Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Thanks But No Thanks, Parkash Singh Badal Says To Chief Minister Amarinder Singh's Offer

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Mar, 2017 12:42 PM
  • Thanks But No Thanks, Parkash Singh Badal Says To Chief Minister Amarinder Singh's Offer
Former Chief Minister of Punjab Parkash Singh Badal, who helmed the state for 10 years, is hunting for a house nowadays. On Sunday, he "politely" declined the new Congress government's offer of free government accommodation in the state capital Chandigarh.
 
The Amarinder Singh-government had offered a suitable bungalow to Badal, a five-time Chief Minister of Punjab.
 
Mr Badal said, "I am thankful to Chief Minister Amarinder Singh for his gracious gesture. It is very graceful of him to make this offer. But I am making my own arrangements for stay. I value his sentiment highly and fully reciprocate it."
 
The veteran Akali leader's aides are hunting for a house for him in the town's Sector 8 for a week now.
 
Mr Badal's family owns two big-sized plots of residential land, measuring almost 1.5 acres, in upscale Sector 9, but a new structure is coming up after the old one was pulled down.
 
 
Mr Badal, 89, lived in the chief ministerial bungalow in Chandigarh's tony Sector 2 before his Shiromani Akali Dal was routed in the February 4 assembly elections.
 
Since Mr Badal is only a legislator from Lambi and his party has only 15 legislators in the new assembly, he does not qualify for the status of Leader of Opposition and hence not officially entitled to a government bungalow.
 
According to reports, the SAD-BJP alliance lost the elections due to a drop in the vote share. The alliance received a 31 per cent vote share while the Congress and the AAP got 38 per cent and 23 per cent respectively, SAD president Sukhbir Singh Badal added.
 
Mr Badal, the country's oldest serving Chief Minister till his party was decimated in the electoral battle, did not attend the swearing in of the new Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh on March 16.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Pak Army Chief Wants Officers To Learn From Indian Democracy: Report

Pak Army Chief Wants Officers To Learn From Indian Democracy: Report
He also asked his officers to read a book titled 'Army and Nation' written by Steven I Wilkinson, a professor of Political Science and International Relations at Yale University, about Indian Army's relationship with the civilian government after independence.

Pak Army Chief Wants Officers To Learn From Indian Democracy: Report

More Reasons To Tie The Knot: Study Shows Marriage Makes You Happier

More Reasons To Tie The Knot: Study Shows Marriage Makes You Happier
Offering couples more reasons to celebrate love on this Valentine's Day -- and beyond, a new study has found that married people face less psychological stress than unmarried individuals.

More Reasons To Tie The Knot: Study Shows Marriage Makes You Happier

Balaclava Rapist's Day Parole Extended But Tightly Restricted: Parole Board

Balaclava Rapist's Day Parole Extended But Tightly Restricted: Parole Board
VANCOUVER — The parole board has been keeping a tight rein on the man known as the balaclava rapist since he was granted day parole last year, newly released documents reveal.

Balaclava Rapist's Day Parole Extended But Tightly Restricted: Parole Board

Vancouver Police Say Three Early Morning Fires Appears To Be Deliberate

Vancouver Police Say Three Early Morning Fires Appears To Be Deliberate
  Police say the fires early Monday morning in east Vancouver appear to be related and deliberately set.

Vancouver Police Say Three Early Morning Fires Appears To Be Deliberate

Indian-Origin Hotel Manager Charged For Helping US Gang

Indian-Origin Hotel Manager Charged For Helping US Gang
An Indian-origin hotel manager faces federal charges for allegedly helping a feared street gang in its drug-dealing and prostitution operations in California, according to prosecutors.

Indian-Origin Hotel Manager Charged For Helping US Gang

Buckingham Palace Offers 30,000-Pounds-A-Year To Run Queen's Twitter

Buckingham Palace is offering a 30,000-pound annual package for a job to run Queen Elizabeth's personal Twitter account, having 2.77 million followers. 

Buckingham Palace Offers 30,000-Pounds-A-Year To Run Queen's Twitter