VADODARA, SEPT 26: In keeping with their `national policy', the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal have decided to hold a black-badge protest outside the Gandhi Nagar Gruh, the venue of the `Miss Vadodara 1999' contest, on Monday.President of the city unit of the Bajrang Dal Neeraj Jain told The Indian Express the two organisations would be joined by the Swaminarayan sect, the Gayatri Parivar, the Vaishnav Samaj and the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, among other organisations, in their protest.
High drama followed when the organisers approached Jain for a compromise. ``I asked them, `Will you allow your sisters and mothers to parade in such shows?' They replied in the negative'', he said. Jain reportedly told the organisers that if their answer had been in the affirmative, he wouldn't have opposed them.
Jain told The Indian Express that anti-pageant volunteers would also talk to the parents of the participants and try to convince them to withdraw from the contest.
When asked ifthe VHP and the BD wanted the show to be cancelled, Jain refused to give a direct answer, but said, ``Our protest is in keeping with our national policy.''
Fashion shows in Surat and Navsari have either been disrupted or cancelled following Bajrang Dal protests recently.
Deputy Commissioner of Police (South) Mohan Jha said adequate police personnel would be deployed outside the venue as the police expected some trouble on Monday.
Monday's is the second venture of Cops Group, a little-known organisation formed by M S University students in late-1997.
Cops general secretary Amit Bharadwaj said 16 contestants would vie for the title over four rounds. ``Though the contestants will wear jeans, they have been strictly instructed not to wear minis or shorts, or anything that can be construed as indecent or vulgar'', he told The Indian Express. ``The audience will have our parents as well.''
Interestingly, the Cops Group's first contest -- held on February 14, 1998, at the same venue -- featuredcontestants in minis and shorts, but did not attract any trouble. But Bharadwaj and Vishal Bhatia, another office-bearer, maintained that the change to ``traditional outfits'' had nothing to do with the threat of the VHP and the BD. All participants in the contest belong to Vadodara; some are outsiders living in the MSU hostels. Most of the contestants, in fact, are MSU students. The 16 finalists were chosen from 26 applicants after an audition.
Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.