Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Eye on polls, Nitish shifts focus to Delhi



Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

What prompted Chief Minister Nitish Kumar yesterday to announce his plan to hold a rally in New Delhi in March next year? Whom does he want to impress? Is he nursing his ambition to play a key role in the formation of the government at the Centre in the next election?

These questions are being asked here at a time when it sounded fairly “logical” when Mr Kumar decided to hold a rally in support of his party’s demand for special-category status for Bihar.

The people are wondering why Mr Kumar needs a rally in New Delhi, why he wants to keep himself busy with rally-and-yatra politics, and who he is trying to impress ~ the Congress-led UPA government at the Centre or Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who he perceives as his biggest rival in the saffron party.   

The BJP, Mr Kumar's junior coalition partner in the NDA government in Bihar, is planning a similar rally in Patna in April, a month after the JD-U expects to hold two mega rallies over the issue without its partners.  

Why is Mr Kumar keeping this distance from the partner that has helped him run his government in Bihar, and which gave him a sort of “political asylum” as a Union minister in the former NDA government when he, as a leader of the defunct Samata Party, after revolting against his mentor RJD chief Lalu Prasad, was battling for survival in his home state?   

Observers say the answer lies in Mr Kumar’s fast-growing political ambition to keep himself in the national reckoning, since the UPA and the NDA are mired in corruption controversies and facing severe credibility crises.  

They say Mr Kumar is well aware of the fact that any decision on granting special-category status to a state is made by the National Development Council and not by the Prime Minister. Thus, his demand has great political meaning.   

A rally in New Delhi, observers say, will convey to Bihar residents that Mr Kumar is serious about Bihar's development, and win him friends in industry, as special-category status will provide tax holidays to willing entrepreneurs. It will also put him in the national reckoning, with not much time left for the 2014 general elections.  

Mr Kumar has held two similar rallies so far ~ one in New Delhi and a second in Mumbai, the national business capital ~ against the backdrop of Bihar's centenary celebrations this year. Some also say Mr Kumar is trying to hide his “failures” by keeping himself busy in rallies and yatras he says are in the interests of his state.  

If his string of yatras and rallies is not enough, Mr Kumar is also planning a week-long tour of Pakistan, which is said to be a move to reach out to Muslims, whose support in his home state will be crucial in the next general election, and to refurbish his image among the minority class.   

The chief minister made his political intentions clear when he appealed to the people at yesterday's rally to give his party a “huge mandate” in the next general election, to enable him to help form a “friendly” government at the Centre to fast-track development work in his backward state. And, by keeping his partner at a distance, he has tried to signal that he holds the “secular” tag despite being in the company of the “communal” BJP.  

Mr Kumar has also exhorted all landlocked backward states to demand special-category status. Observers say this is primarily aimed at exerting more pressures on the Centre, rather than forming a “group of like-minded states”.   

In most of the landlocked states ~ Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Chhatisgarh ~ either the BJP or the Samajwadi Party is in power. Thus, it is unlikely they will support Mr Kumar’s move, as they feel he has grown too big for his boots in recent years. 


Chipko-like movement in Bihar invokes the divine



Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

In a novel campaign to save trees, painters of the Madhubani school of painting have taken up their brushes to paint trees with images of Hindu gods and goddesses, applying coats of vibrant colours. The movement is anchored in the belief that the images would put the fear of god in those who are armed with axes and saws to cut down trees for crass commercial gains.

The movement is in a way a continuation of what a few years back a senior official in the state did ~ paint a notoriously lawless town in south Bihar with soothing shades of pink in the hope that it would foster communal harmony. The unique campaign to conserve environment ~ a little  different from the Chipko Movement started way back in the early 1970s in the Himalayan region to protect trees from being felled by hugging them ~ has been launched in north Bihar’s Madhubani district which shares its borders with Nepal. This is the first time that the residents have turned to “divine therapy”, as it were, by using deities as a cover to discourage the public from felling trees.

