No politics between the wickets in Tamar
Vijay Deo Jha Ranchi Saturday, December 27, 2008
Candidates and leaders contesting and canvassing for Tamar by-election may genuinely use body line campaign against their contenders to win the game.
”This is cricket not election where you suppose to flabbergast the batsman with bodyline bowling”. Amid the screams of “how's that” matched with equal number of people from opposite team howling it as 'foul'; warning is clearly heard during a local cricket tournament at Salgadih where 35-year-old Raghu Patar, the umpire of the match warns the pace battery, named as Bhola. “No politics between the wickets.”
Whereas people and politicians in Tamar are in a twisting brain game to speculate about the winability of the candidate, a good number of youngsters have a busy time organising a small-time 'Sunil Mahto Cricket Tournament.' Nearly 10 teams across the villages of Tamar have been participating. The match is interesting, but spirit is quite friendly.
"We organise such matches every year in the month of December and manage the finance on our own…this time we decided to rechristen it after the name of late Sunil Mahto," said Sudhir, the organiser.
In a stark contrast to the extensive electioneering of the party and candidates in Tamar that still gathers little crowd and clapping by the motley crowd that thronged this sprawling ground is generous to encourage the players on their every fine play. "We are from a nearby village and have come to encourage our team… it is good to watch cricket," said Vinod Ram, a graduate hailing from village Haramlohar.
Since most of the schools are closed for winter vacations and no examinations at hand, youngsters turn out in large numbers to see the tournament. With every four and six, cheer kids would raise cheer slogans and a bunch of clueless sheep grazing nearby would lift its head in astonishment what the whole fuss was about.
While the by-election is at a sniffing distance such cricket matches, teams and players are on the political radar of the candidates as their prospective electoral fodder. The boundary of the ground was dotted with party flags that indicated the political interest of the party to bring them in their catchments area. This is apart from those youths who are paid Rs 500 per day to fill fuel tanks of their motorcycles.
"How many politicians and candidates have approached you for vote so far?” Not very much forthcoming about this, the commentator Dinesh Mahto, who peeps down from the makeshift bamboo platform saying: "So many leaders have come and assured to support us with money and promised to give award to the man of match."
The organisers have announced to give 1000 rupees to the wining team and five hundred to the second winner. But after much prodding a member of the organising committee said: "They promised to give money and other things after the declaration of the result."
But fine bargaining is on. They passed resolution to vote for the candidate who supplies them with cricket kits. Better, intelligent candidates rush to such grounds to tap their voters, as it is a cricket season - apart and unaffected by bodyline campaign.
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