bad news for Congress. Many say AAP is the new Congress.
Aam Aadmi Party is a political movement by activists who were first promoted by the RSS. Then they went into politics. Even today they will never criticise the BJP for its policies. They are only talking of corruption. Corruption is an issue in society and government and in every political party. Every party is fighting its own battle against it. But if you ask Kejriwal what is your political ideology, they say we are against corruption. Who isn't?
But aren't they targeting the Congress vote?
They have to deliver. The Congress has to keep its left-of-centre, socialist, secular ideology strong when it competes with the regional parties of Lalu, Mulayam, JD(U) and AAP. I had warned Delhi Congress leaders that Kejriwal is targeting your core group, the slums, weaker sections, and you have to be careful. They were thinking he would damage the BJP more than Congress. That was a wrong assumption.
So AAP is a fundamental threat to you?
It has to be seen how they perform and where they spend their resources. They could be a challenge to both BJP and Congress. I will be very happy if Kejriwal delivers on his promises. First he has to identify himself. What are the thrust areas of his development schemes? Whom does he represent in his governance? That will become obvious in the next one year.
But aren't they a fresher secular alternative?
I have a hunch that AAP is an overall part of the Congress-mukt-Bharat scheme of the RSS. I've believed this since 2010. We have to pin him down. Does Kejriwal believe in the 'Hindu rashtra'? Why does he not speak on conversions? Does he believe in socio-economic programmes for uplift of minorities? Why did he not visit the places where communal riots took place in Delhi? Has he ever spoken against the communal mindset of BJP? Give me one statement where he has spoken against conversions, 'Hindu rashtra' or taken an ideological line against RSS. All activists who leave AAP join BJP, not Congress. Because that's where their ideological moorings are.
But AAP says it does not want to fall into the secular blackmail trap of the Congress.
It's not a trap, it's a commitment. Congress has never compromised with communal Hindus or communal Muslims. We were fighting Hindu Mahasabha and RSS on one side and the Muslim League on the other. We would like to know from Arvind Kejriwal whether he believes in communal harmony. Will he protect minorities from persecution? Will he stand up when churches are being burnt? Why only speak against corruption? What are his replies to Anna Hazare's charges about funds collected through IAC? Why is he quiet on that? Unfortunately, the Congress has not been able to defend and define what we mean by secularism. That is a problem. Post 2014, we lost the war of perception. We could not communicate and counter the aggressive propaganda of the BJP and its communal allies.
Should Rahul learn from Kejriwal?
You will be surprised to know that Rahul Gandhi did want to run a Kejriwal-type campaign. Open the party up, allow people to come in, put a greater emphasis on mass contact, but unfortunately he was not allowed to give a new direction by the establishment. But he has to come forward, become Congress president, campaign aggressively throughout, not just at election time. He has to be seen more, heard more. Why should people vote for Congress and Rahul Gandhi if they don't know what he stands for? He must be on Twitter and Facebook; social media is a reality you can't ignore.
So, there's a clash between the old and the young in the Congress?
People call me his mentor and adviser but Rahul doesn't need anyone. He is politically conscious and has a political mind, but since his mother has not been well, he does not want to impose his will on her because it will bring him into confrontation with her. But we have to change, we must change. Rahul is prepared to change, but maybe others are not.
Is the Congress getting squeezed with Modi taking away the middle-class Hindus and Kejriwal the lower-income vote?
Yes.Whenever there's an option of a third secular formation, that is a challenge. A coalition of the poor or a secular front is a challenge for us. We do have to re-set; every party has to press the re-set button periodically. It has been a failure of the Congress that we have not been able to build up regional leaderships.
As for Modi, his greatest strength is that he is doing the packaging and event management for all the schemes started by UPA. Inclusive banking was started by us, spelt out in Dr Manmohan Singh's 2011-2012 speeches. Modi has only renamed it Jan Dhan Yojana, claiming 11 crore accounts have been opened, but these accounts have always been there. Swachh Bharat is nothing but UPA's Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan. In fact the budget still provides for it as Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan.