Local artists from Madhubani have been roped in to paint tree trunks and leaves with images depicting various tales from Hindu epics or of deities to ensure the locals do not fell trees, for fear of incurring the wrath of the gods and goddesses. Hundreds of trees have been painted in the district so far which has not only given a colourful look to the roadside trees but boosted mass awareness about environmental conservation.

“People ruthlessly chopping trees with axes and saws always gave me a lot of pain. I tried to convince them that this is not good for environment but they never took it seriously. So I hit upon the plan to paint scenes from Hindu epics  or images of gods on tree trunks thinking it can work wonders, and, it has really begun working now,” said Mr Shashthi Nath Jha who has launched the campaign to protect environment in Bihar. He said around a hundred artists have joined the campaign painting trees with images of deities after taking time off their studies.

The basic themes being painted are Sita swayamvara, Radha-Krishna love lore, various moods of Meera etc. “Apart from strong natural colours, we are also using chemical paints to colour trees so that they can survive rain and heat and last long,” said Mr Jha, who is also working for women empowerment and child labour rehabilitation thorough his NGO, Gramin Vikas Parishad.

Local artists are voluntarily joining in and their tribe is increasing by the day. “This gives me a lot of satisfaction to be associated with such a noble cause. I have been painting images of gods and goddesses on trees so that people think hundred times before cutting down trees," said Seema
Das, who is adept in the art of Madhubani painting.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Empowerment for Mahadalit youths with English language skills





Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

For the first time, Mahadalit youths in Bihar are being provided with an opportunity to learn spoken English. This exclusive project for them aims at bettering their skills, which should help them in getting good jobs, and consequently raising their standard of living.


Mahadalits, the poorest of the poor in the society, constitute around 15 per cent of the state’s total population, and they play a significant role in politics and formation of the government.


The background to this huge step forward in the social uplifting of Mahadalits, stems from a range of initiatives put in place for this particular community by the Nitish Kumar government.


The latest project is a collaboration between the Bihar Mahadalit Vikas Mission, a commission of the government of Bihar and British Lingua, a training institute of national repute in the field of English skills and capacity building. The training module offers four-hour daily classes except on Sundays.


These are divided into four equal sessions ~ sentence formation, group discussion, language activities and feedback. The structural-cum-interactive method adopted in the programme was developed by British Lingua and has proved highly successful in imparting practical and easy-to-follow ways of using English in a variety of contexts.


Bihar’s deputy chief minister Sushil Kumar Modi said the NDA was committed to raising the Mahadalit community out of its downtrodden position, and bringing it to the main stream of society, while Mr Vidyanand Vikal, chairman of the Bihar State Commission for Scheduled Castes, who visited and interacted with the Mahadalit youths said: "I am more than happy to see these youths who are generally more comfortable speaking their own regional language, quite at par with those who can speak fluent English. It is no less than a miracle to see their improvement in such a short space of time”.


British Lingua’s project director group captain I B Thakur said he was most gratified to see the Mahadalit youths holding conversations in English.


Words of praise for the scheme have also come from the trainees. “I had never thought that I too would be able to communicate in English one day. I'm grateful to both the British Lingua and the government of Bihar for their role in providing me with an opportunity of obtaining English Skills,” said Tulshi Rani, a student. “Now I can hold conversations in English and feel that I'm at par with those belonging to the advanced communities,” said Suresh Mahto, another student.


Mr Birbal Jha, Managing Director, British Lingua, said: “By taking English skills to the grassroots of society, we can instill a sense of worth in its members. They can benefit from knowledge of the English language as it brings parity and removes the divisions within society that hold certain sections back simply because of their ancestry.” Mr Jha, quoting Mahatma Gandhi said: “One small step leads to another and soon you have a journey”.


With Bihar taking its place as a meeting point for new investment, where English is the language of business, both nationally and internationally, the barriers are being broken down by integrating English into the lives of the state’s most downtrodden section of society.

