Tag: Yogi

  • DNA of events in Ayodhya, Sambhal, Bangla same: Yogi

    DNA of events in Ayodhya, Sambhal, Bangla same: Yogi

    Ayodhya (TIP)- Uttar Pradesh CM Yogi Adityanath on December 5, accused the Opposition of trying to divide the society, saying the actions of Babur’s commander in Ayodhya and Sambhal around 500 years ago and ongoing events in Bangladesh shared the same nature and intent.
    “Look at the kind of acts our enemies are committing in neighbouring countries. Around 500 years ago, a general of Babur committed certain deeds in Ayodhya, similar acts were observed in Sambhal, and now what is happening in Bangladesh — the nature and DNA of all three events are the same,” he added.
    The CM, who was in the temple town for the inauguration of the 43rd Ramayan Mela, cautioned people against dismissing these issues as distant or irrelevant.
    “Had we given importance to unity and not let the strategy of nation’s enemies succeed in creating social animosity, this country would have never become a slave. Our pilgrimages would not have been desecrated. A handful of invaders would not have dared to invade us and would be crushed by India’s brave soldiers,” he added.
    The Opposition shot back at the Uttar Pradesh CM, saying he was indulging in “divisive politics” and peddling “false narratives”.
    When asked to comment on Adityanath’s remarks, Congress MP Tariq Anwar said his language did not behove that of a chief minister. “It is surprising and saddening that being a big leader of the BJP and the Chief Minister of a large state like Uttar Pradesh, he uses such language that is aimed at dividing people,” Anwar said.
    ‘First get your DNA checked’:
    Akhilesh Yadav attacks Yogi
    Reacting to Yogi Adityanath’s remark that the DNA of what happened in Ayodhya under Babur’s rule, Sambhal and Bangladesh is the same, Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav said the Uttar Pradesh chief minister must get his DNA tested before making such remarks.
    “I don’t know how much science the chief minister knows and how much biology he has studied… But I want to request that he not talk about DNA,” he was quoted as saying by news agency PTI. The former UP CM said he would also get his DNA checked.
    “Through you (media), and I am saying this with full responsibility, that he should not talk about DNA…and if he talks about DNA then we all want to get our DNA checked. The chief minister should also get his DNA checked… I want to get my DNA checked and the chief minister should also,” he added. Akhilesh Yadav said being a saint, Yogi Adityanath must refrain from using such language.
    “This talk of DNA does not suit him (Adityanath). Being a saint, a yogi in saffron robes, this language should not be used and this talk about DNA should not be done,” he said.

  • Home run for BJP in UP

    Home run for BJP in UP

    By Radhika Ramaseshan

    “In the end, it is apparent that the credit for the victory will largely belong in UP’s case to Adityanath. His cheerleaders propagated the view of Yogi’s hard-bitten image as a man who will not tolerate law and order challenges and dissent on the ground — evident in the manner in which he put down the protests against the Citizenship Act amendments — and is incorruptible. It also puts Yogi in the reckoning as a future leader.”

    As the BJP rewrote a serial and spectacular comeback for itself in Uttar Pradesh in the assembly elections, it was evident that the party’s electioneering went according to a script that coalesced multiple strategies and responses to the drawbacks its government in Lucknow ran into in the past five years. It was as though the BJP anticipated the electorate’s positive and negative feedback on the Yogi Adityanath government and switched on its feed-forward correction capabilities to the best possible extent. It takes a level-head to assess a party’s internal weaknesses and accept them as real before rectifying. That’s what the Delhi leadership did, sometimes in consultation with Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and at times unilaterally. Given its experience with the maverick chief minister, the BJP brass recognized that while it was impossible to dump him like its two incumbents in Uttarakhand and Gujarat, it was not feasible to give him the long rope he desired. The mix-and-match formula the BJP adopted was fraught with uncertainty but the gamble paid off.

    The Samajwadi Party (SP), in tandem with the Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) and other parties, positioned itself as the BJP’s principal challenger and converted the contest into a bipolar joust, hoping that the votes that went to the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and the Congress — the other significant players — would pool into its kitty. The SP’s calculation was that this tactic alone would help enhance its depleted vote share to a level of parity with the BJP and make the contest fairly even. It didn’t happen.

