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archive: Pawar's tie-up with SP aims at wooing Muslims in state

Pawar's tie-up with SP aims at wooing Muslims in state

S. Balakrishnan
The Sunday Times of India
June 20, 1999


    Title: Pawar's tie-up with SP aims at wooing Muslims in state
    Author: S. Balakrishnan
    Publication: The Sunday Times of India
    Date: June 20, 1999
    
    The formation of the alliance between the Nationalist Congress Party
    and the Samajwadi Party (SP) is being perceived in political circles
    as a shrewd move by NCP president Sharad Pawar to access Muslim voters
    in Maharashtra.
    
    During the last elections, Mr Pawar had formed a formidable
    combination of the Congress, the SP and the Republican Party of India
    and this had delivered a severe blow to the ruling Shiv Sena-Bharatiya
    Janata Party alliance.
    
    He is now seeking to do a repeat performance by having a tie-up
    between his newly-formed NCP, the SP and the RPI.  Having won over the
    SP, the highly resourceful Maratha leader is now busy wooing rival RPI
    leaders Ramdas Athavale and Prakash Ambedkar, who can be useful in
    mobilising Dalit voters.
    
    Muslims and Dalits do not represent the political constituencies of
    the saffron combine.  Hence, both the NCP and the Congress are
    competing with each other to win over these sizeable segments of the
    electorate which can decisively make or mar the prospects of
    candidates in at least two dozen of the 48 Lok Sabha constituencies. 
    At least for the present, it appears that the NCP is ahead of the
    Congress in this competition.  The Congress is still to take concrete
    steps to win over Muslim and Dalit voters.
    
    Spokesperson for the Congress W.R. Sherekar claimed that Muslims would
    not support the NCP-SP combine since it was headed by persons like Mr
    Pawar and Sudhakarrao Naik "who had failed to tackle the communal
    riots of 1992-93".
    
    However, NCP legislator Digvijay Khanvilkar pointed out that the
    Srikrishna commission, which had probed the riots, did not find Mr
    Pawar guilty at all.  The commission had held the Shiv Sena
    principally responsible for the riots and had only rapped Mr Naik on
    the knuckles, he noted.  In fact, he added, Mr Pawar had provided the
    healing touch after the riots and substantially stabilised the
    situation in Mumbai.
    
    Mr Sherekar said the Muslims were once again flocking to the Congress
    since that party had not given any important post to P.V. Narasimha
    Rao during whose prime ministership the Babri masjid had been
    demolished in Ayodhya.
    
    An office-bearer of the SP said much water had flowed down the Ganges
    after the Babri demolition and the communal riots.  "The primary task
    which the Muslim masses have set is the defeat of the Sena-BJP
    alliance.  There is a widespread perception among them that only the
    NCP-SP combination is formidable enough to trounce the Sena-BJP
    tie-up.  Hence, they are certain to back Mr Pawar and Mr Mulayam
    Singh," he noted.
    
    Political observers said that the section of the Congress which had
    always been vehemently opposed to the saffron government in
    Maharashtra had almost entirely joined the NCP.  As leader of the
    opposition in the state legislative council, Chhagan Bhujbal had been
    in the forefront of the ferocious onslaught on the state government on
    1'affaire Ramesh Kini, the police firing on a Dalit mob at Ramabai
    Colony and other issues.  Mr Bhujbal is now a prominent leader of the
    NCP.  "The consistently anti-Sena track record of Mr Bhujbal and
    others of his ilk during the past four years has made the NCP more
    appealing to Muslims and Dalits," said Jitendra Avhad, a Pawar
    loyalist from Thane.
    
    President of the National Minorities Party Akhtar Rizvi, M.P., claimed
    recently that the Muslims would not back the SP since the party had
    sabotaged the installation of a secular government at the Centre under
    the leadership of Sonia Gandhi.  But the SP pooh-poohs this prognosis
    by pointing out that over the past few years, it has been the only
    party that has made deep inroads into the Muslim community and won its
    confidence.
    



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