Wednesday, March 7, 2012

[ZESTCaste] Cong govt established Nodal agency for SC, ST community: Minister

 

http://www.siasat.com/english/news/cong-govt-established-nodal-agency-sc-st-community-minister

Cong govt established Nodal agency for SC, ST community: Minister
Friday, 2 March 2012

Hyderabad, March 02:

Countering the remarks made against the Congress government by TDP
legislator Rama Rao in the Andhra Pradesh Assembly today, Minister for
Animal Husbandry P Viswarupu said it was his government which had
established the Nodal Agency for SC, ST Community. Making a
clarification to the TDP member's remarks during the discussion on the
the demands for grants for 2012-13, he said the Congress government
was instrumental to enhance the monthly pension to physically
challenged persons from Rs 50 (during TDP's regime) to Rs 500 now.

The Minister said under the Indira Jala Prabha programme, irrigation
water was provided to ten lakh acres and advised the TDP MLA not to
confine to political speech. Mr Rama Rao said it was the late former
Chief Minister N T Rama Rao and the present TDP President N
Chandrababu Naidu who had introduced 33 per cent reservation to women
and his party had made Dalit leader G M C Balayogi as the Lok Sabha
Speaker.

He said banks were not giving loans to the SC and ST community and
they were also not getting any monetary concessions through SC, ST
corporations. Though the state government boasted that it had
introduced number of schemes to the poor, the onus lied on the
government that it ensure that the schemes were implemented
effectively.

To this, the Minister once again intervened and said it was the UPA
Chairperson Sonia Gandhi who had made Meira Kumar, a dalit leader, as
Lok Sabha Speaker. The party was always positive towards dalits and
hence Damodar Sanjiviah was made Chief Minister of the state in 1970,
Koneru Ranga Rao and Damodar Rajanarasimha as the Deputy Chief
Ministers. Congress legislator Shajahan Basha said the Congress
government had taken up the housing programme to construct 59.46 lakh
houses for the poor under Indiramma Housing scheme and so far 34 lakh
houses were completed. He said of those, as many as 17,659 houses were
allotted to Minorities and 8,039 houses had been completed so far.
Stating that the Congress government had taken up the housing
programme with clarity basis, Mr Basha said scholarships and tuition
fee reimbursement were provided by the state government to nearly 25
lakh students in the state. Deputy Speaker Mallu Batti Vikramarka
later adjourned the House to meet again tomorrow. UNI

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[ZESTCaste] Mayawati quits as Uttar Pradesh leader after poll loss

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-17283830

7 March 2012 Last updated at 08:58 GMT

Mayawati quits as Uttar Pradesh leader after poll loss

India's Dalit icon Mayawati has quit as the chief minister of Uttar
Pradesh state after her party's poor showing in crucial assembly
elections.

She said as the results did not favour her party, she had recommended
to the governor to dissolve the assembly.

In Delhi, Congress chief Sonia Gandhi vowed to "correct the mistakes"
that led to her party's dismal performance.

Congress had disappointing results in three other states, winning a
clear majority only in Manipur.

These polls are seen as a litmus test for national elections due by 2014.

The Samajwadi Party took 224 seats out of the 403 in Uttar Pradesh
legislative assembly, while Congress languished in the fourth slot
with 28. Ms Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party was a distant second with
80 seats.
'Cold storage'

On Wednesday, Ms Mayawati blamed all her political opponents - the
Congress party, Bharatiya Janata Party and Samajwadi Party - and
journalists for her loss.

"The new Samajwadi Party government will put all development and
welfare programmes in cold storage and take the state back several
years in time," she said.

"Very soon the voters will get disillusioned with the functioning
style of the Samajwadi government and remember our good governance,"
she added.
Continue reading the main story
FINAL RESULTS

Uttar Pradesh: Total seats: 403. Samajwadi Party 224; Bahujan
Samaj Party 80; BJP 47; Congress 28
Punjab: Total seats: 117. Akali Dal 56; BJP 12; Congress 46
Uttarakhand: Total seats 70. Congress: 32 BJP 31
Goa: Total seats: 40. BJP 21 Congress: 9
Manipur: Total seats: 60. Congress: 42. Others: 18

Ms Mayawati said she was confident her party would be voted back to
power in the next election.

In Delhi, Congress president Sonia Gandhi addressed a rare press
conference after meeting her party leaders.

"We will have to sit down and look at the situation and the results in
every single state and together work out a plan to correct the
mistakes we have made," she said.