So the future for the Congress is … ?
We have to aggressively market ourselves as what we are — a left-of-centre, secular, socialist party. That's the future of the Congress, that's been the political space of the Congress from the very beginning. We cannot renege on that because if we do we will lose our identity. The rightwing space does not belong to us. And we must make attempts to build regional leaderships.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.
Law of averages may dampen dream clash
For many, India-Pakistan is the ultimate dream final; so when they faceoff in their opening matches itself, right at the start of the World Cup, it offers a delicate irony.
Victory will still be savoured, yes, but it will not be as sweet.
Of course, every Indian is already treating Sunday's encounter at the Adelaide Oval as a cakewalk: the team has never lost to Pakistan on this platform and they don't expect the script to unfold in a different way in the rarefied climes of down under.
True, India barely had to bat their eyelids in any of the five Cup games, beating them across four continents; the same veneer of invincibility, however, brings in an altogether different dimension to the contest: the law of averages.
Any statistician will confirm that you can't keep winning against the same opponent, especially if there isn't much to distinguish between the two teams: after all, both have always had the depth and desire to even become the best in the world at some point or the other.Indeed, their battles in other formats and other events have been much more evenly balanced, with Pakistan actually enjoying a healthy edge at 72-45; it can be argued that India have been lucky in the World Cup as they enjoyed first mover's advantage on four occasions.
Yes, they won the toss on as many as four occasions and got the opportunity to set up the target; that ensured that Pakistan were always in the boiling cauldron called pressure, and they just wilted each time as the heat got to them.On the one occasion that they batted first and even amassed a daunting 273, they ran into an emotionally charged Indian team; Sachin Tendulkar himself was in a zone and it didn't matter that Shoaib Akhtar was breathing fire and raw pace.
The law of averages will certainly loom over the two captains; but in this context, it probably descends into a different dimension and that might well have an overwhelming effect on the game itself, if not the result: the two teams have never looked so ordinary or average.India have traditionally been the stronger batting side and, on paper, they still look formidable; the truth, however, is that as a group, they have been woefully out of form and, last heard, are still uncomfortable on bouncy pitches.
Pakistan, on the other hand, have always been sharper with the ball: but for this edition, they have been hit by injuries and Mohammad Irfan is the only real threat. Leg-spinner Yasir Shah may prove to be the joker in the pack, especially as he is an unknown weapon.
Of course, the lesser forces India's bowlers or Pakistan's batsmen might still have the last laugh; that is probably the only way this game will be commensurate with the passion and intensity that it generates among the two nations.
Maybe, it will yet be a dream game.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.
World Press Photo: 18 award-winning images
A photograph showing an intimate moment between a young gay couple in St Petersburg has won the top prize at the World Press Photo of the Year competition.
- This photo by Mads Nissen shows Jonathan Jacques Louis, 21, and Alexander Semyonov, 25, a gay couple during an intimate moment in St. Petersburg, Russia. (AP Photo/Mads Nissen, Scanpix/Panos Pictures)
Other winning photographs highlighted animal cruelty in China and the Ebola crisis in west Africa. The winners were selected from more than 90,000 images submitted to the contest.
