Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Balmuchu’s extension runs in crisis
VIJAY DEO JHA
RANCHI
State Congress in crisis is everyday’s story unceasingly told and written. But the crisis this time is more confounded with state party unit developing a dangerous fault-line over community issue following the decision of Central Congress leadership to continue Pradeep Balmuchu as state president for another one year. The announcement made on Friday angered scores of party leaders who privately told that Balmuchu belonging to a particular religious community was the only merit that helped him to continue on this post.
It is despite majority of state leaders and workers, in the past, rose to rebellion against his style of functioning with countless numbers of petitions sent to the central leadership pointing his failed leadership in the past six years.
“It is not because we failed to convince central leadership. Delhi is aware of the way Balmuchu messed the party, electorally and organizationally. It is a very motivated kind of decision that is not going to motivate the party,” a senior party leader angrily said. Sources in the party confided that Balmuchu has the support of powerful Christian lobby in Ranchi and Delhi. Name AICC general secretary, Oscar Fernandes; they will quickly refer you quite popular buzz in the party, “Oscar kaa haath Bablmuchu ke saath, (Oscar who hands protects Balmuchu),” to refer the kind of support Balmuchu has been enjoying.
“We had met Oscar sahib last time to apprise him about the condition the party has faced during the tenure of Balmuchu. He had promised us a change in a week…a new president for state unit he had assured. We were fooled. We feel cheated,” a senior Muslim leader of the party said.
A miffed display of displeasure may not wait for a long to turn into an open rebellion as another prominent Muslim leader cautioned. “We are assembling on November 15 during co-ordination committee meeting in Ranchi. We will not remain silent. We will lodge our protest. Private and sectarian interest have been given precedence over composite nature of the Congress,” the leader said. Though, top Muslim faces of the party —former Godda MP Furkan Ansari, former Pakur MLA Alamgir Alam and Gandey MLA Sarfaraz Ahmed—tactically remained silent but they are believed to be representing disgruntled group.
Disgruntled leaders said that the continuation of Balmuchu will further alienate Muslims and Saran tribals from the party.
“The state party had authorized national president Sonia Gandhi to take a decision over appointment of state president. I can’t comment over the merit of the decision,” Alam said. Nevertheless, Central Congress leadership snubbed the controversy saying that state president post is not a kind of permanent kind of thing and Balmuchu has given extension for a year, no more. So was a party leader supposed to be close to Balmuchu who said that the central leadership took the decision to end any confusion among the party workers at a time when the schedules of the Mandu assembly by-election has been announced.
Some of the party insiders questioned the very rationale. “Central leadership many times promised to change him during and after parliamentary and assembly elections. Nothing happened,” one said. Balmuchu finally resigned after Jamshedpur debacle and the central leadership remained tightlipped to relieve him finally. In a badly divided state Congress, central leadership, probably, faced the problem in choosing a president one who could be acceptable to all. For time being it decided to keep Balmuchu and let controversy goes on.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Sunday, 23 October 2011 00:37
Vijay Deo Jha Ranchi
A grand welcome show has often been a tantalising political prospect for a leader but not in the case of BJP veteran Lal Krishna Advani who disliked the huge motorcycle rally the party arranged to escort him from Birsa Munda Airport to Morhabadi Ground on Friday for Jan Chetna Rally. Advani already late on schedule hardly spoke for 15 minutes, even less, during the rally. Even after, the State BJP could have managed another 20 minutes for him to speak provided it would not have messed up his journey from Birsa Munda Airport to Morahabadi Ground in the motorcycle rally."We would have spared another 20 minutes more for Advaniji to speak. In fact precious 45 minutes were wasted from the airport to the rally ground as his cavalcade was sandwiched in a huge motorcycle rally," a senior party functionary said.Advani coming from Kolkata to Ranchi by air was already late on his schedule against the pre-announced programme of 11.30 am. He reached the rally ground around 12.45 pm, started his speech at 12.52 pm and ended it at 1.05 pm. Advani also sought apology for his brief stay here in Ranchi saying that he was scheduled to address another rally in Nicobar for which he needed to move fast as we would not be permitted land after 3.30 pm as per the rule of the airport authority of Nicobar airport.Party insiders said that the idea of a grand welcome of Advani by escorting him to the rally point by motorcycle rally was the part of the plan of to offer him an impressive show of support. "But once he arrived late the plan should have been dropped. In fact his cavalcade was caught in a traffic chaos created by motorcycle-borne party workers who were deputed welcome Advaniji," source said.One of the leaders, who was part of the team deputed to escort Advani to the rally ground, admitted that Advani in hurry to reach the ground even expressed concern that such a huge show might cause delay to him.As per the schedule, the State leadership had planned around 45 minutes for Advani's speech. Ravishankar Prasad and Anant Kumar, one out of two Central leaders accompanying him were also scheduled to address the rally besides Chief Minister Arjun Munda and State BJP president Dineshananda Goswami. Munda had to finished his speech in less than two minutes. Goswami got no time even for a customary welcome speech. In terms of arrangement the rally was a marked improvement on the two previous rallies of Advani in Ranchi. What dismayed State BJP and workers was the point that they got less time to hear the senior leader.
