Electronic Telegraph: Click here for UK news

Search
The Indian Express

The Financial Express

Latest News

Screen

Express Computer
Feedback
Travel

Matrimonials

Careers

Lifestyle

Astrology

E-Cards

Columnists

Graffiti

Crossword

Letters

Environment

Jewellery
Info-tech

Power

Advertisers Forum

Business Forum

In association with Amazon.com

Books Music

Enter keywords


INDIAN EXPRESS FRONT PAGE

Politics

Business

Expressions

General

World

Sports

Leisure

States

 

Thursday, February 4, 1999

Sangh orders cadres to lie low

Milind Ghatwai  
SONGADH, Feb 3: The second day of the four-day bandh called by the Sangh Parivar ended in a shambles, with Sangh leaders directing their local cadres to tone down the agitation. An effigy-burning demonstration today and a chakka jam planned for tomorrow have been called off.

The agitation is against the police's `heavy-handedness' with Bajrang Dal activists following clashes over the weekend, and seeks to secure DSP B D Vaghela's suspension.

Sangh leaders said the decision to tone down the agitation was taken with the interests of those arrested in mind. ``By intensifying the agitation, the arrested volunteers will be kept in police custody for a longer spell, they said.

However, this didn't cut much ice with the local cadres, who called the affair a `farce'. They made their displeasure known in no uncertain terms, hurling a string of abuses at the BJP leadership. Soon after the decision was announced, they broke into small groups for heated discussions and the leaders who had come from outside had a difficult time pacifying them.

``We were expecting a lot to happen and were prepared for the worst'', said one particularly agitated member. ``The leadership has insulted Songadh. Either the call should not have been given, or the effigy should have been burnt.''

Local Bajrang Dal leader P K Shah admitted that all was not well within the Sangh. ``Vast differences have cropped up between the BD, BJP and VHP.'' Just a few hours before, he had said, with considerably more gusto, ``I am the sole spirit behind the agitation. I don't take orders from anyone''.

The scenes in the evening were an anticlimax to the passions that had been on show throughout the day. To begin with, the townfolk woke up to the reality of a shortage of essentials, a reality that hit harder because the shops were closed. ``When you are made to starve, you get the message loud and clear'', an activist said. Neither vegetables, nor milk is available in the town; the resale market is seven kms away.

It took only a small cardboard placard, placed by the BD in front of a bust of Sayajirao Gaekwad, to make shopkeepers down their shutters. In fact, the bust has come to symbolise what is wrong with the town. On its head is a demand for dismissal of the `erring' DSP who let `loose his army of policemen on hapless BD volunteers'. Ironically, the pedestal still carries the appeal to Hindus issued when the Hindu Jagaran Manch held an anti-Christian rally at Tokarva on December 25. Completing the frame is the notice of Sec 144, banning the assembly of more than four people in one place.

The atmosphere next to the Songadh Police station was electric. BD and VHP volunteers carried out their agitation almost bang in front of the prohibitory order and watched by armed policemen. They stood and watched, not showing any sign of acting, not even when the fiery speeches were being made. Not even when Shah said, ``If police lay their hands on you I'll bring them before you and beat them with chappals.'' Later, police officials said they were satisfied that `PK', as they call him, behaved well.

Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


Top


Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Ltd.

DRDO Recruitment

Astrosurf
 

Click here for a printer-friendly page Printer-friendly page

Send gifts throughout India



EXPRESSindia.com
News   Business    Sports   Entertainment
The Indian Express | The Financial Express | Latest News | Screen | Express Computers
Travel | MatrimonialsCareersLifestyle | Astrology
E-Cards | Graffiti | Environment | Jewellery | Info-tech | Power