- This photo shows,'when spores of the fungus land on an ant, they penetrate its exoskeleton and enter its brain, compelling the host to leave its normal habitat on the forest floor and scale a nearby tree. Filled to bursting with fungus, the dying ant fastens itself to a leaf or another surface. Fungal stalks burst from the ant's husk and rain spores onto ants below to begin the process again' in Manaus, Brazil. (AP Photo/Anand Varma, National Geographic Magazine)
- In this photo, Laurinda is waiting in her purple dress for the bus that will take her to Sunday School, Moree, New South Wales, Australia. She is among the many socially isolated young women in disadvantaged communities in Australia facing entrenched poverty, racism, trans-generational trauma, violence, addiction, and a range of other barriers to health and well-being. (AP Photo/Raphaela Rosella, Oculi)
In this photo, twin brothers Igor and Arthur hand out chocolates to their classmates to celebrate their ninth birthday in an orphanage in Baroncea, Moldova. (AP Photo/Asa Sjostrom, Moment Agency/INSTITUTE for Socionomen/ UNICEF)
This photo shows a kitchen table after a mortar attack in downtown Donetsk, Ukraine. (AP Photo/Sergei Ilnitsky, European Pressphoto Agency)
This photo shows a 19-year-old Chinese worker, wearing a face mask and a Santa hat, standing next to Christmas decorations being dried in a factory, as red powder used for coloring hovers in the air, in China on June 12, 2014. (AP Photo/Ronghui Chen, City Express)
This photo shows Odell Beckham of the New York Giants making a one-handed touchdown catch in the second quarter against the Dallas Cowboys at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA. (AP Photo/Al Bello, Getty Images)
This photo shows a cadet at the Royal Military Academy in Breda, Netherlands. (AP Photo/Al Bello, Getty Images)
This photo shows students seen in a schoolyard in El Dorado County, California. (AP Photo/Tomas van Houtryve/VII for Harper's Magazine)
This photo shows a group of young Samburu warriors encounter a rhino for the first time in their lives in Lewa Downs, Northern Kenya. Most people in Kenya never get the opportunity to see the wildlife that exists literally in their own backyard. (AP Photo/Ami Vitale/National Geographic )
This photo shows a photo of Julia Baird in a series named: Family Love 1993-2014 – The Julie Project. For 21 years Darcy Padilla photographed Julie Baird and her family's complex story of poverty, AIDS, drugs, multiple homes, relationships, births, deaths, loss and reunion. (AP Photo/Darcy Padilla/Agence Vu )
This photo shows medical staff at the Hastings Ebola Treatment Center escort a man in the throes of Ebola-induced delirium back into the isolation ward from which he escaped in Hastings, Sierra Leone on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014. (AP Photo/Pete Muller/Prime for National Geographic/The Washington Post)
This photo shows an Orthodox priest blessing the protesters on a barricade in Kiev, Ukraine. (AP Photo/Jerome Sessini, France, Magnum Photos for De Standaard)
This photo shows school uniforms belonging to three of the nearly 300 girls kidnapped from a remote school dormitory in Northern Nigeria by Boko Haram, an Islamic terrorist group on April 14, 2014. (AP Photo/Glenna Gordon)
This photo shows a young girl pictured after she was wounded during clashes between riot-police and protesters after the funeral of Berkin Elvan, a 15-year-old boy who died from injuries suffered during last year's anti-government protests, in Istanbul, Turkey. (AP Photo/Bulent Kilic, AFP)
This photo shows a monkey being trained for the circus cowering as its trainer approaches. (AP Photo/Yongzhi Chu)
This photo shows shipwrecked people are rescued, aboard a boat 20 miles north of Libya, by a frigate of the Italian navy on June 7, 2014. After hundreds of men, women and children had drowned in 2013 off the coast of Sicily and Malta, the Italian government put its navy to work under a campaign called "Mare Nostrum" rescuing refugees at sea. (AP Photo/Massimo Sestini)
This photo shows Argentina player Lionel Messi looking at the World Cup trophy during the final celebrations at Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on July 14, 2014. Argentina were defeated by Germany in the final. (AP Photo/Bao Tailiang, Chengdu Economic Daily)
View the entire collection of winning images from the 57th World Press Photo Contest here.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.