VIJAY DEO JHA RANCHI
BJP veteran LK Advani and old-timers of the Jana Sangh in Jharkhand will share some nostalgic moments on October 21, when the former will felicitate them as part of his Jan Chetna Yatra.
A special status invitation has been sent to them and a gallery prepared at the venue of the rally, Mohrabadi Ground, only for them.
Gumla district and the adjoining areas, which remain a Jana Sangh stronghold, are expected to cart the maximum number of Jana Sangh ‘old boys’. For instance, 95-year-old Ganpatlal Sahu of Gumla, former associate of BJP patriarch Atal Bihari Vajpayee, is expected to arrive. During 1967, Vajpayee, Vijayraje Scindia and others used to stay at his residence during party programmes.
Haricharan Goyal (85) and Mohan Oraon (80) are two such faces who were associated with Advani during the Jana Sangh days.
For Oraon, it will be an occasion to refresh his association with Advani from the time he had campaigned for Oraon, who was contesting as a Jana Sangh candidate from Gumla. Including Girija Prasad Sharma and Sukra Oraon, Gumla has a fairly long list of old Advani associates. Channu Ram Rajak (85) has now lost both his legs as a result of an accident and doesn’t see too well.
But he was an active member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and closely associated with some senior leaders of the Jana Sangh.
The list from Palamu includes Shyamnarayan Dubey, a well-known name in the team of Vajpayee and Advani during their south Bihar visit.
Dubey, along with Ramjilal Singhaniya (70) and Ramvilas Ram of Chhatarpur, was among the dedicated workers who took part in the JP movement. “The date of the rally coincides with foundation of Jana Sangh. All of them have contributed to formation and development of the Jana Sangh and the BJP as a credible political alternative,” said State party secretary Anant Ojha.
“Around five of them will be directly felicitated by Advaniji for their contribution. But he (Advani) will meet of all of them after the rally,” Ojha added. Party district units are searching for such old and forgotten faces, checking fact files and archives, to bring them to Ranchi.
Om Prakash Goyal, member of State BJP Working Committee said, “Most of them are in their 70s and even beyond…they are no more in active politics. We are trying to reach to them. Resourceless they were, but they had the resource to public support and commitment to a cause which drove him to work for the Jana Sangh. Honouring them is a small gesture for their big contribution.”
According to a rough estimate, 500 people associated with Jana Sangh from all over Jharkhand will be felicitated. “But the number could be much lower,” said a party leader.
“Not more than five to 10 old-timers are expected to attend from each district. Most of them are old, frail and ill. Some of them have expressed their inability,” he added.
The party has decided to put young party workers on duty to ferry them from their districts to Ranchi comfortably. “They are special to us and we have made special arrangements fore their visit,” said State BJP president Dineshananda Goswami.
jharkhand's jana Sangh old boys to meet Advani
Thursday, 20 October 2011 00:59
VIJAY DEO JHA RANCHI
BJP veteran LK Advani and old-timers of the Jana Sangh in Jharkhand will share some nostalgic moments on October 21, when the former will felicitate them as part of his Jan Chetna Yatra.
A special status invitation has been sent to them and a gallery prepared at the venue of the rally, Mohrabadi Ground, only for them.
Gumla district and the adjoining areas, which remain a Jana Sangh stronghold, are expected to cart the maximum number of Jana Sangh ‘old boys’. For instance, 95-year-old Ganpatlal Sahu of Gumla, former associate of BJP patriarch Atal Bihari Vajpayee, is expected to arrive. During 1967, Vajpayee, Vijayraje Scindia and others used to stay at his residence during party programmes.
Haricharan Goyal (85) and Mohan Oraon (80) are two such faces who were associated with Advani during the Jana Sangh days.
For Oraon, it will be an occasion to refresh his association with Advani from the time he had campaigned for Oraon, who was contesting as a Jana Sangh candidate from Gumla. Including Girija Prasad Sharma and Sukra Oraon, Gumla has a fairly long list of old Advani associates. Channu Ram Rajak (85) has now lost both his legs as a result of an accident and doesn’t see too well.
But he was an active member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and closely associated with some senior leaders of the Jana Sangh.
The list from Palamu includes Shyamnarayan Dubey, a well-known name in the team of Vajpayee and Advani during their south Bihar visit.
Dubey, along with Ramjilal Singhaniya (70) and Ramvilas Ram of Chhatarpur, was among the dedicated workers who took part in the JP movement. “The date of the rally coincides with foundation of Jana Sangh. All of them have contributed to formation and development of the Jana Sangh and the BJP as a credible political alternative,” said State party secretary Anant Ojha.
