Polls seem imminent as Congress-Left spat intensifies

By Liz Mathew, IANS

New Delhi : Early parliamentary elections in India seemed imminent Monday with the ruling Congress and its communist allies sparring afresh on the India-US nuclear deal as the Election Commission ordered the publication of electoral rolls by mid-January 2008.


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“The Election Commission has directed all the chief electoral officers (CEOs) of states to get the electoral rolls of 2008 published by mid-January 2008,” the poll panel said in a statement issued after the Chief Election Commission (CEC) held a review meeting with CEOs of 14 states and union territories from southern and western India.

Although it was termed a routine exercise, the announcement came on a day when the communists hit back at Congress president Sonia Gandhi for her attack on critics of the nuclear deal and said that India was capable of developing nuclear energy “primarily on a self-reliant basis”.

Reacting a day after Gandhi’s comments in Haryana, the Left parties said there was no need to “surrender our vital interests to America” on the plea of nuclear energy.

A Left leader, who did not wish to go on record, told IANS here that with Gandhi’s public criticism there was no possibility of any rapprochement between the two sides over the nuclear deal.

In another significant development, Gandhi met President Pratibha Patil in Rashtrapati Bhavan Monday. Although party leaders claimed that Gandhi, who had returned from New York on Thursday, was briefing the president on her speech made at the UN General Assembly, sources indicated that the imminent general elections also came up for discussion during the meeting.

In a joint statement reacting to Gandhi’s attack, the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) and its three allies said: “The Left parties categorically reiterate that the nuclear deal with the US is against the interests of India.

“Those who advocate the deal should know that India is capable of developing nuclear energy primarily on a self-reliant basis. We need not surrender our vital interests to America on this plea.”

However, the Left’s statement went against the conciliatory tone of veteran Marxist leader Jyoti Basu in Kolkata Monday. Basu told reporters: “What Sonia Gandhi said is not right. It is my wish that both of us (United Progressive Alliance -UPA- and Left) should stay together for some more time. So, I personally do not want early elections. But if the Congress so wants, we are ready for it.”

He also said that External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee, who met him Sunday at his Kolkata residence, had requested him to ensure that talks between the UPA and the Left on the nuclear deal do not break down.

“I have asked (CPI-M general secretary) Prakash Karat and (politburo member) Sitaram Yechury to listen to Mukherjee and see whether we can work out a compromise or allow them some concessions on the issue,” he added.

“The minister has explained to me the compulsion to go to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for an India-specific safeguards agreement, which we do not want. But the minister told me he will try to explain to the IAEA the objections from the UPA allies and try to seek some concessions,” Basu said.

The 15-member UPA-Left nuclear committee, formed to address the concerns raised by the communists over the nuclear deal, is meeting for its fourth meeting Tuesday.

If the Left, that has warned the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government of “serious consequences” if it went ahead with the nuclear deal, withdraws support, the government would be reduced to a minority.

On Sunday, addressing a rally in a Haryana town, Gandhi said that the nuclear deal with the US was “necessary for the country to keep the pace of development going”.

“Those who have been creating hindrances in the implementation of development programmes were enemies of not only the Congress government but also of the common people. Therefore, such elements should be given a befitting reply,” she said.

Although the Congress later clarified that Gandhi’s remarks were made in the context of Haryana politics, sources both in the Congress and the Left indicated that a divorce between the two sides appeared imminent.

“There is no point of convergence now. We both are going at two different directions now,” the Left leader told IANS.

Congress sources said the party was ready for fresh elections. Political observers feel general elections were likely in early 2008.

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