Monday, October 22, 2012

A Chief Minister trying to be a "goodwill ambassador"


In his first term as the chief minister of Bihar, Nitish Kumar had better confined himself to the local politics but in his second term, he seems to be grabbing the national centrestage trying hard to transform himself into a "goodwill ambassador". While he has already visited China, he is scheduled to visit Pakistan the very next month. India just does not share very good relations with those two Asian countries. While tension in relations prevails with China after the latter was accused of doing military build-ups along the border, bilateral relations with Pakistan have soured in the aftermath of 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks. Manoj Chaurasia reports…


Prime Minister Manmohan Singh may be quite hesitant about visiting Pakistan post Mumbai terror attacks but Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar looks only too eager to visit the neighbouring country. It took just an invitation extended out of sheer courtesy by a visiting Pakistan delegation to Bihar in August this year to make Kumar plan for a weeklong tour to Pakistan!

“It’s worth mentioning that a Pakistani delegation which visited Bihar recently had extended an invitation to the chief minister to visit Pakistan on behalf of the Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency. After completing the basic formalities, his Pakistan trip has been scheduled between 9 November and 17 November”, says an official statement issued by the state government.

The statement claims that Kumar’s visit to Pakistan will not only promote bilateral ties but also accelerate the dialogue process between the two countries. The dialogue process, it may be noted here, has been virtually got derailed in the aftermath of 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks which killed more than 150 people.

As per his itinerary cleared by the ministry of external affairs, Kumar will be visiting places like Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Mohenjodaro and Taxila during his stay in Pakistan and will also be paying courtesy visits to several top Pakistani leaders, like the President, Prime Minister and also opposition party leader Imran Khan.

Official sources said party ministers Renu Kumari, Sukhda Pandey, Rajya Sabha member NK Singh, chief secretary AK Sinha and home secretary Amir Subhani will be part of the 11-member delegation Mr Kumar will be leading to Pakistan on a “goodwill mission”.

Official sources said Kumar’s proposed tour to Pakistan followed an invitation extended to him by the 18-member Pakistan parliamentary delegation which had visited Bihar in August this year. The invitation to visit Pakistan had been extended on behalf of Punjab chief minister Mohammad Shahbaz Sharif, brother of former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

During his visit to Bihar, the Pakistani delegation had called on the chief minister and hugely praised his leadership skills for ushering in development works in his home state. And, apparently an overwhelmed chief minister just did not resist his temptation to visit Pakistan, confided an official of CM’s office.

This is the second time in past 16 months that Bihar chief minister has assumed the new role of a “peace ambassador” to neighbouring countries India does not share very good relations.

Last year in June, Kumar had led a delegation to China on a three-day “goodwill mission”. His visit to China also followed an invitation extended to him by a visiting Chinese envoy to Bihar, and Mr Kumar on his part did not let him down. Earlier, the Bihar CM had visited Bhutan and Mauritius though his goal was to lure foreign investors.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

In legitimacy quest, woman made to marry dead man



Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

A poverty-stricken woman in Bihar had to marry a dead man last week to save her four children from the stigma of illegitimacy. The incident occurred in Banka district.

Chudki Hembrom and Mahalal Marandi, residents of Rosaiya village under Katoria block had been living together under their community’s customs which allow young adults to live together till they understand each other well enough to get married.

But Chudki and Mahalal couldn't decide about entering into formal wedlock since they were too poor to afford the cost of the wedding feast they were required to arrange. In the meantime, four children were born to the couple.  

Even as they were trying hard to accumulate money for their wedding rituals, disaster struck when Mahalal died due to hunger and disease.   

The tragedy left the woman on the horns of a dilemma. Everyone feared she would have to live a life of ignominy with her children not having the name of their father.

Community leaders decided the couple should be married before Mahalal was consigned to the flames.

In the macabre ritual, the lifeless finger of the dead man was used to put vermilion mark on the hair parting of Chudki, who was dressed in bridal attire. In minutes the vermilion mark was washed off and the woman was declared a widow.