“Around five of them will be directly felicitated by Advaniji for their contribution. But he (Advani) will meet of all of them after the rally,” Ojha added. Party district units are searching for such old and forgotten faces, checking fact files and archives, to bring them to Ranchi.
Om Prakash Goyal, member of State BJP Working Committee said, “Most of them are in their 70s and even beyond…they are no more in active politics. We are trying to reach to them. Resourceless they were, but they had the resource to public support and commitment to a cause which drove him to work for the Jana Sangh. Honouring them is a small gesture for their big contribution.”
According to a rough estimate, 500 people associated with Jana Sangh from all over Jharkhand will be felicitated. “But the number could be much lower,” said a party leader.
“Not more than five to 10 old-timers are expected to attend from each district. Most of them are old, frail and ill. Some of them have expressed their inability,” he added.
The party has decided to put young party workers on duty to ferry them from their districts to Ranchi comfortably. “They are special to us and we have made special arrangements fore their visit,” said State BJP president Dineshananda Goswami
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Wednesday, 05 October 2011 01:25
VIJAY DEO JHA RANCHI
“There is a request for deploying two more choppers in Ranchi. We will have a total of six helicopters in these operations,” head of Indian Air Force Air Chief Marshal NAK Browne was quoted by news agencies.
The forces have two Dhruva helicopters donated by the BSF to back up their operations.
It is for the first time that the IAF will provide choppers to the State Government. “We had made a request for choppers. These will be made available to us following maintenance work. We have already pushed back the Maoists. The IAF choppers will give us a decisive edge,” State DGP GS Rath said.
The Centre has denied reports that the new choppers will be used exclusively to airlift and drop jawans from the operation area and will not be directly involved in the offensive. It is yet to be known whether or not these will be fitted with light machineguns since the IAF had asked the Centre to allow for retaliatory action in case its helicopters are attacked by the Maoists. “The Centre will take a call (on the matter),” said Rath.
The decision to provide more choppers to Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal and other States in the Maoist corridor was taken last year by the Central Government during a crucial meeting with top officials. The Centre had promised to provide as many as 23 choppers to these States.
Giving priority to Jharkhand over other States such as Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal that demanded a unified command to coordinate such operations, the Centre chose it for the unified command last year.
Aware of the shortage of the IAF choppers since a good number of these were deployed in the UNO mission in Congo, the Centre also mulled the proposal to hire them from private players and initially made a provision for 13 choppers to ferry troops and supplies to Maoist zones under operation, reducing the figure to six later on.
The twin-engine bullet-proof Mi-17iv choppers can carry up to 25 persons including the crew. It can fly and make sorties in the dark, giving the forces an edge in evacuation and rescue
Friday, September 23, 2011
Parties slam Plan panel’s BPL status report
- THURSDAY, 22 SEPTEMBER 2011
- | RANCHI
But the States like Jharkhand having shocking statistics of poverty, the political class has strongly opposed the very redefining of the BPL. The Congress chose a close guard language to seek a review while the BJP painted the Congress- led UPA Government as anti-people and anti-poor.
“Report and its recommendations are yet to be accepted by the Central Government. It is not final we have been told by the Central leadership. So there is no cause of concern,” State Congress spokesperson Sailesh Sinha said. Wary about the Congress getting anti-poor tag everyday Sinha accepted the criteria set by the Commission was illogical.
Former Finance Minister and BJP MP Yahswant Sinha termed it a fine act to blur the line between poor and peer. “The Government is removing poverty in the papers by changing its definition. It has become obvious now that the Government considers poor as a liability and doesn’t want to spare resources for their upliftment,” he said.
He refused to believe Congress and the Government confused over the BPL issue. “The Government has always refused to accept actual figure of the BPL families in the country even if after the reports of various commissions appointed by the Government,” he said.
The Left Front has too joined the chorus. MLA Vinod Singh of the CPI (ML) and Arup Chatterjee of the Marxist Coordination Committee registered their strong opposition. “Well, policymakers should be given `32 per day as sustenance cost and than ask them their experience of hardship. Only then they will know poor and their pain,” Chatterjee said.
JVM Chief and MP Babulal Marandi deployed three adjectives ‘cruel’, ‘casual’, and ‘sad’, to thrash the Centre and the Commission. “It would have been good on the part of the Government to take some radical steps to end poverty but not by this way. People are getting alienated and they are one who to face the burnt of price hike. Pittance has been pressed into the whole discourse to redefine poverty three times less than minimum wage,” he said.
JMM, AJSU control bid over boards/corps gains steam
Vijay Deo Jha
Pressure politics of disgruntled JMM and AJSU MLAs to secure boards/corporations in Jharkhand is gaining ground since the State Government is reported to have asked various departments to furnish details of boards/corporations where the posts of chairpersons are lying vacant.