Mrs Gandhi said the reasons behind the party's poor showing could be many.

"Our organisation is weak in Uttar Pradesh, our candidate choice was
one of the reasons, inflation could be another," she said.

Mrs Gandhi, however, said that the results would "not damage the
Congress party-led government" and it was premature to talk about
general elections as they were due only in 2014.

The Samajwadi Party's legislative board is meeting in Lucknow to elect
the new chief minister.

Mulayam Singh Yadav, the 72-year-old-leader of the party, is expected
to lead the government in the state.

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[ZESTCaste] Mayawati quits, warns against SP's hooliganism

 

http://www.assamtribune.com/scripts/detailsnew.asp?id=mar0712/at041

Mayawati quits, warns against SP's hooliganism

Lucknow, March 7 (IANS): Uttar Pradesh was likely to witness a wave
of hooliganism as the Samajwadi Party (SP) had been voted back to
power in the State, outgoing Chief Minister Mayawati said today
shortly after submitting her resignation.

In her first comments after her Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) was routed
in the State on Tuesday, Mayawati told reporters that the State would
now taste "SP culture" as had become evident in the last 24 hours.

Citing incidents of violence in Jhansi, Firozabad and Sambhal where SP
workers indulged in violence Tuesday, Maya said that very soon the
state would remember "her good governance" and repent the verdict that
they gave in favour of the SP.

Blaming the Congress and BJP of conniving to oust her from power and
get a SP government, she also accused the Congress-led United
Progressive Alliance (UPA) government of "harbouring a negative
mindset" against her and the State government. She also blamed the
media for "unnecessarily hyping irrelevant issues".

Asked whether scandals like the rural health scam had impacted on the
party, the outgoing Chief Minister answered in the negative and said
that knives would be out for the Congress, the Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) as well as the media when people faced the hooliganism of the SP
brass.

In Mayawati's view, Muslims voted in large numbers for the SP and
Mulayam Singh Yadav and this probably cost her the job. She, however,
underlined that her Dalit vote bank was intact and numbers would have
slipped further had that not been the case.

Mayawati said 70 percent of Muslim votes went to the SP as the
Congress appeared weak.

While the SP got an emphatic verdict of 224 seats in the 403-member
assembly, the BSP was reduced to just 80 seats, down 126 from the 206
it got in the 2007 assembly polls.

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[ZESTCaste] In Mayawati’s defeat, there’s hope for Dalits

http://www.firstpost.com/politics/in-mayawatis-defeat-theres-hope-for-dalits-237841.html

In Mayawati's defeat, there's hope for Dalits

Mar 7, 2012

Follow @firstpostin

Abhay Vaidya

Renaming districts after Dalit leaders such as Ambedkar and erecting
giant statues of Kanshi Ram and herself to project 'Dalit pride' may
have helped India's first Dalit woman chief minister to play her caste
card. But clearly, what the people in India's most populous state seem
to want is development.

This has emerged as the central message that politicians will take
home from the 2012 assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh where the
people have rejected Mayawati and given a clear mandate to the
Samajwadi Party (SP) led by the dynamic and youthful Akhilesh Yadav.
The SP's clear majority with 224 seats out of a total of 403 is
nothing short of spectacular.

There are clear parallels in the voter behavior in Uttar Pradesh. AFP

Where Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) came to represent a
pompous, arrogant and corrupt government which spent huge amounts on
raising statues and memorials, the young and charismatic Akhilesh
Yadav spoke the language of development and the promise of a new UP.
This helped Akhilesh overshadow his father and veteran politician
Mulayam Singh Yadav, who had been rejected by the voters in the 2007
assembly elections because of widespread lawlessness and insecurity in
UP.

Thus, apart from the traditional support from Muslims and the OBC
Yadav caste to which Mulayam belongs, the SP emerged as an attractive
choice for Dalits and voters across caste barriers over the incumbent
BSP. Valiant efforts by Rahul Gandhi with support from sister Priyanka
to revive an organisationally-weak Congress in UP failed, while it was
another lost opportunity for the BJP to improve its numbers.

In fact, there are clear parallels in the voter behavior in Uttar
Pradesh and the recently-held municipal elections in Maharashtra when
it comes to the promise of change and dynamism. In both the states,
regional parties such as the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) and the
Shiv Sena performed far better than the national parties. While both
states have sizeable Dalit populations (21 percent in UP and 18.5
percent in Maharashtra), like Akhilesh in UP, it was MNS's Raj
Thackeray in Maharashtra who won the support of a large section of the
voters, especially the youth and Dalits, across caste barriers.

