JD-S sets tough terms for power transfer, BJP undecided

By IANS

Bangalore/New Delhi : The Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) Thursday set near impossible conditions for transferring power in Karnataka to its coalition partner, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which deferred taking any decision ahead of Saturday’s meeting between the two parties’ presidents.


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JD-S president H.D. Deve Gowda and his son, Chief Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy, in their speeches at a party meeting here questioned the BJP for its Hindutva ideology and asked if it would maintain communal harmony in the state.

Kumaraswamy, meanwhile, convened a cabinet meeting Friday though 17 BJP ministers have resigned to pressure him to vacate the chief minister’s chair in favour of their party in accordance with the agreement reached 20 months back.

Speculation in the political circles was that Kumaraswamy had decided to seek a trust vote in the assembly later this month.

At the party meeting, Deve Gowda and Kumaraswamy referred to the burning down of a Tamil Nadu state bus in Bangalore last month after the neighbouring state’s Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi made controversial remarks against Hindu god Rama.

Two people were charred to death in the incident. The same night the residence of Karunanidhi’s daughter Tamiz Selvi in Bangalore was attacked by a group of about 20 youths.

Referring to the killing of two minority community members in Mangalore just days after the JD-S-BJP coalition came to power in February 2006, Deve Gowda said: “Deputy Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa (of BJP) did not visit the place even after I pleaded with him to do so to give a sense of protection to minorities.”

“Can the BJP be trusted to maintain peace and communal harmony if power is handed over to them?” Kumaraswamy asked.

“I can’t be sure that the BJP will protect the interests of 5.5 crore (55 million) people in the state,” he told reporters before his party’s meet.

“If I do not keep my word on power transfer, it is no big deal. I am willing to be called a ‘vachanabrashta’ (one who did not honour his word) for the sake of people and the party,” Kumaraswamy told the meeting.

To justify his stance, he made a reference to former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Kalyan Singh of the BJP during whose regime the Babri Masjid was brought down in the northern state in 1992.

“The word I gave was between individuals. Kalyan Singh gave an affidavit in the Supreme Court on behalf of 100 crore (1 billion) Indians. Within 48 hours of the affidavit, Babri Masjid was brought down,” he said, mocking the BJP’s demand that he keep his word.

Assuring him that he was not breaking his word, his father H.D. Deve Gowda said: “Kumaraswamy’s only intention is to strengthen the JD-S. Taking decision for it does not mean not honouring one’s word.”

Kumaraswamy told reporters: “When grave allegations of corruption and criminal charges were levelled against me (by local BJP leaders), the BJP leadership chose to take it lightly.

“Should I hand over power to the BJP whose leaders have vowed to perform last rites of my family and my party? The mutual trust between the parties has ceased to exist now. Power transfer is not a child’s play. The BJP never created a cordial atmosphere for such an exercise to happen,” he said.

On staying in power with support from the Congress, Kumaraswamy said there was nothing that was not possible in politics. “Politics is nothing but opportunities and possibilities,” he said.

The emboldened stance the party adopted in the evening could reduce Saturday’s meeting between Deve Gowda and BJP chief Rajnath Singh in New Delhi to a mere formality.

Deve Gowda earlier told his party’s state executive committee meeting in Bangalore that he proposed to have “frank discussions” with Singh one last time. “If there is an understanding, it is fine. Otherwise, each party will have a right to take its own decision.”

The BJP, on its part, stated that there could be no negotiations on the power sharing agreement and its chief ministerial candidate in Karnataka, though it deferred any decision on the stand-off.

Party vice-president Yashwant Sinha told reporters in New Delhi after a meeting of the BJP parliamentary board: “The parliamentary board will meet again Saturday morning. We have postponed taking any decision as the JD-S president called the BJP president and conveyed that he would have talks with him after the meeting of his party’s political affairs committee Friday.”

Sinha reiterated, “The arrangement arrived at 20 months ago between the two parties has to be implemented. This is non-negotiable. The parliamentary board has emphasised that Deputy Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa is our chief ministerial candidate. This is also non-negotiable.”

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