Chudki was shell-shocked, but she was still relieved: the opprobrium of “illegitimacy” had been erased from her children’s names.

“I agreed to it for the sake of my children. Now they can at least use their father’s family name,” said Chudki.

As is its wont, officialdom stepped in after the tragedy. “We are giving an Indira Awas (housing) unit and money under social security scheme to the family,” the District Magistrate of Banka, Mr Deepak Anand said.

He, however, strongly denied poverty had caused the tragedy.

Block Development Officer Rajkumar Sharma said the man was suffering from some ailments and poverty, adding that the administration had granted the family money for the last rites under Kabir Antayesi Yojana.

The level of poverty is appalling in Bihar; as per an official report, 1.40 crore families live below the poverty line in the state, which, if the average family size is assumed to be five people, would come to something like 70 per cent of Bihar’s total population of a little over 10 crore.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Nitish Kumar: A story in constrast


Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

Contrast is only too stark to be perceived now. 

In his first term as the chief minister of Bihar, Nitish Kumar had fired one of his ministerial colleagues Jitan Ram Manjhi moments after he had taken the oath ~ even the portfolio had not been allotted to him ~ merely on the information that the man he had given the berth in his cabinet was an accused in the degree scam! Then he effected a massive reshuffle in the state administration, giving key postings to the honest and efficient officials and shunting out bureaucrats of questionable integrity. All these actions were on display shortly after Mr Kumar had taken oath as the new chief minister of Bihar, ending the 15-year-old rule of Lalu Prasad-led Rashtriya Janata Dal.  

Barely seven years into power, such “dare-devilry” seems to have become a thing of the past now as the NDA government that Mr Kumar heads in Bihar has come under fire for its questionable actions. Mr Kumar who earned the respect as an honest and upright politician is now being routinely accused, by the masses and his adversaries alike, of rewarding “inefficient” officials, victimising those launching crackdown on corrupts and publically praising leaders with criminal background. And, the Madhubani firing incident in which at least three youths were gunned down by the police who resorted to indiscriminate fire to quell an unruly protesting against police’s insensitivity to hand over body of the youth to the grieving family members, is only a pointer to the fact!

Following heavy protests by the protesting crowd who resorted to large-scale arson and violence on Friday to protest administrative high-handedness, the chief minister Mr Kumar ordered for immediate shifting of all the senior civil and police officials from the district, such as the district magistrate, superintendent of police and also inspector general of police, Darbhanga Range under which jurisdiction the entire incident took place, apparently holding them responsible for administrative lapses. 

Hours after they were given marching orders, two of the officials ~ IG Rakesh Kumar Mishra and SP Saurabh Kumar ~ were given promotions. Mr Mishra, however, said his promotion was long overdue, asserting that he had an impeccable track-record. "Never in my 26-year-long career, I compromised with ideals and professional ethics", said Mr Mishra, looking quite aggrieved at what was written about him in the local media in the aftermath of Madhubani firing incident. According to him , he has the distinction to serve at places like Kaimur, Nawada, Deoghar, Betia, Aurangabad, Jamshedpur and Bhagalpur (before proceeding on central deputation) in his long illustrious career. He has also been given three medals by the President of India ~ gallantry medal, meritorious medal and distinguished medal for his remarkable job, he informed. 

Right since the beginning, the police had been claiming that the headless body of the youth did not belong to that of "missing" youth Prashnat and the recovery of the boy has only vindicated the stand of the police. Mr Mishra said certain newspapers had carried factually incorrect reports about the recovery of the headless body which aroused public outcry leading to rioting in Madhubani as the police were forced to open fire on the unruly mob. 

The message has not gone down well even within the BJP, coalition partner, in the government. “Transfer is no punishment. The government will have to initiate severe actions against the erring officials to ensure faith of the common men is restored in the system”, remarked a BJP lawmaker Rameshwar Chaurasia. Another senior BJP leader and parliamentarian Bhola Singh went even more ballistic at the Nitish Kumar dispensation alleging that the government was totally unable to protect lives of the common men.