There are around 40 board/corporations out of which around 36 are waiting for the appointment of a chairperson. The exercise has taken place after the disgruntled MLAs formed a solid coalition to push their interest. Just a week before the Monsoon Session of the Assembly in August, these MLAs had set a deadline before their respective party chiefs to settle the matter without delay and even met Chief Minister Arjun Munda in this regard.
Sources in the Government confided that departmental secretaries have been asked to submit details of the board/corporation for the likely appointment of chairpersons. But the group has now come up with a fresh demand to replace existing chairpersons of the remaining boards and corporations.
“What is the logic behind keeping a person as a chairperson for a decade, why Government appointed an IAS as the chairperson of the State Pollution Control Board,” JMM MLA Sita Soren asked.
Keeping a person for a decade, lady Soren did not refer Jharkhand Khadi board chairperson Jainandu, but she meant so. Janinadu is the man who has charisma on his side to keep bosses of political parties and Chief Ministers in good humour, an essential maneuvering mantra that kept him at the helm of affairs despite change of Governments.
But the coalition partners are trembling with the trouble in deciding shares in the board/corporation, especially plum one. For instance both JMM and the BJP are eying for State Pollution Control Board, Jharkhand State Mineral Development Corporation Limited, Adityapur Industrial Area Development Authority and others.
The AJSU is also keen for Pollution Control besides State Housing Board. There is at least seven to eight such boards/corporations like Mineral Area Development Authority, Ranchi Industrial Area Development Authority, Jharkhand State Mineral Development Corporation, Jharkhand State Agriculture Marketing Board, State Housing Board, Jharkhand Hill Area Lift Irrigation Corporation, Tenughat Vidyut Nigam Ltd etc which are in the wish-list of every party.
The problem does not end with a convincing and agreeing sharing formula that is under discussion right now. Last time when similar voices were raised the Government had appointed JMM MLA Seshank Sekhar Bhokta and BJP MLA Barkuwar Gagarai to find the number of board/corporations. But the swelling number of competing clamour in the JMM forced the party chief Shibu Soren to shelve the matter for the time being. “Every MLA of the JMM wanted board and corporation as compensation for not getting ministerial berth… everybody wanted plum board… and beside them there is a long queue of party leaders who persuaded for their rehabilitation. It was not easy. Soren took an easy way to defer it,” a senior party MLA said.
Like the JMM, the AJSU is also humming with dissonance. Nevertheless, the aspirants in the BJP including its MLAs have not gone overboard in the JMM and AJSU fashion but party insiders sounded enough caution on this count.
“The party does not consist only of MLAs. There are competent and dedicated people who have served the party whom you cannot ignore.” The only difference is it is an open rebellion in the JMM and AJSU while it is a controlled epidemic in the BJP,” he said.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Two crore to sign in favour of special status for Jharkhand
The State BJP has reiterated its outstanding demand for the special status for Jharkhand. The party will launch a signature campaign from September 25. About two crore signatures would be collected from across the State which would later be sent to the Central Government.
Chief Minister Arjun Munda, who has been raising this issue at every opportune occasion, would be the first signatory. “It will not be a token protest or humble submission. The protest will gather momentum in the towns and villages of Jharkhand which are the worst victim of the Centre’s apathy,” Munda told The Pioneer.
Powered by the active support of the party rank and file, about two crore signatures would be appended to the petition addressing the Central Government.
“We will target around two crore people out of the 3.31 crore population of Jharkhand for their signatures and active involvement,” State BJP president Dineshananda Goswami said. “We will meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh with the petition,” Goswami added.
The demand for special status is new. Munda may even appear to follow in Bihar’s Chief Minister Nitish Kumar footsteps who had launched a similar signature campaign a few months back to pressure the Centre.
Noted economist Prof. Ramesh Sharan said that the demand for ‘special status’ for Jharkhand has a solid basis and a history.
“In the days of undivided Bihar, the Jharkhand Autonomous Council was constituted to address the underdevelopment in this area with special economic assistance. There was demand to declare the areas falling under JAC as a Union Territory, which could not happen leading to the creation of Jharkhand as a separate State in 2000. But in terms of development, it has remained underdeveloped in all spheres, thus presenting a strong case for its special status,” he said.
Special status to Jharkhand won’t come easily and the Munda establishment is aware of this fact, experts, however, said. Munda has placed this demand before the Centre and special status for Jharkhand has become a political issue.
“I am merely echoing the public voice that will ring across New Delhi. The Centre will have to pay heed to our demand. We are like a colony of the Centre that exhausts our mineral resources to develop the rest of India,” Munda said.
“As many as 10,500 villages of Jharkhand are extremely backward. We get less royalty on minerals and resources. We own mines and minerals but are forced to beg before the Centre for our own requirements,” he added.
