Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
India

Mamata not to attend Modi's swearing-in

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 May, 2014 02:03 PM
    West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee will stay away from the swearing-in ceremony of Narendra Modi as prime minister May 26, but send two of her close associates to the event, a state minister announced Friday.
     
    However, the opposition CPI-M said no representative from the party's state unit would attend the ceremony.
     
    Urban Development Minister Firhad Hakim said Finance Minister Amit Mitra and party's national general secretary and Rajya Sabha member Mukul Roy would grace the function at the Rashtrapati Bhavan for which Banerjee has been invited.
     
    He said Banerjee would be preoccupied with the birthday celebrations of rebel poet Kazi Nazrul Islam May 26 when she would also inaugurate "Nazrul Tirtha" in the city's north eastern outskirts.
     
    Banerjee and Modi had engaged in a serial war of words during the Lok Sabha election campaign.
     
    Banerjee has also not sent any congratulatory messages to Modi who led the BJP to an absolute majority for the first time in the polls.
     
    The Trinamool chief has for years faced attacks from the opposition in West Bengal - which has an estimated 25 percent plus Muslim population - for sending flowers to then Gujarat chief minister Modi on his victory in the 2002 assembly polls, months after fierce communal disturbances in the western state.
     
    However, Trinamool's discomfiture with Modi was also in evidence during the day.
     
     
    Initially, Hakim said Roy would represent the Trinamool. But within minutes he returned to the media podium at the state secretariat Nabanna with an amendment. "Roy, like Mitra, will represent the government."
     
    When journalists asked the minister to spell out the post which Roy held in the government, he replied: "He is the leader of our MPs in parliament".
     
    Meanwhile, Leader of the Opposition in assembly Sujya Kanta Mishra said the nobody from the West Bengal unit of the Communist Party of India-Marxist would be present at the May 26 programme.
     
    "I can say that no one from our state (party) unit will attend the swearing-in. In the past also, we had boycotted the swearing in ceremony of the BJP-led government at the centre," he said.
     
    However, the CPI-M politburo member parried a query on whether the party was nationally boycotting Modi's swearing in. "I'm not the politburo spokesperson. This question can be answered only by them."
     
    In the recent polls, the Banerjee led Trinamool bagged 34 of the 42 Lok Sabha seats in the state. The CPI-M came up with its worst performance in the state since its formation 50 years back by winning only two seats. A resurgent BJP also got two seats.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Breaking Brahmin Monopoly: Hindu Temple To Have Women, Lower-Caste Priests

    Breaking Brahmin Monopoly: Hindu Temple To Have Women, Lower-Caste Priests
    Here's another traditional male bastion set to crumble. With a Supreme Court prod, the renowned 900-year old Vitthoba Temple in the pilgrim town of Pandharpur will script religious history when it appoints its first women priests as also priests from the backward classes as part of an inclusive mission.

    Breaking Brahmin Monopoly: Hindu Temple To Have Women, Lower-Caste Priests

    Sonia Gandhi's plane makes emergency landing

    Sonia Gandhi's plane makes emergency landing
    A private plane flying Congress president Sonia Gandhi was forced to make an emergency landing in Agra due to gusty winds and bad weather in New Delhi late Thursday, an official said Friday

    Sonia Gandhi's plane makes emergency landing

    Over 100,000 Indians studying in America

    Over 100,000 Indians studying in America
    With 113,813 Indians studying in America, India is second only to China with 290,133 students among more than a million international students enrolled in nearly 9,000 US schools, according to a new report.

    Over 100,000 Indians studying in America

    Judiciary, media best judges of 2002 riots: Modi

    Judiciary, media best judges of 2002 riots: Modi
    As far as the 2002 Gujarat riots were concerned, it is the judiciary, media and NGOs which should be left to draw conclusions, BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi said.

    Judiciary, media best judges of 2002 riots: Modi

    Truth will come out in allegations against Robert Vadra, says Modi

    Truth will come out in allegations against Robert Vadra, says Modi
    The BJP government in Rajasthan was following due procedures over allegations concerning land deals of Sonia Gandhi's son-in-law Robert Vadra and the truth will be revealed, said Narendra Modi.

    Truth will come out in allegations against Robert Vadra, says Modi

    Witnesses deposed against me under CBI pressure, Kanimozhi tells court

    Witnesses deposed against me under CBI pressure, Kanimozhi tells court
    Declined to lead the defence evidence, DMK MP Kanimozhi told a court here Thursday that prosecution witnesses have deposed against her in the 2G spectrum allocation case under CBI pressure.

    Witnesses deposed against me under CBI pressure, Kanimozhi tells court