It was not the first time that the actions of the chief minister have come under question. Earlier, the chief minister had fired the excise minister Jamshed Ashraf merely after he spoke of a Rs 500 crore scam in the excise department and pointed his accusing fingers towards the then excise commissioner N Vijayalakshmi. Curiously, instead of initiating actions against the excise commissioner, the government sacked the minister itself! 

As of now, Mrs Vijayalakshmi, husband of a most powerful IAS official S Siddharth now secretary to the chief minister, is an agriculture secretary in the government. Her clout is underlined from the fact that she was asked to coordinate the function marked for the launching of agriculture roadmap of Bihar by the President Mr Pranab Mukherjee at the local SK Memorial Hall here on 3 October.

The role of the chief minister again came under question after his government suspended an IPS official Anusuiya Ransingh Sahu who as the SP of Sheikhpura district had launched a massive crackdown on mining mafia and lodged as many as 150 cases against the stone quarrying mafias between March and September this year and also busted a liquor racket. It is alleged the government acted under pressures from a particular caste who is said to be the traditional vote-bank of the NDA. According to the official, the DGP’s logic behind her suspension is classic ~ “illegal gratification by bodyguards in her name”. “If I can be punished for the faults committed by my subordinates, then why not the DGP on similar grounds?” she asks.

What is even stranger is the move of the chief minister to openly shield a criminal Ranvir Yadav who snatched a carbine from police and fired in the air to make way for Mr Kumar from the angry mob protesting against him during his visit to Khagaria district earlier this month. While the state administration has arrested persons protesting against the CM and sacked cops who failed to maintain law and order during CM’s visit to Khagaria town, the police have not initiated any action against Yadav who openly fired from a police carbine and even beat up the mob from lathis till date. As the government has virtually given a “clean chit” to Yadav, notorious husband of JD-U lawmaker Poonam Devi, a local resident had to register a case against him in the court of the chief judicial magistrate.

Curiously, the chief minister himself had publically praised the Yadav couple for his bid to “save” him and allow him address Adhikar rally there. Yet another move of the chief minister to stay in the house of Kaushal Yadav, a notorious gangster, in course of his Adhikar yatra at Nawada has not gone down well within the masses. During his earlier yatra, Mr Kumar had lunch at the residence of another alleged gangster Dhoomal Singh in Saran district.


Saturday, September 29, 2012

Caste divides sharpen in Bihar



Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

Mandalisation is back in Bihar. Unofficially, that is. 

Students seeking rooms on rent to stay here for study are being forced to answer uncomfortable and disconcerting questions by prospective landlords who want them to reveal their caste and family status first. 

A dearth of hostels in Patna colleges makes many students from rural areas opt for private lodgings as the new session has begun.  But, instead of negotiating the rent, these students have to first tell the landlords about their family status and locations of their homes ~ the most popular method, apparently, to ascertain one's caste and family background.  

What’s even worse, agencies that are supposed to help students in getting rooms on rent insist that the students mention in a personal proforma their castes and preferences for landlords of the castes of their choice. 

“It's revolting the way landlords grill us about our caste and family status", said Vikrant Kumar, a student who has come to Patna to prepare for competitive examinations.  

“Even the Thackerays in Mumbai are better than these landlords in Patna! At least the Thackerays want to know only whether one is from Bihar, but not about one's caste or creed," he said. 

Another student, Saurabh Kumar, said the landlord he had gone to had asked him whether he belonged to his caste, whether he was single and of course the area he was from. 

Social scientists condemned the prevailing trend. "It's certainly not a sign of healthy democracy,” remarked Professor Hetukar Jha. 

Prof Nawal Kishore Chaudhary of Patna University said it was all because of vote-bank politics which, according to him, has caused sharp divisions in the society. 

During the 15-year-long RJD regime led by Lalu Prasad and his wife Rabri Devi the usual fights were primarily between the "forward" and the "backward" who suddenly became aggressive apparently bolstered by the implementation of the Mandal Commission report.  