In pics: Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
Written By Unknown on Minggu, 15 Februari 2015 | 07.20
01
Aam Aadmi Party convener Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday took oath as the eighth chief minister of Delhi, promising to make Delhi the first corruption-free state in five years. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
02
Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) president Arvind Kejriwal (R), with fellow AAP minister Manish Sisodia, address supporters. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
03
Supporters of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) watch leader Arvind Kejriwal being sworn in as Delhi chief minister by Delhi Lieutenant Governor Najeeb. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
04
Lieutenant governor Najeeb Jung administered the oath of office and secrecy to Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia and five other ministers at the historic Ramlila Ground here, exactly an year after Kejriwal quit after a short 49-days regime. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
05
Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) president Arvind Kejriwal (2R) and fellow AAP ministers Asim Ahmed Khan (L), Satyendra Jain (2L) and Manish Sisodia greet supporters. (AFP photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
06
The AAP had won 67 of the 70 seats in Delhi decimating Congress and leaving only three seats for the BJP. (TOI photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
07
Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal alongwith Manish Sisodia leave his residence in Kaushambi to take oath at Ramlila Maidan on Saturday. (TOI photo)
Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
Law of averages may dampen dream clash
For many, India-Pakistan is the ultimate dream final; so when they faceoff in their opening matches itself, right at the start of the World Cup, it offers a delicate irony.
Victory will still be savoured, yes, but it will not be as sweet.
Of course, every Indian is already treating Sunday's encounter at the Adelaide Oval as a cakewalk: the team has never lost to Pakistan on this platform and they don't expect the script to unfold in a different way in the rarefied climes of down under.
True, India barely had to bat their eyelids in any of the five Cup games, beating them across four continents; the same veneer of invincibility, however, brings in an altogether different dimension to the contest: the law of averages.
Any statistician will confirm that you can't keep winning against the same opponent, especially if there isn't much to distinguish between the two teams: after all, both have always had the depth and desire to even become the best in the world at some point or the other.Indeed, their battles in other formats and other events have been much more evenly balanced, with Pakistan actually enjoying a healthy edge at 72-45; it can be argued that India have been lucky in the World Cup as they enjoyed first mover's advantage on four occasions.
Yes, they won the toss on as many as four occasions and got the opportunity to set up the target; that ensured that Pakistan were always in the boiling cauldron called pressure, and they just wilted each time as the heat got to them.On the one occasion that they batted first and even amassed a daunting 273, they ran into an emotionally charged Indian team; Sachin Tendulkar himself was in a zone and it didn't matter that Shoaib Akhtar was breathing fire and raw pace.
The law of averages will certainly loom over the two captains; but in this context, it probably descends into a different dimension and that might well have an overwhelming effect on the game itself, if not the result: the two teams have never looked so ordinary or average.India have traditionally been the stronger batting side and, on paper, they still look formidable; the truth, however, is that as a group, they have been woefully out of form and, last heard, are still uncomfortable on bouncy pitches.
Pakistan, on the other hand, have always been sharper with the ball: but for this edition, they have been hit by injuries and Mohammad Irfan is the only real threat. Leg-spinner Yasir Shah may prove to be the joker in the pack, especially as he is an unknown weapon.
Of course, the lesser forces India's bowlers or Pakistan's batsmen might still have the last laugh; that is probably the only way this game will be commensurate with the passion and intensity that it generates among the two nations.
Maybe, it will yet be a dream game.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.
Live: Arvind Kejriwal to take oath as Delhi CM today
Arvind Kejriwal urges traders to pay full tax, assures security
Wish Indian Team wins the World Cup: Arvind Kejriwal
AAP supporters at Ramlila Maidan (TOI Photo courtesy Jayashree Nandi)
AAP supporters at Ramlila Maidan (TOI Photo courtesy Jayashree Nandi)
I respect Kiran Bedi and Ajay Maken: Kejriwal
Kejriwal rakes up attacks on churches in Delhi
AAP govt's first cabinet meet that was to be held today stands rescheduled for Monday: Times Now
Wish him all the best and all support to him in his efforts: Ajay Maken
Gul Panag and Bhagwant Mann at Ramlila Maidan (TOI Photo courtesy Jayashree Nandi)
I want to end VIP culture in Delhi, says CM Kejriwal
Arvind Kejriwal's very own auto-driver is thrilled to see AAP ka CM being sworn in at Ramlila Maidan.