    Statistics speak for themselves. The SP, which was the incumbent in 2017, dropped from a high of 224 seats in the 403-member legislature to 47 in the election that year, its vote share plummeting to 21.82 per cent in the 311 seats it contested with the Congress as an ally. UP was awash with the Narendra Modi wave that swamped every party. The BSP picked up just 19 seats with a vote share of 22.23 per cent. The BJP was on top, winning 312 of the 384 seats it fought and posting a vote share of nearly 40 per cent. Its team-mates, the Apna Dal (Soneylal) and Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP), benefitted immensely from the partnership. The SBSP left the BJP shortly thereafter while the Apna Dal stayed with it. Therefore, the SP had a vast swathe of ground to cover before it hoped to catch up with the BJP.

    The SP’s role in the Opposition was not inspiring. For instance, during the horrific pandemic strikes when the Adityanath government seemed apathetic to people’s plight, the SP was nowhere on the ground to help people. Its defense was that the situation was not conducive for its workers to be mobile. The state government tactically unrolled the Centre’s scheme to hand over rations to the less well-off in the villages and stave off hunger, particularly among the migrants returning home. A realistic assessment would have it that the sops would not have recompensed the loss of lives suffered in this phase. But months later, people thought less of the sufferings inflicted by Covid-19 and remembered the “ration-paani” delivered to their doorstep.

    The BJP had several problems in the prelude to the elections. Unlike the CMs “anointed” by the “high command”, Adityanath was not one to be subservient to Delhi’s diktat. From Day 1, the custodian of Gorakhpeeth, North India’s wealthiest monastery, fancied himself as a potentate and potentially a PM candidate. Delhi’s efforts to have a former Gujarat bureaucrat, Arvind Sharma, a Modi favorite, inducted in the UP cabinet after Sharma was elected a member of the UP legislative council, failed. Adityanath refused to have him. A perception that the CM in saffron was just as cattiest as any UP politician and pandered excessively and overtly to his Rajput community angered the Brahmins, core BJP voters since 1989, and alienated the backward castes and Dalits. The agrarian distress, caused by the state government’s obduracy to enhance the state advisory price for sugarcane farmers, and the scaled-up costs of agricultural inputs was too real to be brushed aside.

    The Centre stepped into the breach, at times distanced the CM from the damage-control moves and addressed these issues. The repeal of the contentious farm laws that provoked protests in western UP among the Jat farmers went some way to assuage their anger.

    A defeat is invariably followed by the unpleasant aftermath of apportioning blame; a victory means it is time to savor the fruits of hard work. The BJP organization worked as one army on the ground under the stewardship of Amit Shah, the Home Minister, who went on door-to-door visits in seats that seemed tricky. Prime Minister Modi camped for days in Varanasi, his Lok Sabha constituency, after reports of a couple of shaky constituencies came in and campaigned tirelessly.

    However, in the end it is apparent that the credit for the victory will largely belong in UP’s case to Adityanath. His cheerleaders propagated the view that the Yogi’s hard-bitten image as a man who will not tolerate law and order challenges and dissent on the ground-evident in the manner in which he put down the protests against the Citizenship Act amendments-and is “incorruptible”. Like Modi, Adityanath is a singleton and, therefore, thought to be a politician who will not lust after wealth and favors for the family. The fact that he didn’t attend his father’s cremation in Uttarakhand because of his “preoccupation” with managing the pandemic added to the profile of a “singularly committed” leader. The “attribute” was accentuated in the BJP’s campaign as a counterpoint against the “dynasts”, represented by the SP and RLD leaders, Akhilesh Yadav and Chaudhary Jayant Singh. What does Adityanath’s ascendancy portend for the BJP? It marks the return of UP’s pre-eminence in the BJP’s political scheme after the Vajpayee years. Although Modi adopted Varanasi as his constituency, he is primarily identified with Gujarat, his home state. It puts Adityanath high in the reckoning as a future leader.

    (The author is a senior journalist)