Prof. Sharan, meanwhile, argued in favour of a special package for Jharkhand State.
“If the rest of India is shining, it is due to States like Jharkhand that supplies minerals and other resources. These States are, however, destined to remain undeveloped and face the brunt of displacement and deprivation. Jharkhand receives less allocation from the Finance Commission only because of its higher per capita income while one half of its population lives below poverty line. But nobody bothers to know if the per capita income information is fallacious. Poverty should be the criteria for allocation and Jharkhand at least deserves special package for another 10 years before its socio-economic development gets off the ground,” he said.
The rules for granting special category status - that brings a slew of economic and tax-related relief measures for the States- lie clearly defined by the Planning Commission forming part of the guidelines of the National Development Council. They are usually States with hilly and/or inaccessible terrain, low population density or a sizeable tribal population, strategic location or sharing international borders, economic and infrastructural backwardness and non-viable nature of finances. Eleven States enjoy special status and these include Assam, Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and the North-Eastern States.
Sunday, August 21, 2011

Two minutes of silence for Sonia!
VIJAY DEO JHA
RANCHI
Congress Rajya Sabha MP Dhiraj Sahu exhausted his quota of common sense in sheer excess of loyalty towards the Nehru-Gandhi family and observed a ‘two-minute of silence’ for the speedy recovery of the Congress President Sonia Gandhi.
Sahu used a public occasion, the foundation laying ceremony of a school at Simaria in Chatra, to display his loyalty towards Madam, a day back. On his call hundreds of his faithful bowed their head in silence with frustrating freeze on their tongue. But many kept wondering, questioning and whispering about his baffling act.
A local Congress leader part of that silence session intelligently lifted a part of the quote Mani Shankar Aiyar about the ‘Congress party like a circus and every party member has to join’, to narrate the incident.
“As though we were the animals of the circus company and he was the ring master he suddenly asked all of us to observe silence and we had no time to correct him. He refused to realise the mistake even when he was told about this later on,” the leader said.
It was too late for the liquor baron Sahu to realise that a two-minute silence is meant to mourn the death not to wish longevity of a person who has not died. “My intention was not bad. It was a prayer meeting for the speedy recovery of Soniaji. She is our party chief and guardian too,” he defended later on. None in the Congress came to defend him; Sahu too withdrew in silence after the episode. But his adversaries have ensured that the party general secretary Rahul Gandhi must be briefed about this with added pepper and spice.
“It is a serious matter not the prank and frolic of a baby to laugh. He is an MP after all. He thinks that such acts will give him the access to the 10 Janpath Road. Dukhad hai dukhad hai,” said one of the party seniors. Sahu is not the only State Congress leaders who have funnily attempted to get direct access to the Congress chief and Rahul Gandhi and to catch their attention. “Most of us make regular visit to Delhi and mostly return without getting an audience of the party chief over Jharkhand. We laze and roam there,” confided a former party MLA. Back to Jharkhand they claim having met Madam.
The tradition of flattery of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty is not new in Jharkhand. Rahul Gandhi is referred with honorific title Yuvraj (prince) and Yuva Hridaya Samrat officially. Since there is no prescribed limit of the degree of loyalty they go overboard often creating controversy. Some Congress workers led by Ajay Rai had celebrated the victory of Italy in 2006 in FIFA ‘World Football’ by hoisting Italian flag not out of sportsman spirit but Sonia being the native of Italy. The matter was patched-up.
But Sahu’s faux-pas cautioned many in the state Congress who wanted to rewrite their insipid CV of their loyalty towards the party and its chief. So why the fax machines of media houses are least troubled these days by their press release seeking speedy recovery of Sonia Gandhi. “Initially I too wished to issue a press release but dropped the idea since only few statements have been issued by important leaders of the Opposition and the Congress. Let not hype it,” a senior party office bearer said. State Congress President Pradeep Balmuchu has announced to organise Mahamritunjaya to seek the blessing of divine for her good health. A Sarv Dharm Prathana Sabha was held on Monday for Sonia and her health. Thanks heaven it remained a prayer meeting not a point to prove loyalty.
State to share river mining revenue with panchayats
Malay/Vijay Deo Jha | Ranchi
It was a small step but one seen as a landmark one that will go a long way in empowering panchayat bodies. The State Government has decided that panchayat bodies will be a major stake holder in the auctioning of the work of quarrying of sand from the river beds of Jharkhand.
As per the proposal agreed upon, mining of sand will be decided by an open tender involving the panchayat body. The significant part of the proposal is that the panchayat body will have a major share of the money generated out of the tender at 80 per cent. The remaining 20 per cent will go into the State coffers.
Close on the heels of this decision, panchayat bodies of two districts Godda and Dhanbad have been provided with sums of Rs four and five crore, respectively, against the bandobasti of sand quarrying.