During Mr Nitish Kumar's tenure as Bihar chief minister, caste divisions have become much wider with the government dividing communities into classes and castes into sub-castes. 

The whole issue came to the fore after the Nitish Kumar government classified 18 of 22 Dalit castes as Mahadalits. The four castes left out from the Mahadalit category were Paswan, Pasi, Dhobi and Chamar. As the move triggered strong protests, the government subsequently brought three more castes into the category, all except for Paswan.  

The reason for the exclusion of the last caste is apparently the hostile stand taken by the Lok Janshakti Party chief Ram Vilas Paswan against the NDA government's policies in Bihar. 

There's also a minority twist to the problem.

Minority leaders have criticised the Nitish Kumar government for giving priority to Pasmanda Muslims or Dalit Muslims in the party and government while ignoring the upper castes. The Pasmanda Muslims are led by Rajya Sabha MP Ali Anwar, a Muslim face of the JD-U. 

Opposition exposes Nitish's double standard






Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar, who is now making a strong pitch for getting special category status for his state, was actually using all  his might to scuttle the efforts of his predecessor, Rabri Devi, to realise the same demand.

The Opposition parties are now digging up old newspaper clippings to expose the "double standard" of Kumar.

When the ruling Janata Dal (United) is taking the campaign for special status for Bihar to a feverish pitch, the RJD and the Congress have decided to hit back.

And it's RJD chief Lalu Prasad who has taken it upon himself to orchestrate the move to "call the chief minister's bluff ".

"We are going to circulate copies of old newspaper clippings wherein then Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee during a rally at Patna’s Gandhi Maidan in February 2002 agreed to seriously consider the special category status demand made by former chief minister Rabri Devi. But, he later rejected it”, Prasad said. The RJD chief alleged that the rejection was the outcome of pressure applied by Kumar who was then railway minister of the Vajpayee government.

The RJD chief said he would go to the masses armed with evidence and make them aware of how the chief minister was "hoodwinking" the people. The Congress, too, has planned to circulate copies of  the speech of the former Prime Minister rejecting the special category status demand and paste copies of the speech at all the block headquarters across the state. The Congress was then a coalition partner in the ruling RJD government in the state headed by Rabri Devi.

 “The only one responsible for Bihar not getting  special status is the NDA government and Nitish Kumar. The former Prime Minister declared in the presence of Kumar and Sushil Kumar Modi during a rally at Gandhi Maidan that Bihar won't be given special status. The news was covered by all the newspapers in Patna the next day. We will now distribute copies of this speech among the masses and expose the hollowness of the state chief minister's campaign,” the state Congress president, Chaudhary Memboob Ali Kaiser, said.

Political circles say Kumar’s demand for special category status is nothing more than a “political stunt” as Bihar does not fulfil the criteria required to avail this facility. They say if Bihar is granted the status, then other states too will make the same demand. Eleven states which share international boundaries are inaccessible and backward ~ both socially and economically~ due to their topography and as such they can demand special status for themselves. 

The Bihar chief minister launched the campaign for special status through his month-long “Adhikar yatra” from north Bihar’s West Champaran district to drum up support for the demand. The yatra which is set to cover each of the 38 districts of Bihar will culminate in a massive “Adhikar Rally” in Patna’s Gandhi Maidan.

He is equating the question of special status with Bihar's "pride and is gearing up for mobilising the people to fight for their pride at the rally. “I am fighting to restore the dignity of the people of Bihar by bringing the fruits of developments to your doorstep so that you people do not have to go outside in search of jobs and face insults”, the CM has been telling the masses at his rallies. 

