CricEx

Search
The Indian Express

The Financial Express

Latest News

Screen

Express Computer
Feedback
Expresswheels

Travel

Matrimonials

Careers

Lifestyle

Astrology

E-Cards

Columnists

Graffiti

Crossword

Letters

Environment

Jewellery
Info-tech

Power

Steel

Global Tenders

Filmtvindia

In association with Amazon.com

Books Music

Enter keywords


INDIAN EXPRESS FRONT PAGE

Politics

Business

Expressions

General

World

Sports

Leisure

States

 

Tuesday, June 1, 1999

Pawar's fails to melt sugar-belt bigwigs

EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE  
MUMBAI, MAY 31: Western Maharashtra, more specifically the sugar belt, will be the battleground between the Congress and expelled leader Sharad Pawar as at least five prominent leaders, four MLAs and one MLC, kept away from the crucial meeting of legislators called by the Pawar camp today. Leaders with considerable clout in the influential sugar lobby, they have bargained for more time to make up their minds in the party versus Pawar fight.

Belying initial hopes that they will support Pawar without looking backwards, they stayed away from the meeting called by Pawar loyalists Chhagan Bhujbal and Madhukar Pichad and instead chose to call PCC president Prataprao Bhosale to inform him of their neutral position.

MLAs Vijaysinh Mohite-Patil, Jayant Patil, R R Patil and Shankarrao Jagtap and veteran MLC Vishnuanna Patil have been fence-sitting ever since Pawar rebelled. They have been meeting leaders of both sides and discussing their options with both the Pawar camp as well as the party.

While the Pawargroup is saying that they will hop over eventually, Bhosale is taking heart from their continuing dialogue with party leaders including central observers like Ghulam Nabi Azad.

Of the powerful five, Jayant Patil -- president of the Maharashtra State Sugar Growers Federation -- is a vital link in the sugar lobby politics. Jayant Patil had even attended one of the first few meetings held by Pawar in Mumbai immediately after raising the rebellion a fortnight back.

Vishnuanna Patil has been a trusted Pawar acolyte for years; his word is said to carry immense weight in the sugar cooperative sector. RR Patil, the youngest in the group, was chosen as a person of potential by Pawar; a sharp speaker and diligent legislator, he has been instrumental in bringing the Sena-BJP government on its knees on several occasions.

Mohite-Patil was in Mumbai yesterday but chose not to stay back either for the Congress meeting or Sharad Pawar's parallel meeting. However, he touched base on the telephone with Bhosale during theday as did other leaders from the sugar belt. The party is gleeful that five influential elected representatives, considered to be pro-Pawar, have not cast their dice with him yet. On their part, PCC leaders are doing everything -- doling out assurances, offering key party positions -- to keep them in the party fold.

Though almost all of them pleaded their inability to the two meetings at due to local commitments confirmed earlier, it has set the cat among the pigeons. With key sugar belt leaders keeping their distance from Pawar for over two weeks, there's immense speculation of his losing grip over the western Maharashtra region -- his traditional bastion as well as that of the Congress party. This is where the battle lies in the days to come.

Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


Top


Phone Cards: 44c a minute to India

Great Britain : Towards the next millenium

 

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

India Gift House: Send gifts all over 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