Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
India

WATCH: Congress, Akalis, Aap Flex Political Muscles In Punjab

IANS, 15 Dec, 2015 10:59 AM
  • WATCH: Congress, Akalis, Aap Flex Political Muscles In Punjab
Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) and opposition Congress held political rallies on Tuesday in Patiala and Bathinda respectively while Aam Aadmi Party held statewide protests against the state government.
 
Hardliner Sikh leader Simranjit Singh Mann held a rally in Bargari village in Faridkot district, where sacrilege of Guru Granth Sahib had sparked major protests and violence across the state.
 
Speaking at the rally in Bathinda, a stronghold of the Badals, newly appointed Punjab Congress unit president Captain Amarinder Singh said that the SAD was out to ruin Punjab.
 
 
Amarinder Singh, a deputy leader of the Congress in the Lok Sabha, vowed to end drug pedalling and addiction in Punjab and punish the guilty, end corruption and cancel all false cases registered against Congress workers during the 10-year SAD rule in case his party returned to power.
 
The former chief minister asked Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and his son and Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Badal to be ready for a big political fight in the next assembly polls, slated for early 2017.
 
 
The Congress rally saw faction-ridden state unit putting up a show of unity on the stage. Amarinder Singh was formally handed over reins of the party's state unit by outgoing president Pratap Singh Bajwa. 
 
Both leaders have been bitter critics of each other in the past.
 
Bajwa too lashed out at the Badals for "destroying Punjab", saying the mammoth crowd at the Congress rally was a reflection of public anger against the Badals.
 
In Patiala, the hometown of Amarinder Singh, Chief Minister Badal and Sukhbir lashed out at the Congress and the AAP, and said both parties were trying to mislead people.
 
The Akali Dal leaders blamed the Congress for the recent violence and protests in Punjab.
 
 
The chief minister asked Amarinder to give up his "feudal mindset" and work to ensure peace and development in Punjab.
 
"Amarinder must refrain from using language that vitiates the congenial atmosphere in the state. I advised him to shun politics of confrontation and concentrate on politics of consensus to ensure overall development and prosperity in the state," Badal said at the 'Sadbhawna' rally' in Patiala, 80 km from here.
 
Sukhbir said the Congress had always been inimical to the people of Punjab. 
 
The Akali Dal-BJP alliance government has been in power in Punjab since 2007. The state assembly's present term ends in 2017.
 
AMARINDER AND PUNJAB CM BADAL EXCHANGE SWEETS, FLOWERS
 
Bitter political rivals Amarinder Singh of the Congress and Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal on Tuesday exchanged sweets and flowers through emissaries.
 
 
This show of bonhomie - even if only for a while - between the two came on a day when their parties, the opposition Congress and the ruling Shiromali Akali Dal in Punjab, are holding rallies in Bathinda and Patiala respectively. 
 
Amarinder sent sweets and flowers, plucked from the garden of his estate in Patiala, to Badal through a close aide.
 
In return, Badal greeted Amarinder Singh, deputy leader of the Congress in the Lok Sabha, on his appointment as chief of the Punjab unit of the Congress and sent a bouquet of flowers, a fruit basket and five boxes of sweets.
 
Amarinder Singh will formally take over as Punjab Congress president at the Tuesday public rally in Bathinda, the stronghold of the ruling Badal family.
 
The Shiormani Akali Dal is holding its 'Sadbhavana' rally in Patiala, the hometown of Amarinder Singh.
 
After the Akalis announced their Patiala rally, Amarinder said the Badals would be given sweets and flowers over his appointment as Punjab Congress chief. 

MORE India ARTICLES

Congress will again back AAP if needed: Dikshit

Congress will again back AAP if needed: Dikshit
The Congress was ready to support an AAP government again in the event of a hung assembly in the capital, former chief minister Sheila Dikshit said Thursday

Congress will again back AAP if needed: Dikshit

Punjab offers incentives to curb stubble burning

Punjab offers incentives to curb stubble burning
To curb the menace of straw burning in the state, Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Thursday announced incentives of Rs.1 lakh and Rs.1 crore as financial grants to villages and districts which were free from stubble burning across the state

Punjab offers incentives to curb stubble burning

Diaspora's strength can be driving force for India: Modi

Diaspora's strength can be driving force for India: Modi
Prime Minister Narendra Modi Thursday said every NRI is like a "shakti" and if the strength of the entire diaspora can be consolidated, it could become a driving force for India's progress

Diaspora's strength can be driving force for India: Modi

Khalistani Terrorists Find Favour With Akalis, Badals Demand Early Release Of 13 Convicts

Khalistani Terrorists Find Favour With Akalis, Badals Demand Early Release Of 13 Convicts
Some of the most dreaded Khalistani terrorists, including those involved in mass killings and VIP assassinations, have found favour with Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal, which is seeking their release from prisons.

Khalistani Terrorists Find Favour With Akalis, Badals Demand Early Release Of 13 Convicts

Men Manipulated The Price Of Company Shares: B.C. Securities Commission

Men Manipulated The Price Of Company Shares: B.C. Securities Commission

VANCOUVER — Securities' regulators in British Columbia say a North Vancouver man and tw...

Men Manipulated The Price Of Company Shares: B.C. Securities Commission

Shashi Tharoor Alleges Bid To Implicate Him In Sunanda Death

Shashi Tharoor Alleges Bid To Implicate Him In Sunanda Death
A day after police said Sunanda Pushkar was poisoned, her husband and Congress MP Shashi Tharoor alleged in a letter made public Wednesday that a police officer tried to implicate him and a domestic help in her mysterious death.

Shashi Tharoor Alleges Bid To Implicate Him In Sunanda Death