The Government took this step after various rounds of consultations with different bodies. The proposal is very much on the lines of the Panchayat Act which says that the local body should have the right over minor mineral resources including water.
This is the second such move of the State Government in the last two months and it will allow the local body a major say in critical issues. Barely two months ago, Jharkhand Chief Minister Arjun Munda placed a bar on the industrial houses from direct purchase of land for establishment of industry. He made it amply clear that the consent of the local body should be taken and the local people taken into confidence before acquiring land for industry.
The Government has said the step will be one of the biggest sources of finance for the panchayat body. Government sources said the panchayat body could be given preference in sand quarrying if it so wishes.
"This is an innovative project from the Government's side and is a win-win situation for such panchayat bodies as well," Secretary Mines AK Sarkar said.
The system is working effectively in other BJP-ruled States such as Chhattisgarh where the panchayat body has been vested with rights to manage minor mineral resources. Even if the move has been described as "innovative", it follows the Central Government guideline issued to State Governments asking them to empower local bodies to put an end to complaints of alienation among the tribal populace. Last year, the Central Government had accepted the right of the locals and tribals over minor forest products and even directed the State Governments to withdraw minor cases of theft of forest products against them. Governor K Sankaranarayanan had ordered the withdrawal of 11,000 such cases in Jharkhand.
Involving the panchayat as share holder in the sandbank may upset stakeholders who have been controlling this unorganised yet profit-making business. Hemant, holding the charge of the Department of Mines and Minerals, said: "No doubt, it is going to end the tussle between sand miners and the people of the area who are the natural stake holders. Additionally, it will prove to be a source of revenue for the respective panchayat bodies."
But this step will not benefit all panchayats of Jharkhand. "It's quite natural since a river cannot be forced to flow through every panchayat," Sarkar said. But then it is a minor step that will usher in major change, he added.
Oppn to corner Govt despite curtailed Monsoon session
August 13, 2011 11:34:07 PM
VIJAY DEO JHA | Ranchi
Even if the nine-day long Monsoon session of the Assembly gets reduced to five working days due to intermittent holidays the Opposition will make best use of the time to grill the Arjun Munda Government.
The Opposition's strategy will be revealed only after the joint meeting of the united Opposition on July 18 but a section of the Congress MLAs can even propose to boycott the session.
“The Government does not want to face the Opposition over public issues so why it deliberately chose short duration of the session. I am of the view that the Opposition should boycott the session if the Government does not accept a month-long Monsoon session,” Congress MLA KN Tripathy said.
And Tripathy is even going to place this proposal during the meeting as he said: “Many of my party colleagues have a similar opinion that the Opposition should boycott the session since the five working days are of no use.” His proposal may face flank of the JVM since the party is mulling some bigger assaults on the Government and placing no-confidence motion against the Government could be one of these.
“Some of the MLAs of the coalition Government are speaking in a pattern that echoes their distrust against the Government. They had open spat during the Jamshedpur by-election. The JMM chief has already made his displeasure known towards the Government for ignoring the minorities. The people would like to know whether the Government enjoys support of the majority," leader of JVM legislative body Pradeep Yadav said.
Yadav clearly stated what he meant: “We can even bring a no-confidence motion against the Government.” Both Tripathy and Yadav favoured extreme steps but even the milder one will be enough to smother the Government on various issues.
The House will boom with Opposition's noise over poor results of the Class XII affecting thousands of the students of the State who became the victim of JAC's inapt handling and subsequent failure of the HRD Minister and the Government to find a solution.
“It is top on our agenda since it involves the future of the students. The Government has the tendency to avoid a problem even if the public anger boils,” CMI (ML) legislator Vinod Singh said. On the issue of anti-encroachment drive also Chief Minister Arjun Munda and the Deputy Chief Minister Hemant Soren will have to face angry show of the Opposition. “Our strategy will revolve around eviction of the poor in the name of anti-encroachment drive and the failure of the Government to resettle them. I know what this Government is going to parry this issue by issuing a nonsense statement but that will not work,” leader of RJD legislative body Annapurna Devi said.
Hemant will have to face most of the lethal attacks of the Opposition since his Urban Development Department is a key to the anti-encroachment drive and rehabilitation policy. Left with less time the department is working overtime to give final shape to the rehabilitation policy likely to be tabled before the House. But confusion and chaos continues over some of the key issues
Gandhi cap no more a Cong trademark
Gandhi cap no more a Cong trademark
August 21, 2011 12:07:19 AM
VIJAY DEO JHA
Good news has stopped flowing for the Congress in the wake of the Anna Hazare movement and the bad news is that the party has seemingly lost property rights as exclusive user of the Gandhi cap as its trademark.
