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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, August 12, 2001 |
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LCP splits, Agrawal expelled
By Our Special Correspondent
LUCKNOW, AUG. 11. The dismissed Uttar Pradesh Minister for
Energy, Mr. Naresh Agrawal, was today left in the lurch by all
but one of his party MLAs who formed their own group and decided
to continue their support to the Rajnath Singh Government.
At a meeting here this afternoon in which 14 of the 19 Loktantrik
Congress Party (LCP) Ministers were present, Mr. Shyam Sunder
Sharma was elected the LCP legislature group leader in the place
of Mr. Agrawal. A resolution was adopted to expel Mr. Agrawal
from the party keeping in view the Chief Minister's decision to
dismiss him from the Cabinet, thus splitting the LCP.
The LCP MLAs claimed that besides the 14 MLAs who were present at
the meeting three others had also decided to join the group and
extend their support to Mr. Rajnath Singh. That left the lone LCP
MLA, Mr. Vikramajit Maurya, to keep Mr. Agrawal company.
After arriving here from New Delhi in the noon, Mr. Agarwal
claimed the support of six MLAs, three of whom - Mr. Vikramajit
Maurya, Mr. Bachcha Pathak and Mr. Vinay Pandey - were with him
while he addressed presspersons. By evening Mr. Bachcha Pathak
and Mr. Vinay Pandey had decided to support Mr. Rajnath Singh.
The new LCP legislature group has left the issue of electing a
party president to the workers. Mr. Agrawal was so far
functioning as the chief of the LCP both within and outside the
legislature.
On his dismissal, Mr. Agrawal charged that the Chief Minister had
stabbed him in the back. While in the Government, he was trying
to play the role of the Opposition and was expressing his opinion
on important issues. His speech at Hardwar earlier this week was
no different in tone and tenor from what he had said earlier, he
said. But while his earlier statements had been ignored, this
time the Chief Minister decided to dismiss him from the Cabinet.
Mr. Agrawal said the party cadres were angry because they were
being treated shabbily by the BJP leaders. He had brought this
fact to light time and again but in vain.
He said he had also demanded Assembly elections in October this
year instead of March next year. This had rattled the BJP
leadership. Now he would go to the people and ``expose the real
face of the communal BJP''.
Mr. Agrawal accepted that he had very close relations with the
Samajwadi Party leader, Mr. Mulayam Singh Yadav. However, he had
still to take a decision on forming an electoral alliance with
any party, he said.
Prove majority: Mayawati
The Bahujan Samaj Party leader, Ms. Mayawati, today demanded that
the Chief Minister summon the Assembly immediately and prove his
majority on the floor of the House. ``In case the Chief Minister
failed to do so, the Centre should dismiss him,'' she said,
claiming that the BJP-led Government had lost its majority in the
Assembly following withdrawal of support to it by the LCP.
Dismiss Govt.: Cong.
PTI reports:
The U.P. Congress demanded the dismissal of the Rajnath Singh
Government and imposition of President's rule saying the BJP-led
Government had lost its majority.
A Government mustering support through ``horse-trading'' should
not be allowed to continue, it said.
A delegation of Congress leaders met the Governor, Mr. Vishnu
Kant Shastri, and submitted a memorandum demanding imposition of
Central rule leading to fresh elections.
BJP rejects demand
The BJP rejected the Opposition's demand for convening a special
Assembly session, saying the ``dismissal of a Minister is the
prerogative of the Chief Minister and there is no tradition to
summon the Assembly after a dismissal.'' The party spokesman, Mr.
Hriday Narain Dixit, also rejected the demand for imposition of
President's rule.
In New Delhi, Mr. Mulayam Singh Yadav demanded the immediate
dismissal of Rajnath Singh Government. Asked whether Mr. Agarwal
had met him to explore new political equations, Mr. Mulayam Yadav
evaded a direct reply saying his relationship with him was
cordial. ``We may have ideological differences, but personally we
are very close.''
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