Delhi will become India's first corruption-less state: CM Kejriwal
The verdict which we got is 'miracle of God': Arvind Kejriwal
Watch: Kejriwal singing 'Insaan ka insaan se ho bhaichara'
Arvind Kejriwal takes charge as the CM of Delhi
Delhi cabinet ministers arrive at Delhi secretariat
Kejriwal takes charge as Delhi CM.
Munna Prajapati, a rickshaw driver from Patel Nagar, played this thaali like a dafli on result day. It is now badly bashed in. He painted over it, and made a memento out of it. ( TOI Photo courtesy Kim Arora)
Firdaus Fatima, a tailor from Babarpur, made 2000 AAP caps during the election campaign. She also made some AAP flags. She earlier made Congress flags. But now all her 5 kids are AAP volunteers. ( TOI Photo courtesy Kim Arora)
People have started moving out of Ramlila Maidan.
Kejriwal reaches Delhi secretariat, takes charge of CM office.
Kejriwal ends his speech with cry of "Vande Mataram".
Grateful to people of Delhi for record mandate: Gul Panag
Kejriwal sings: 'Insaan ka insaan se ho bhaichara".
Kejriwal's cabinet ministers take oath
Kejriwal had sung the same song in his last swearing-in ceremony too.
Kejriwal asks people to sing along with him the song: "Insaan ka Insaan se ho bhaichara, Yehi Paigam Hamara."
I hope Indian team win the Cricket World Cup and make us proud: CM Kejriwal
I respect Kiran Bedi, she is like my elder sister. She has good experience in administration, i need her advice. I will cooperate with Ajay Maken too. I will involve everyone to make Delhi an ideal state, CM Kejriwal says.
Nobody likes the VIP culture, we have to get rid of it: CM Kejriwal
BJP had promised to grant full statehood to Delhi. Before the elections, they had promised this to the people of Delhi. It's not possible for the Centre to take care of every important issues related with governance of the state, so I hope the Centre will fullfill their promise: CM Kejriwal.
Tens of thousands packed the sprawling Ramlila Maidan where AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal took oath on Saturday as Delhi's chief minister for a second time in 14 months.
I want cooperation and good relations with Centre: CM Kejriwal
In recent days, we witnessed several communal incidents in Delhi. We witnessed burning of churches. I want to warn the elements who are responsible for these incidents. I want to make Delhi where people of every religion feel safe, says CM Kejriwal.
I can see arrogance in reports that AAP will fight elections in other states: Arvind Kejriwal
Lokpal Bill is very important, it needs to be passed as soon as possible: CM Kejriwal
Delhi will become India's first corruption-less state: CM Kejriwal
Some people might try to malign us by impersonating AAP workers. I want to tell the law and order machinery to not spare anyone who indulges in unlawful activities, says Delhi's CM Arvind Kejriwal
I will work for the service of Delhi's people for five years with my full dedication: CM Kejriwal
We have to make sure that we don't get carried away and become arrogant: CM Kejriwal
The verdict which we got is 'miracle of God': Arvind Kejriwal
People of all religions, castes, classes voted for us, says CM Kejriwal
I knew people of Delhi love me, but didn't know they love me so much, CM Arvind Kejriwal says.
Now, CM Kejriwal is addressing the gathering. He starts with "Bharat Mata ki Jai".
The oath-taking ceremony is over.