The fact that both the SP and the MNS won seats in reserved
constituencies goes to show that they had the support of other
communities in addition to the Dalits. SP, for example, gained
significantly in the Mayawati-stronghold of Poorvanchal dominated by
Dalits, Kurmis and OBCs indicating the strong anti-incumbency trend
and their vote for change under Akhilesh. The SP also won 56 of the 85
reserved constituencies in UP, as against just 17 won by the BSP.

As in the case with Akhilesh, Raj Thackeray's appeal to the people in
Maharashtra was to vote for anti-incumbency and in favour of change
and development. Ironically, the Dalits in Maharashtra have been used
and abused by political parties primarily because of disunity and
multiple Dalit factions led by their various self-serving leaders.

The leading Republican Party of India (Athavale) faction, for example,
entered into an alliance with the Shiv Sena-BJP for the Maharashtra
civic polls, rather than the Congress-NCP with whom it had an alliance
in the past. While the RPI won just one seat in the Mumbai civic
polls, its support gave an edge to the Shiv Sena-BJP candidates in
many seats.

The disillusioned among the Dalits, however, preferred to vote for Raj
Thackeray across cities in the hope of a new leadership. The
direction-less politics of Dalits over the past many decades in
Maharashtra has been eloquently captured in Anand Patwardhan's latest
documentary, Jai Bhim Comrade.

Unlike Mayawati who frittered away her opportunity to focus on
development and good governance, the new SP government led by Mulayam
Singh – Akhilesh will be expected to chart a new course for UP, more
on the lines of Nitish Kumar's Bihar where good governance has become
a talking point. As also demonstrated by Gujarat, there's all round
support from voters when governments engage in effective governance
and ensure productive investments in infrastructure such as good roads
and power.

Such steps help the economy in the state bringing in employment and
revenues. When that happens, everyone benefits, including the Dalits.
Hopefully, that's the story that will unfold in Akhilesh Yadav's Uttar
Pradesh.


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[ZESTCaste] How Mayawati blew it (Opinion)

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/how-mayawati-blew-it/921385/

How Mayawati blew it
Virender Kumar Posted online: Thu Mar 08 2012, 03:51 hrs
Why she junked the rainbow, fled to her core vote

Why has the BSP lost despite the world-class F1 race tack, the Yamuna
Expressway, the plus-seven per cent growth, and those impressive
stone-and-granite symbols of Dalit pride which have changed the face
of Lucknow and Noida? Ask anyone who travelled in UP in recent weeks.
In the general sense of disaffection with the government, three points
stand out.

One, complaints of pervasive corruption, so much so that the poor had
to pay for getting their pension, Indira Awas or NREGA wages. Two,
that hers was a "bureaucratic, insensitive" government, with no
redress of grievances, not even when MLAs tried to intercede. Three,
that it was a government which cared only for the Dalits.

Interestingly, unlike others, the Dalits generally remained
enthusiastic supporters of Mayawati, crediting her for giving them a
sense of security and dignity. Post-results, it seems, Mayawati has
again become a leader of Dalits, exactly where she stood before 2007
when, for the first time, non-Dalits voted for the BSP in large
numbers, helping it get an absolute majority.

Her promise of restoring the rule of law had then caught the
imagination of a people fed up with Mulayam Singh Yadav's jungle raj.
She changed her language: from a champion of Bahujan, she turned into
a votary of Sarvajan. Her party shed its old, anti-upper caste
rhetoric. Did she rise to the demands of an inclusive, sarvajan
mandate? For an answer, let us trace, briefly, the journey of her last
five years.

After taking over as chief minister in May 2007, she announced two
bold initiatives: the over 1,000-km-long Ganga Expressway project and
a scheme to open the agriculture sector to private investment. The
first, running from Basti in the east to Noida in the west, could have
opened up vast tracts in UP's most backward hinterland to
urbanisation, and growth that comes with it. But it was stalled by
land acquisition and environmental roadblocks. The second, which had
the potential of sowing the seeds of a green revolution, was abandoned
because, as Mayawati said, intelligence reports suggested that farmers
did not like the idea.