Explaining the rationale behind this demand, he says the special category status would mean tax recessions to industries which will attract huge investments in the state leading to massive development. However, everything does not appear well with the CM as wherever he has gone, he has received huge protests by unpaid teachers and villagers.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Troubled Nitish buries hatchet with rebel party leader




Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

Amidst the mounting pressure by his rivals to make him an accused in the multi-crore fodder scam, Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar offered to call a truce with his political adversary, Mr Rajiv Ranjan Singh alias Lalan Singh, and is holding meetings with the rebel party leader at intervals. Mr Singh, a powerful leader from the upper caste Bhumihar community was among the four JD-U MPs who were suspended from the party for “anti-party activities” in March last year.  

Mr Singh, who represents Munger in Lok Sabha, was one of the petitioners in the fodder-scam cases which eventually led to the unceremonious exit of former chief minister and RJD chief, Mr Lalu Prasad, who also had to go to jail.  

In the past one month, both the leaders have met twice at the chief minister’s official residence in Patna, fuelling various speculations in the political circles. Last Sunday again, the chief minister had invited the rebel party leader to his official residence during which both of them remained closeted in a room for about three hours.  

Although it is still not known about what transpired between the two leaders then, sources said some “vital” issues were discussed. One of the matters was probably Mr Singh’s suspension from the party which could be withdrawn very soon given the prevailing political compulsions.  

Mr Singh, on his part, showed enough warmth for his rival when he supported Mr Kumar’s yatra to seek special a category status for Bihar to be started later this week.  

While Mr Singh, after staying away from the political limelight and marginalised within his own party ~ that too by his once “langotia yaar-turned-bitter enemy ~ want to restore his lost glory and his hold on his constituency with the talks of mid-term polls in the air, the Bihar chief minister has faced some trouble with his political rivals constantly filing petitions at Ranchi High Court.  

On 7 September, a petition was filed by Mr Mithilesh Kumar Singh, a social worker, at the CBI court in Ranchi to make the Bihar chief minister an accused in the fodder scam. In his petition, the petitioner claimed there was enough evidence pointing towards the involvement of the Bihar chief minister in the scam. He had earlier filed a similar plea in the CBI court which was rejected. Subsequently, he moved Jharkhand High Court which asked him to approach the CBI court.  

Media reports said the CBI court has admitted the petition of Mr Singh, seeking to make the Bihar chief minister and another party MP, Mr Shivanand Tiwari, accused in the fodder scam. The court has fixed the next date of hearing for 25 September.

The petitioner’s counsel, Mr Bhola Nath Jha, has told the Press that the petition sought the inclusion of the Bihar chief minister and Mr Tiwary as accused in fodder scam cases. “The petitioner has submitted that there are sufficient evidences which point at both Mr Kumar, who was then a Janata Dal MLA, and Mr Tiwary having received Rs 1 crore and Rs 60 lakh, respectively from the then regional director of the animal husbandry department and kingpin of the scam SB Sinha”. 

Reports further said the RJD chief, too, is preparing to submit a petition from his side in this regard. All these developments have virtually robbed off the sleep of the Bihar chief minister who now looks to be trying hard to get the support of all those, even his rivals, who were even remotely connected with the fodder scam. The JD-U sources, though, denied Mr Kumar’s bonhomie with the rebel party leader had anything to so with Mr Kumar’s impending problems.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Seamier side





The Nitish Kumar government may insist that law and order problems are a thing of the past in Bihar but its curious reluctance to deliver justice to a teenage gang-rape victim undermines the claim, writes Manoj Chaurasia ...  

Bihar under chief minister Mr Nitish Kumar is repeatedly projected as a land where crime is history. The administrators claim that the jails of the state are choc-a-bloc with notorious criminals whose trials have been fast tracked, that no massacre has taken place in the state since 2005 and that people are leading a much more harmonious life. Bihar’s ‘transformation’ has not only captivated national dailies but also international publications such as The Economist, The New York Times and Time that believe the state has become a model of governance worth emulating across the country.

