Elections 2019: In Assam, Prafulla Mahanta finds himself at the crossroads
The
Asom
Gana Parishad
(AGP) is split but not fully out because Prafulla Kumar Mahanta, its
founder and leader (until recently), stands isolated as the party is
back with the Bharatiya Janata Party in Assam after a brief
‘estrangement’ to Mahanta’s surprise and disapproval. He turned
to small regional outfits on the political periphery to support him
but interestingly, even the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU), of
which he was once the spearhead, was indifferent to his appeal.
The
trigger for Mahanta’s dissent was the AGP’s decision last week to
return to the National Democratic Alliance and contest the Lok Sabha
polls together after “walking out” of the coalition last January
to protest the BJP’s doggedness to pass the contentious Citizenship
(Amendment) Bill, 2019, in Parliament. Eventually, the Centre put it
aside, after the entire north-east rose up in arms because the
proposed law would have legalised the citizenship rights of
foreigners of every religious denomination living in these states,
barring Muslims. To the AGP--whose progenitor, the AASU, led one of
independent India’s long-drawn agitation against ‘illegal
infiltrators’ from Bangladesh who were domiciled and given voting
rights in Assam--the amendment was an abomination because the AASU
never recognised ‘infiltrators’ as Hindus and Muslims.Three AGP ministers in the BJP-led government, Atul Bora, Keshab Mahanta and Phani Bhushan Choudhary, put in their papers in “protest”. However, reliable BJP sources said the “understanding” was the BJP would pound away the bill for a while to disseminate a “larger” political message the country over and put it aside expediently. Until such time, its leaders counselled the AGP to stay out of the government. Read More
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