Close X
Thursday, October 10, 2024
ADVT 
India

BJP Wants To Rule Kashmir - With Hindu Chief Minister

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Dec, 2014 05:27 PM
    The BJP declared Thursday that it was determined to govern Jammu and Kashmir amid speculation that the National Conference would ally with it if the BJP didn't insist on a Hindu chief minister for the country's only Muslim-majority state.
     
    BJP leaders Arun Jaitley and Ram Madhav made known the party's intentions separately in Jammu and Srinagar, with the latter saying he was in the state to explore various options on government formation after elections led to a hung 87-member assembly.
     
    The BJP and the National Conference, the second and third largest groups in the house with 25 and 15 members, denied they were in secret talks. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which won 28 seats, was reportedly looking at both the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress as possible allies.
     
    Jammu and Kashmir must have a BJP-led government, party general secretary Ram Madhav said, adding he was in Srinagar to explore the various options.
     
    Ram Madhav told reporters: "The BJP has the mandate to lead the government in Jammu and Kashmir. I am here to explore the options."
     
    He added that he was meeting representatives from different parties but did not provide details.
     
    "We are open to discussions, and meetings can be had with the prime minister also in this regard," he added, two days after the BJP emerged as the second largest group in the Kashmir assembly for the first time.
     
    BJP sources told IANS that talks between the National Conference and the BJP had hit a roadblock because of the BJP's insistence on having a Hindu chief minister.
     
    In Jammu, Finance Minister Jaitley said the BJP would play a prominent role in government formation and the decision on its exact nature had been left to party president Amit Shah.
     
    Briefing reporters after meeting newly-elected BJP legislators, Jaitley underlined that his party got the largest popular vote in the state though it contested from only 76 of the 87 constituencies.
     
    He said the BJP was in touch with "independent and unattached" legislators.
     
    "Whatever government is formed, the BJP should have a prominent role in the political process as the popular mandate in terms of highest vote is with us," he said.
     
    The National Conference, the sources said, was ready to support and even join a BJP-led coalition on the condition that the BJP gives up its demand for a Hindu chief minister.
     
    At the same time, the PDP, while keeping its options open vis-a-vis the BJP, had sent feelers to Sajad Lone that he could be a deputy chief minister if he backed a PDP-Congress coalition, the sources said.
     
    Sajad Lone's People's Conference has won two seats. Congress candidates were elected from 15 constituencies. 
     
    Another independent, Hakim Yaseen, has denied media reports that he had announced support for a BJP-led government.
     
    Seven independents have also been elected to the assembly. A group of parties will need the support of 44 members to form a government.
     
    Earlier, Ram Madhav denied a meeting had taken place between the National Conference and the BJP leadership. 
     
    Outgoing Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, who has been in New Delhi since Wednesday, retweeted Ram Madhav's statement.
     
    Some reports say the BJP would get the chief minister's post for a full six years while Abdullah would join the union cabinet led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
     
    A PDP spokesperson said the reports were meant to mount pressure on it to reach an early post-election agreement with the BJP. "As of now, we have decided to wait and watch," the spokesperson told IANS.
     
    All the BJP legislators were elected from the Hindu-majority Jammu region while almost all PDP and National Conference legislators won from the largely Muslim Kashmir Valley.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Arvind Kejriwal Caught Doing 'Media Fixing'

    Arvind Kejriwal Caught Doing 'Media Fixing'
    Video showing Aam Aadmi Party leader and former Chief Minister of New Delhi, Arvind Kejriwal asking TV news anchor, Punya Prasun Bajpai to highlight certain segments of his interview has gone viral on YouTube. 

    Arvind Kejriwal Caught Doing 'Media Fixing'

    Election Commission of India Orders Scrutiny of Illegal Flow of Money and Liquor in Delhi

    Election Commission of India Orders Scrutiny of Illegal Flow of Money and Liquor in Delhi
    The Election Commission (EC) in Delhi Monday directed the excise and the income-tax departments to strictly monitor the flow of illegal alcohol and flow of money in the national capital prior to the Lok Sabha polls.

    Election Commission of India Orders Scrutiny of Illegal Flow of Money and Liquor in Delhi

    2014 polls: Congress down, BJP far from Mission 272

    2014 polls: Congress down, BJP far from Mission 272
    Next month's general elections may prove to be the most significant ever because they can determine the fate of the Congress' first family.

    2014 polls: Congress down, BJP far from Mission 272

    Women's Day: Women break barriers, don the entrepreneur's cap

    Women's Day: Women break barriers, don the entrepreneur's cap
    Shravani Hagargi's parents gave her three options - continue with her studies, get married or do a regular 9-5 job. But her urge to do something for the uplifting her fellow women was stronger than her parents' command.

    Women's Day: Women break barriers, don the entrepreneur's cap

    US cosying up to Narendra Modi?

    US cosying up to Narendra Modi?
    Even as a visiting US official indicated the country's willingness to work with India's new leader post elections whoever it may be, Washington insisted there is no change in its visa policy in respect of Narendra Modi.

    US cosying up to Narendra Modi?

    Tebbit Test for Kashmiris who applaud Pakistan cricket team?

    Tebbit Test for Kashmiris who applaud Pakistan cricket team?
    Across its six columns on page one last Wednesday, The Indian Express screamed: “For ‘cheering’ Pakistan in India Match, University in Meerut suspends 67 Kashmiri students.”

    Tebbit Test for Kashmiris who applaud Pakistan cricket team?