However, while the Assam government lost no time in putting the alleged perpetrators behind bars following the very public molestation of a young girl on a Guwahati street after TV channels ran the news, Bihar continues to investigate and re-investigate the gang-rape of a teenage girl nearly two months after the crime was committed in the high-security zone of Patna. While the crime is believed to have been committed last June, the principal culprits ~ who reportedly come from influential families ~ remain untraceable. The Opposition is accusing the powers-that-be of pressuring the administration to shield the perpetrators.

Apparently, police initially took no notice despite a copy of the CD containing footage of the gang-rape being made available to them on 12 July, 2012. It is believed that the perpetrators ~ some eight of them ~ had uploaded the footage onto the Internet once the victim refused to submit to them any more.

The victim was apparently duped by her boyfriend Prashant Jha into entering Flat No 301 of Rambha Apartment located off Patna’s upscale Bailey Road where seven other young men were waiting for them. While each of them took turns to rape the teenager, one managed to capture the gang-rape on his cellphone. CDs were eventually burnt to blackmail the teenager into repeated submission. This went on for a month. When the victim started resisting them, the perpetrators started circulating the CDs and also ensured that the footage found its way into the Internet. Even Patna police received a copy but took no action saying the victim needed to lodge a complaint first.

“If news channels had been reporting a gang-rape for one week, why did not police at least get in touch with reporters?” wondered noted social activist Ms Kanchan Bala. It was only after local TV news channels kept following up the news, telecast bits of the footage and flashed pictures of the perpetrators on 12 July, 2012 that the administration found itself under pressure. Women’s rights groups took to the streets of the state capital and even organised a candlelight procession. Bihar women’s commission finally sat up and Commission member Chandramukhi Devi visited the victim at her home, recorded her statement and forwarded her complaint to police. It was then that police registered a first information report (FIR).

But the Opposition alleges that the FIR had been deliberately diluted to protect the perpetrators. In an open letter dated 6 August, 2012 to the state’s director-general of police, Opposition lawmakers raised 17 points. “Even after the women’s commission had obtained a signed statement from the victim on 18 July, why did not police include in the FIR the names of Saurabh and Sushant who figure in her (victim’s) statement recorded by a court under Section 164 of the CrPC?” is one point raised by the Opposition. The open letter also suggests that police arrested only six perpetrators while the victim had mentioned eight in her statement to the court.

Police swung into action when Patna’s chief judicial magistrate issued a warrant of arrest against the culprits after taking suo motu cognisance of the gang-rape that was reported by a newspaper on its front page on 25 July, 2012. But, Saurabh, said to be the son of a JD-S lawmaker in the Nitish Kumar government, is still evading arrest. The conspiracy to protect Saurabh became apparent when police picked up Dinesh Paswan, a domestic help with the alleged perpetrator’s family, and produced him in the court of the CJM, Patna asserting that he was the missing Saurabh. According to the Opposition’s open letter to the top cop, Paswan spilled the beans in court and described Saurabh as a “fair complexioned, handsome boy who resides in a government flat near the Hanuman Mandir in Ranvanshi Nagar”. A JD-U lawmaker has already lodged a complaint against a local Hindi news portal for suggesting that Saurabh was his son.

Bihar’s women’s commission too has accused police of shielding the main culprits. “The scene of crime described by the culprit does not match what police insist is,” Chandramukhi Devi said, it alleging that Patna police were trying to cover up for powerful people. She said: “Police are definitely under huge pressure to make the victim recant. The scene of crime that police are scouring bears little resemblance to what is on the rape footage.”

Local media claims that it had received the CD about a month ago and promptly handed a copy to the then Patna city superintendent of police Ms Kim Sharma for action. It is believed that Ms Sharma had been secretly gathering evidence when she was transferred to the distant eastern Bihar town of Katihar. The administration remains tight-lipped. The matter rocked the current monsoon session of the state Assembly but the only thing the government has done so far is to make a routine promise to deliver justice to the victim.

The teenage victim, who is from a family of modest means, has described the gang-rape as a nightmare. With both the chief minister and the director-general of police remaining mysteriously mum, it seems her ordeal is far from over.

The writer is The Statesman’s Patna-based Special Representative