Arvind Kejriwal takes oath as chief minister of Delhi
Jitender Singh Tomar takes oath as cabinet minister in Delhi assembly
Gopal Rai takes oath as cabinet minister in Delhi assembly
Satyender Jain takes oath as cabinet minister in Delhi assembly
Sandeep Kumar takes oath as cabinet minister in Delhi assembly
Asim Ahmed Khan takes oath as cabinet minister in Delhi assembly
Delhi's lieutenant governor Najeeb Jung administers oath to Manish Sisodia as Delhi's minister
Arvind Kejriwal takes oath as Delhi's chief minister
Delhi's lieutenant governor Najeeb Jung arrives at Ramlila Maidan
Arvind Kejriwal arrives at Ramlila Maidan
Arvind Kejriwal along with his cabinet
Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia walk into Ramlila Maidan
AAP leader Yogendra Yadav is swarmed by party supporters
Arvind Kejriwal arrives at Ramlila Maidan
Arvind Kejriwal with Manish Sisodia and Kumar Vishwas at the ITO bridge
Arvind Kejriwal is travelling in a car to reach Ramlila Maidan for his oath-taking ceremony. Last time, he used Delhi Metro.
Crowd swells at Ramlila Maidan ( TOI Photo courtesy Kim Arora)
Arvind Kejriwal heads to Ramlila Maidan for swearing-in ceremony
Arvind Kejriwal leaves for swearing-in ceremony at Ramlila Maidan
Kejriwal's family leaves for Ramlila Maidan
All roads lead to Ramlila Maidan
AAP leaders reach Arvind Kejriwal's house
Javed Jaffrey leaves for swearing-in ceremony
Arvind Kejriwal's wife and other family members leave for Ramlila Maidan
Inside Ramlila Maidan
A historic day, am certain that Arvind & his team will serve the people well, fulfill all promises : Rahul Mehra
1 lakh people expected at Kejriwal's swearing in at Ramlila Maidan
Inside Arvind Kejriwal's residence.(Photo: ANI/Twitter)
1,200 police personnel at the Ramlila Maidan
Kejriwal to visit Rajghat after swearing in
Senior AAP leaders gather at Arvind Kejriwal's residence
Kumar Vishwas, Ashish Khetan meet Arvind Kejriwal at his residence
It is important day for Swaraj,extend my good wishes to Arvind Kejriwal and the entire cabinet : Kumar Vishwas
Man dressed as a peacock, seen at Ramlila
'AAP' branded soft drinks being distributed at Ramlila Maidan
Exactly 1 year after quitting over the Janlokpal issue, Arvind Kejriwal to take oath at Ramlila Ground as 8th CM of Delhi.
I'm very happy.There's a change coming: Javed Jaffrey
Central Delhi is expected to be choked on Saturday afternoon as roads leading to Ramlila Maidan will be shut ahead of the oath taking ceremony. Traffic police have asked commuters to avoid roads around the grounds as visitors and parked vehicles will result in heavy congestion.
This will be the second swearing-in ceremony of the Arvind Kejriwal-led AAP govt
Ramlila Maidan all set to host AAP govt's swearing in
Preparations in full swing at Ramlila Maidan for Arvind Kejriwal's swearing-in ceremony
Will take forward the campaign of good intention: Gopal Rai
Rahul wanted a Kejriwal-type campaign: Digvijaya
Does the rise of AAP spell the death knell of the Congress, now reduced to zero seats in Delhi? Some party leaders have been lately speaking out about the rot within. Now senior leader Digvijaya Singh tells Sagarika Ghose that Rahul Gandhi's attempts to change the Congress are being blocked by the party 'establishment'
The rise of the Aam Aadmi Party is bad news for Congress. Many say AAP is the new Congress.
Aam Aadmi Party is a political movement by activists who were first promoted by the RSS. Then they went into politics. Even today they will never criticise the BJP for its policies. They are only talking of corruption. Corruption is an issue in society and government and in every political party. Every party is fighting its own battle against it. But if you ask Kejriwal what is your political ideology, they say we are against corruption. Who isn't?
But aren't they targeting the Congress vote?