She took a third initiative: she started work on those grand
memorials, a total of five in Lucknow, including two expansive ones
dedicated to Kanshi Ram and B.R. Ambekdar, and a third, equally huge,
in Noida, each costing several thousand crores. Everywhere, she
installed her own statues along with those of Ambedkar, Kanshi Ram,
Jyotiba Phule, Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj and other Dalit icons — as
many as 12 in Lucknow alone. In a state which has for long ranked
among the lowest in socio-economic indicators, how could this promote
Sarvajan Hitay? This was Mayawati's first self-inflicted blow to her
sarvajan platform.

Her party leaders, in the meantime, went berserk. Within six months, a
minister was allegedly involved in the murder of a girl in Faizabad;
after another six months, an MLA was arrested for rape in Agra.
Another six months and a third MLA, along with the district BSP
president, and helped by the police, forced his way into the house of
an engineer in Auraiya and allegedly tortured him to death just
because he refused to pay for Mayawati's birthday celebrations. Many
more such incidents followed.

Mayawati couldn't stop any of this.

So, when the Lok Sabha elections were held in 2009, the BSP found
itself beaten to the third place by the SP and the Congress. Worse, it
could win only two of the 17 reserved seats. This was stage one of
Mayawati's undoing.

Assembly elections were almost three years away. If she wanted,
Mayawati could still make amends and push administrative and policy
initiatives to regain public trust. But rattled by the defeat, she
took a big leap back: she junked her inclusivist mandate and sought
the safety of her traditional Dalit supporters.

She announced that party general secretary Satish Mishra, who many had
begun to see as her No 2, would stay away from politics and, instead,
concentrate on the party's legal work. The State Advisory Committee
under Mishra, which had been constituted on the pattern of Sonia
Gandhi's National Advisory Committee, was rendered defunct. Mishra was
no mass leader and his belittling did not alienate any section. But
Mayawati's action sent out a message to the Dalits that she is the
only leader of the BSP, that no one else mattered. Non-Dalits were
also listening.

What damaged Mayawati and the BSP hard was the systematic emasculation
of her MLAs. All of them were answerable to the party's local
coordinators, who are regarded as Mayawati's eyes and ears. Most of
them are Dalits. Without the coordinator's approval, an MLA could not
even hold a meeting or make a statement to the media. If there was a
local grievance, the coordinator would decide how it would be taken up
and with whom. They kept everyone on a tight leash. This destroyed the
MLAs politically, particularly the non-Dalits.

Mayawati kept underlining that the Dalit agenda remained her top
priority, nothing else. She gave a new thrust to the Ambedkar village
project, under which basic facilities are provided on priority in
villages that have substantial Dalit population. She introduced
reservation for Dalits in contracts. She ordered that the government
pay membership fee of Dalits so that they became members of primary
cooperative societies and, therefore, eligible for loans. The DGP was
told to personally visit homes where a Dalit was the victim of a
crime. She ordered a special campaign to give land to the landless
Dalits. All this was as it should be. But in all other matters, the
administration kept functioning in its usual uncaring, inefficient
ways. For example, the police would promptly attend to complaints of
Dalits, not others. And if the complaint was against a BSP man, it
would not even lodge an FIR until it got a green signal from above. It
was this reverse discrimination that blew apart her Sarvajan Hitay
slogan.

Meanwhile, crime and corruption flourished; her trusted men Babu Singh
Kushwaha and Naseemuddin Siddiqui were caught for alleged corruption.
Two CMOs were shot dead in Lucknow, a deputy CMO was found dead in
Lucknow jail under suspicious circumstances. As Mayawati increasingly
came under attack, she fled to the safety of her core vote. Read her
speeches over the last few years and the refrain is that everyone is
gripped by "Dalit-virodhi mansikta", trying to bring down a "Dalit ki
beti". Even Julian Assange was "Dalit virodhi".

The undoing of Mayawati's sarvajan platform was complete. Since in a
state like UP, no one can win an election by courting one or two
communities, the BSP's defeat was a foregone conclusion.

Any lessons from this for the Samajwadi Party? One, the SP should
recognise that it has got a mandate for governance from a people fed
up with Mayawati's misrule. Two, it has to respect the fact that
behind its victory is the support and goodwill of people across
Hindu-Muslim, forward-backward and rural-urban divides. Nothing else
can explain its win in Lucknow. It should remember that as long as it
was a party of Yadavs and Muslims, its best score was 143 in 2002.
Three, the SP should be on guard against those who can tar the new
government. Unlike Mulayam Singh Yadav, who has avoided using the
stick even when necessary, Akhilesh Yadav has shown he is made of
sterner stuff. The space and support the father gives the son could
hold the key to the SP's success.

virender.kumar@expressindia.com


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