The surge of men, women and children with white cap on their head to support Anna all over the country from Delhi’s pulsating vista India Gate to numerous hinterlands of the country is a clear indication of this. But dare not to look at the sale record of the Gandhi caps which is nothing but a topi boom that has boomeranged on the Congress.
Jharkhand is not far behind in selling Gandhi cap, which some call Anna cap too. The Khadi Board of Jamshedpur has witnessed a sudden surge in the sale of cap after its establishment in 1995. “We have sold about 200 caps in three days meeting the gap between demand and supply. We store 500 caps, but have asked our production unit to be prepared to supply more. It is not only the politicians and social workers, but majority of the customers are students, businessmen, teachers, retired persons etc”, said Bhibuti Rai, manager, khadi retail outlet in Bistupur. He went on to inform that the sale after August 15 especially picked off due to the campaign led by Anna.
“Gandhi cap,” the civil society activist Vishnu Rajgadhiya observes, “is on more deserving heads, those who are fighting for democracy rather than those who have made daily business to disdain and doubt Anna and his campaign.”
Back to Ranchi it is topi industry in making. “Sir we are more in a topi industry than selling usual khadi stuff. Everybody wants a Gandhi cap to join some procession to support Anna. Gandhi caps were never in demand except for few occasions. If people are returning to this cap to join protest it is an indicator of a big change lurking before the nation,” an employee of khadi retail shop in Ranchi observed.
“All it comes with a little cost `25 to `40 no more, and you get right gear on your head before to announce Mai Bhi Anna (Me Anna too).” Pandit Prakash and Bipul Vikash, the two brothers who have recently passed their Class XII and their sister Preeti Kumari, proudly display their caps; nevertheless, they have little idea about this popular campaign. Asked whether they know anything about the cause for which Anna stands for: Probably very little. But that does not bother these brothers to join the campaign with others.
Senior citizen Gaffar Khan, a tailor, of the Main Road has two sets of concerns before him. He is wary about the success of the Anna Hazare-led movement for that he makes daily prayer, but, equally worried since he has to supply around 200 Gandhi caps in the coming four days. His sewing machines are making lot of noise to stitch odd pieces of white cloth to make a cap. “Arey gol nahi tikona banao kabhi Nehruji ka topi pahne foto nahi dekha kya, bewakoof aadmi log, (Keep it triangular doesn’t make it round. Idiot and unskilled people haven’t you even seen Nehruji in Gandhi cap),” he chides his staff. He could be yet another tailor earning his bread and butter but making cap is something different. He could have told you if bobbin had not run out of thread.
But few veterans and old time leaders left in the State Congress understand the loss that the party has suffered. “You could be distinguished either as Gandhian or a Congress worker if you had placed this cap on your head.
Gandhi and his cap were the symbol of the Congress but today it has become a seething symbol of protest against the Congress. It is a big loss and nobody is realising it,” a veteran Congress leader lamented privately.
Back in 2008, the Congress had formally dropped Gandhi cap from its political wardrobe during the conclave of Congress Sewa Dal when cricket caps were distributed among the workers in New Delhi. Then Sewa Dal president Mahendra Joshi had said that the Gandhi cap would be used during special situation like disaster management where Congress workers are seen organising help.
The Congress today is facing a disaster of a different kind which is hard to manage at the drop of the hat. In between it has lost this cap at the hand of public.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
VIJAY DEO JHA
RANCHI
Things have long been bad for the JD (U) in Jharkhand but they have never been so bad as now. It has already lost precious counts of number in the Assembly to save face as a recognised political outfit in the tally of the Election Commission of India. It has of course a jilted state president, Jaleswar Mahto; who is more prone to promote factionalism to save his post rather to take some urgent steps to address organisational follies before the party gets more faceless in Jharkhand.
Factionalism has affected the party down the line: it has more leaders and less of the workers. Only last day two of the party seniors Bhagban Singh and Ramesh Singh acted like macho-man holding each others’ collar at a press conference rather to show maturity. It happened just a few days before when the party national president Sharad Yadav is on an urgent house keeping job in Jharkhand on July 26.
And before you begin to wonder whether Yadav will be able to discipline his unruly house in Jharkhand and energize his cadres; things that wonder party leaders the most, whether they can converge even a modest gathering of thousand workers for the conclave.
“I do not believe that we will be able to gather even a thousand workers to attend the party programme. Many have joined other parties, many have gone dormant and many others have lost interest because the party organisation was deliberately made defunct,” a party senior warily told.
The party in the past offered a poor score card of its presence through demonstrations, regular meetings and others. The Bihar Chief Minister, Nitish Kumar had famously announced an ambitious plan to expand electoral and organisational base of Jharkhand JD (U) on the line of Bihar. During last assembly election Nitish had deputed three of his trusted lieutenants Sharavan kumar, Bhim Singh and Ravindra Singh for electioneering and to diagnose the problem of the state unit. Nitish had peppered Jharkhand with many chopperstop visits, addressing a good number of high-voltage meetings. He was the spike-points of this campaign that bagged his party only two MLAs: Raja Peter and Sudha Chaudhary.