They have to deliver. The Congress has to keep its left-of-centre, socialist, secular ideology strong when it competes with the regional parties of Lalu, Mulayam, JD(U) and AAP. I had warned Delhi Congress leaders that Kejriwal is targeting your core group, the slums, weaker sections, and you have to be careful. They were thinking he would damage the BJP more than Congress. That was a wrong assumption.
So AAP is a fundamental threat to you?
It has to be seen how they perform and where they spend their resources. They could be a challenge to both BJP and Congress. I will be very happy if Kejriwal delivers on his promises. First he has to identify himself. What are the thrust areas of his development schemes? Whom does he represent in his governance? That will become obvious in the next one year.
But aren't they a fresher secular alternative?
I have a hunch that AAP is an overall part of the Congress-mukt-Bharat scheme of the RSS. I've believed this since 2010. We have to pin him down. Does Kejriwal believe in the 'Hindu rashtra'? Why does he not speak on conversions? Does he believe in socio-economic programmes for uplift of minorities? Why did he not visit the places where communal riots took place in Delhi? Has he ever spoken against the communal mindset of BJP? Give me one statement where he has spoken against conversions, 'Hindu rashtra' or taken an ideological line against RSS. All activists who leave AAP join BJP, not Congress. Because that's where their ideological moorings are.
But AAP says it does not want to fall into the secular blackmail trap of the Congress.
It's not a trap, it's a commitment. Congress has never compromised with communal Hindus or communal Muslims. We were fighting Hindu Mahasabha and RSS on one side and the Muslim League on the other. We would like to know from Arvind Kejriwal whether he believes in communal harmony. Will he protect minorities from persecution? Will he stand up when churches are being burnt? Why only speak against corruption? What are his replies to Anna Hazare's charges about funds collected through IAC? Why is he quiet on that? Unfortunately, the Congress has not been able to defend and define what we mean by secularism. That is a problem. Post 2014, we lost the war of perception. We could not communicate and counter the aggressive propaganda of the BJP and its communal allies.
Should Rahul learn from Kejriwal?
You will be surprised to know that Rahul Gandhi did want to run a Kejriwal-type campaign. Open the party up, allow people to come in, put a greater emphasis on mass contact, but unfortunately he was not allowed to give a new direction by the establishment. But he has to come forward, become Congress president, campaign aggressively throughout, not just at election time. He has to be seen more, heard more. Why should people vote for Congress and Rahul Gandhi if they don't know what he stands for? He must be on Twitter and Facebook; social media is a reality you can't ignore.
So, there's a clash between the old and the young in the Congress?
People call me his mentor and adviser but Rahul doesn't need anyone. He is politically conscious and has a political mind, but since his mother has not been well, he does not want to impose his will on her because it will bring him into confrontation with her. But we have to change, we must change. Rahul is prepared to change, but maybe others are not.
Is the Congress getting squeezed with Modi taking away the middle-class Hindus and Kejriwal the lower-income vote?
Yes.Whenever there's an option of a third secular formation, that is a challenge. A coalition of the poor or a secular front is a challenge for us. We do have to re-set; every party has to press the re-set button periodically. It has been a failure of the Congress that we have not been able to build up regional leaderships.
As for Modi, his greatest strength is that he is doing the packaging and event management for all the schemes started by UPA. Inclusive banking was started by us, spelt out in Dr Manmohan Singh's 2011-2012 speeches. Modi has only renamed it Jan Dhan Yojana, claiming 11 crore accounts have been opened, but these accounts have always been there. Swachh Bharat is nothing but UPA's Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan. In fact the budget still provides for it as Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan.
So the future for the Congress is … ?
We have to aggressively market ourselves as what we are — a left-of-centre, secular, socialist party. That's the future of the Congress, that's been the political space of the Congress from the very beginning. We cannot renege on that because if we do we will lose our identity. The rightwing space does not belong to us. And we must make attempts to build regional leaderships.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.
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