Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
India

AAP Crisis: Yogendra Yadav, Prashant Bhushan Sacked From National Executive Body

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Mar, 2015 03:41 PM
    The month-long internecine war between AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal and dissident leaders Yogendra Yadav and Prashant Bhushan came to a head on Saturday with the duo being expelled from the party's national executive for sabotaging the organisation.
     
    The founder-members, who were ousted in a 247-8 vote at the 311-member National Council meeting - marred by protests and chaos - termed the decision a "farce and illegal", saying they might seek legal recourse.
     
    They also hinted at floating another party if required. An AAP source said their expulsion from the party was imminent since their case will be referred to the disciplinary committee.
     
    Ever since the AAP came to power in the national capital by winning 67 of its 70 assembly seats, the party has been embroiled in an internal crisis that has pitted Bhushan and Yadav against Kejriwal, the party's best known face. The duo has repeatedly questioned Kejriwal's supremacy.
     
    Hours after their ouster, Medha Patkar, a senior leader, announced in Mumbai that she was quitting the party, saying what happened in the meeting in New Delhi was disrespect to senior leaders and did not augur well for the future.
     
    Delhi Chief Minister Kejriwal was present at the meeting but left before the voting. The two others who were also sacked were Anand Kumar and Ajit Jha for siding with the rebel duo.
     
    The meeting, chaired by Gopal Rai, started at 10 a.m. with the supporters of both camps shouting slogans against each other and holding banners. Yadav also held a protest outside the venue over denial of entry to "genuine" members.
     
    A national council member told IANS that many members shouted slogans in favour of Yadav and Bhushan during the meeting and were reportedly forcibly removed.
     
     
    A resolution to oust Yadav, Bhushan, Kumar and Jha was tabled by Kejriwal confidant Manish Sisodia. 
     
    AAP national secretary Pankaj Gupta told reporters that 247 members had voted in favour of the proposal for removing the four, while eight - including Delhi legislator Devender Sherawat - opposed it. Two gave their dissent in writing and 54 members expressed no view.
     
    A member who attended the meet told IANS that Kejriwal told the members to "be either with him or with them (Yadav, Bhushan)".
     
    At a media meet later, a visibly upset Bhushan said: "It is true that we can move the court, Election Commission or call another meeting of the national council. All options are open."
     
    "I have been telling him (Kejriwal) this that he has dictatorial tendencies and he must curb them.
     
    "I have failed. Instead of curbing these dictatorial tendencies, he has ruthlessly stifled any opposition," he told reporters.
     
    Yadav also said that goons were also present at the meet who beat their supporters.
     
    AAP was quick to reject the charges as "baseless" with its leader Sanjay Singh saying that Yadav and Bhushan wanted to gain sympathy.
     
    "No violence had taken place. No one was hit or injured," he told media after the meeting.
     
    Bhushan, a noted Supreme Court lawyer, claimed the AAP meeting was scripted while Yadav called it a "murder of democracy". 
     
    "There was no distinction between members and invitees. Manish Sisodia announced they have a petition signed by 160 people... There was no voting, no discussion," said Yadav, a psephologist and co-founder of AAP.
     
    "There were many people who opposed it, they were not even given the chance. It is a total mockery of democracy."
     
    Yadav and Bhushan had five demands -- transparency in the AAP, autonomy for local units, a Lokpal probe into graft charges against party members, AAP should come within the ambit of the RTI, and an end to secret ballot during election to key posts.
     
     
    Anand Kumar, a Jawaharlal Nehru University professor who was also ousted, however said they will not leave the party.
     
    Giving his account of the events, he said: "Kejriwal said we caused trouble in the elections, and asked members to decide whether we should be ousted. But they did not let us speak."
     
    "We are not out of the party. We will neither leave nor break the party. This is a party of the workers," he said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Rahul Gandhi dozes off in Parliament, footage goes viral on social media

    Rahul Gandhi dozes off in Parliament, footage goes viral on social media
    Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi Wednesday dozed off in the Lok Sabha during the debate on price rise, with the BJP using the visuals caught on the house TV channel to hit out at the Congress.

    Rahul Gandhi dozes off in Parliament, footage goes viral on social media

    Punjab to bring e-stamping to phase out stamp papers

    Punjab to bring e-stamping to phase out stamp papers
    Aiming to eliminate the need to purchase and submit stamp papers with legal documents, the Punjab cabinet Tuesday gave nod to the draft of the state e-stamp rules, 2014 for the implementation of e-stamping system.

    Punjab to bring e-stamping to phase out stamp papers

    Tech, commerce to power Indian Railways in future

    Tech, commerce to power Indian Railways in future
    Bullet trains are set to become a reality in India with the first service between Mumbai and Ahmedabad as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government sought to run Indian Railways - one of the world's largest - like a "commercial enterprise but serve like a welfare organization".

    Tech, commerce to power Indian Railways in future

    91 Punjabis return from Iraq

    91 Punjabis return from Iraq
    At least 91 men from Punjab who were stuck in conflict-hit Iraq have returned home, a state government spokesman said here Tuesday.

    91 Punjabis return from Iraq

    Punjab rides 'HIGH' on pharmaceutical intoxicants

    Punjab rides 'HIGH' on pharmaceutical intoxicants
    The increasing seizures of drugs, especially heroin, in recent years shows that Punjab has emerged as a major transit point for those in the illegal drugs trade. But the state itself, facing a worrying drugs menace, is hooked to pharmaceutical intoxicants.

    Punjab rides 'HIGH' on pharmaceutical intoxicants

    Where is Breaking News? Modi government tightens grip on information

    Where is Breaking News? Modi government tightens grip on information
    Among the subtle changes associated with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government are those dealing with the media and nowhere has it affected a news-hungry media's working more than in the way news sources from the government have completely dried up and resulted in shrinking of the culture of intermittent Breaking News on television.

    Where is Breaking News? Modi government tightens grip on information