The Darjeeling Lok Sabha election was over on April 18 but the Queen
of the Hills has left its cool climes to descend on the plains of
Burdwan-Durgapur, where the maximum temperature is hovering around 44
degrees Celsius.
Darjeeling has become a poll issue in the
Burdwan-Durgapur seat, which votes on Monday, because BJP candidate S.S.
Ahluwalia has migrated from the hills to the plains this time. For the
past five years, Ahluwalia had represented Darjeeling in the Lok Sabha.
That
past, marked by the demand from his ally in the hills for a Gorkhaland
state, is haunting Ahluwalia although he can claim to be a son of the
Bengal plains because he was born near Asansol.
“Not
a single vote for the man who conspired to divide Bengal,” chief
minister Mamata Banerjee told a campaign rally in Durgapur on April 25.
Across
the constituency — from cosmopolitan Durgapur to rural Raina — the
Trinamul Congress is using this narrative to attack Ahluwalia.
Trinamul
has pressed Gorkha Janmukti Morcha leaders Binay Tamang and Anit Thapa
to buttress its allegation that Ahluwalia was helping the other (Bimal
Gurung) faction of the Morcha to divide Bengal. Banners and posters
attacking the former Darjeeling MP for his apparent role in “dividing
Bengal” have come up across the constituency.
Ahluwalia is up against Trinamul’s Mamtaz Sanghamita, the sitting MP, and the CPM’s Abhas Roy Choudhury.
“Mamata
Banerjee can go to any extreme for political gain. If she can accuse
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, what more can you expect?” asked
Ahluwalia, sitting in the newly built BJP office in Burdwan town.
Mamata
and Ahluwalia had both been in the Congress when they shot to national
limelight during Rajiv Gandhi’s helmsmanship of the party. She was the
rookie who had felled a
giant in Jadavpur in the 1984 general election, and he a member of the
so-called Congress “shouting brigade” at the peak of the Bofors
controversy.
Last week, Ahluwalia said the allegation that he had tried to divide Bengal had no basis.
“During
the 104-day strike in Darjeeling in 2017, when the Morcha renewed its
demand for Gorkhaland, the hill party had accused me of not visiting the
hills. Trinamul, on the other hand, had accused me of helping the
Morcha,” he said, pleading innocence.
The Morcha’s Gurung faction is still an ally of the BJP in the hills.
Asked
whether he had “run away” from Darjeeling, Ahluwalia replied in fluent
Bengali: “I was sent to Darjeeling in 2014 with a purpose: it was to
defeat Trinamul’s Bhaichung Bhutia. You can say that I recused myself
from Darjeeling this time. I’m happy to be here as I belong to this
place.”
The 68-year-old, who has often faced flak for not being a bhoomi putra (son of the soil) in the hills, said he was relieved that the BJP had nominated him from Burdwan-Durgapur.
“I
was born and brought up in Burdwan district. My birthplace is JK Nagar,
a place between Raniganj and Asansol. I studied in Burdwan University
and found my wife (Monica Banerjee) here,” Ahluwalia said.
His three sons — Meher, Raunak and Ramanjit — are part of his team.
Ahluwalia
says that his ability to speak Bengali is helping him connect with the
local people, who he believes want a change. The turban too is “helping
me as people can easily recognise me”.
Ahluwalia has a thing for languages — he had sent his resignation from the Congress to Sonia Gandhi in Italian.
A
BJP lobby, though, is disgruntled with Ahluwalia’s nomination. Among
party nominees in Bengal, his name was the last to be announced. But the
veteran of many a battle said he was not worried about the April 29 test.
“The people will decide; they are the judges. There is no point claiming anything in advance,” he said, looking at the tough contest ahead.
https://www.telegraphindia.com
Post a Comment
We love to hear from you! What's on your mind?