Nitish furiously dumped his plan soon after. Jharkhand was not his cup of tea, nevertheless state leaders regularly continues to pay him a visit for his benign look.
“People in Jharkhand rejected us because we could not perform up to their expectation. We were not competent. We delivered exceptionally well in Bihar against Jharkhand where delivered a dud. We need to address urgent and core issues,” Shravan Kumar told The Pioneer over telephone.
The core issue, many in the party think needed to be addressed on urgent basis; is the removal of Jaleswar Mahto who is facing flanks from all sides.
“Even Nitishji and Sharadji are not in the favour of retaining him. But they have different choices and difference about the selection,” a leader said who did not want his name to be quoted. Nitish wants a Kurmi face as state president. Sharad prefers a tribal leader to lead the party. Nitish is facing a predicament of peculiar kind. State JD (U) has no such Kurmi face to fit in his design. Nevertheless, the state JD (U) has one popular tribal face, Raja Peter who is not only young but also has considerable mass following. Many in the party accept Peter as the future face of the party. Peter is the minister of Disaster Management and Excise Department in the Arjun Munda led coalition government. “He is not only ministering his political fortune but the fortune of his party also. He has proved himself as a good administrator and has caliber and courage to expand the base of the party,” a leader of the state JD (U) executive committee said.
The burden to Nevertheless, party’s lone popular face and minister in Arjun Munda led BJP coalition government Raja Peter. But Mahto has known disparage against Peter to that extent where he used all tricks and excuses to stop Peter from becoming minister in the cabinet.
A bereft state headquarters of the JD (U) resounded with the severity of multifold crisis, leaders looked desperately for explanations they could not afford to air publicly. But they said enough to understand: “We hope his visit may not like yet another drops of passing rain that barely even seeds the ground, much less create a harvest.”
VIJAY DEO JHA
RANCHI
Amid ominous grunts of the coalition partner and his party over not so satisfactory performance of the government Chief Minister asserted his was a development oriented government and placed before the media ‘plans’ and ‘priorities’ of the government at a press conference, on Monday.
Munda hinted the government will bring three important bills related with corruption, service act and IT. The purpose of this press conference Munda said: “People have the fundamental right to know as to what the government is doing. The Ministers of the government will now hold regular press conferences to let the people know about government and governance. We want the social audit of the performance of the government.”
Claiming law and order situation in Jharkhand has improved Munda said that his government was keen to bring transparency, accountability and zero tolerance towards corruption.
“The purpose of bring a bill regarding IT is that, it will add transparency in the government works. We will form law to deal with corruption and the law related with service act so that people get right service at the right time,” he said. Though, Munda did not explain much about the nitty-gritty of proposed bills.
Munda veered around key words like ‘accountability’ ‘responsibility and communication gap’ just to add on to his muffled acceptance of the failure of his government to meet the expectation of the people. He did not make any pointed reference but his target group was the officials who had occupied the first row of the press conference. Even Munda during the press conference was repeatedly reminded and complained by the media about his unresponsive bureaucracy that acts as a roadblock to let the information related with development work to pass on to public domain.
Munda answered: “I have started this initiative to ensure our accountability and responsibility.” For the next two weeks; Munda has ensured his government as the rallying point of media attention since the government has planned a slue of press conferences of the ministers from July 25 to August 8.
Munda discussed the key sectors where the pace of infrastructural development has been accelerated. In the power sector we have drafted plans for 6000 MW of power generation by the next year. Jharkhand where the power generation capacity of its vintage and defunct power plants has never crossed 1000 MW limit, statistics of the State Energy Department were readily made available according to which the total power production of its total four units is 2520 MW
.
“We are upgrading power plants. We have plans to turn Jharkhand into a power hub. New transmission lines have been established. Now we are aiming around 1200 villages of Jharkhand which is bereft of electricity,” he said.
Munda informed that government has decided to grant 85 per cent subsidy for CFL project in Jharkhand involving elected local body for its execution. Munda said that his government was committed to involve local elected body in governance adding that his government was bound to bring the development to the last people.
A patient Munda asked patience till the time his long term projects come into shape. “It may take some time for the result to come. Roads, electricity, social security are the major thrust area of the government. We have involved noted economists who are working with us to draw plans for the integrated development of Jharkhand.”
Munda replied quite philosophically to some of the pointed poser at a time when the alliance partner in the government, the JMM is not so impressed with the government and governance. Munda shifted blames on the coalition compulsion without buying any direct confrontation.
“During election we too ask people for a complete majority. But then we are running a coalition government by forging some common grounds and political will. Development is not the responsibility of a government only…the Opposition, MLAs and people are too responsible. They should know it.”