Gadkari to take final call on severing JD(U) ties: BJP

Part leaders favour continuing alliance with JD(U), but prepared to face Bihar Assembly polls alone

PTI | June 21, 2010



Amid the growing rift with JD(U) in Bihar, BJP today said a decision on continuing the alliance will be taken by party president Nitin Gadkari after consultations with the state unit.

Bihar state unit chief C P Thakur called on senior BJP leader L K Advani this morning to discuss the status of the party's alliance with JD(U).

After the meeting, Thakur told PTI, "Advani has asked me to meet Gadkari by this evening to apprise him of the new developments in the alliance. A decision on the issue will then be taken by the party president."

Top BJP leaders at the Centre and in Bihar favour continuance of the alliance but at the same time are prepared to go it alone in the Assembly elections in the state which are likely to be held in October.

Advani and his group, as well as Bihar deputy chief minister and BJP leader Sushil Modi do not want to snap the 15-year old ties with JD(U).

"We are prepared to fight the elections alone if we are forced to do so. But, we would like the alliance to continue," Thakur said.

He expressed confidence that a decision, either in favour of the alliance with JD(U) or against it, will be taken within a fortnight.

JD(U) president Sharad Yadav had also said yesterday that though the events of June 12 when Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar returned the flood relief money given by Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi were "unfortunate", it would not affect the alliance.

In Patna, Kumar sought to downplay the flood aid row with ally BJP, saying there was no cause for tension.

"Tension mat lijiye, relax kijiye (Don't take tension, relax)," Kumar replied cryptically to a volley of questions by mediamen before leaving for his Biswas Yatra in Nalanda district.

He was asked about suggestions by BJP leaders that he should reconsider his decision on returning Rs five crore for the Kosi flood relief to the Gujarat government or spell out his strategy on whether he wanted to continue the alliance with the saffron party.

Earlier, the chief minister and his deputy and senior BJP leader, Sushil Kumar Modi were seen talking with each other at the swearing-in ceremony of the Chief Justice of the Patna High Court Rekha Manoharlal Doshit at the Raj Bhavan.

Modi had yesterday decided to stay away from the Biswas Yatra at Paliganj.

State minister and NDA Convenor Nand Kishore Yadav, who represents the Patna City constituency, had also pulled out from the chief minister's 'Biswas Yatra' yesterday.

The crisis in the NDA emerged after Kumar reacted angrily to an advertisement in the local dailies on the eve of the June 12-13 BJP national executive meeting which said that the Gujarat government, led by Narendra Modi, contributed liberally towards relief for victims of the 2008 Kosi floods.

Kumar had termed this claim as "uncivilised", saying any gesture of help should not be proclaimed publicly and threatened to return the unspent amount to Gujarat.

The JD(U) leader's posturing is understood to be in keeping with his attempt to woo the Muslim electorate in poll-bound Bihar.

He had also vociferously objected to another advertisement showing him clasping hands with Narendra Modi, the hardline Hindutva face of key ally BJP.

BJP to blame for political mess: JD(U)

Blames party for ad row, but says will stay on with NDA ' in true spirit'

The ruling JD(U) in Bihar today held ally BJP responsible for friction between the two over flood relief advertisements, but said it wanted to continue ties with the saffron party "in true spirit".

"We hold BJP responsible for the present mess arising out of the developments over (Gujarat chief minister Narendra) Modi ... But, we want to continue the relationship between the two parties," JD(U) national spokesperson Shivanand Tiwari told PTI.

"The alliance should continue. It is the need of the hour to keep the people away from 'jungle raj' which was unleashed by RJD-LJP combine and Congress earlier," he said, adding the ties should continue in true spirit.

Tiwari said had the BJP prevented the advertisements from being published at the time of its National Executive here on June 12 and 13 that showed Modi holding hands with Kumar and the other advertisement about the relief for Kosi flood victims from Gujarat, the situation would have been averted.

"What we (alliance) did with full commitment for the uplift of minorities has come a cropper because of the advertisements for which the BJP alone is responsible," Tiwari said.

"People know that Bihar has a different political background. Everybody knows that the leader of the alliance is Nitish Kumar ... so what is the problem with the BJP in accepting the truth when elections are around the corner?" he asked.

He said if the chief minister objected to his Gujarat counterpart electioneering in Bihar, the BJP should concede it instead of stating that it would be decided at an appropriate time.

Tiwari asked the BJP to ponder over whether it would really gain from campaigning by Modi. "Are people of the state prepared to accept Modi as a leader? Will he be able to convince the electorate?"

He suggested that both sides be open to a threadbare discussion on these issues.
 

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