Premium
This is an archive article published on January 13, 2008

Dalits in her heart?

Apropos of your leader, ‘Illusory makeover’, where you advise Mayawati “to pause a moment and reflect on the promises she has made to her electorate”...

.

Apropos of your leader, ‘Illusory makeover’, where you advise Mayawati “to pause a moment and reflect on the promises she has made to her electorate” — the UP chief minister is in her element when she steps out, bejewelled, with an army of security personnel, and pockets donations from her partymen, most of them obviously poor.

This is a serious letdown where her primary dalit constituency is concerned. She does not appear to have the foggiest idea of development because otherwise she would not go on building park after park in the name of Ambedkar (who, if he were alive today, would decry such a waste of public funds) and her mentor Kanshiram.

She seems to labour under the impression that what she demands from the UPA should be conceded without delay and demur! The disproportionate assets case pending against her should be disposed of in her favour by the CBI. The Centre should grant UP tens of thousands of crores, which, if not granted, will be termed discrimination. If these demands are not met, she would withdraw support to the UPA! That, in essence, is the stand of a chief minister of the country’s largest state.

Story continues below this ad

Instead of tending to her large and needy constituency and addressing infrastructure and employment issues, she continues to delude herself.

— Prasad Malladi

Basivireddypeta

Ratna row

It was funny that the BJP, through L.K. Advani, publicly demanded the nation’s highest honour, the Bharat Ratna, for its veteran leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee by simply writing a letter to the prime minister! Bharat Ratna awardees are selected only with the consent of the opposition leader, and a lack of unanimity prevented anyone being awarded the honour since 2001. The political misuse of the Bharat Ratna should be avoided by making the selection process transparent, after the awardees are named on January 26.

— Subhash C. Agrawal

Delhi

Award monopoly

L.K. Advani insists that the Bharat Ratna, India’s highest civilian honour, should be conferred on Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The Bharat Ratna should be awarded on the basis of merit, and not through someone’s lobbying. But the fact remains that the Congress, which has ruled free India for the most part, has managed to make it a politically motivated honour. The fact that three successive generations of the same family were all awarded the Bharat Ratna testifies to the extent that it has become a party monopoly.

— V. E. Venkataramani

Chennai

Clean Sydney slate

That Steve Bucknor has been removed from umpiring in the remaining Test matches is technically enough to strike off the result of the Sydney match from the record book. Such an exception is the need of the hour, since his wrong decisions have been witnessed by cricket lovers all over the world. This has been the rarest of rare cases. Will Ricky Ponting act as a gentleman now and request the match referee to strike off the Sydney victory from the record book? There is dignity in penance and seeking forgiveness.

— Kedarnath R. Aiyar

Mumbai

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement