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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, January 14, 2001 |
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Southern States
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Preparations on for three-day Cong plenary session
By A.Jayaram
BANGALORE, JAN 13. The hard realities are dawning on the KPCC(I)
leaders as they set out to make arrangements for the Congress
plenary to be held in Bangalore from February 14 to 16.
For the record, it will only be the third plenary to be held in
Karnataka. The State has the unique honour of having hosted the
only Congress session to have been presided over by Mahatma
Gandhi, and that was in Belgaum. Two of the titans of the
Congress contributed by the State, Gangadhara Rao Deshpande and
Dr. Narayan Subbarao Hardikar, were in the vanguard of the
reception committee. The latter launched the Hindustan Seva Dal.
The second Congress plenary to be held in the State was the 65th
session of the party held in January 1960 and presided over by
Neelam Sanjiva Reddy, who later became President of India. It was
held at today's Sadashivanagar, which was formed on the just then
destroyed Palace Orchards. There were no environmentalists those
days to protest against the large-scale massacre of trees and
greenery. The B.D.Jatti government was in office those days. The
MPCC President then was the pioneer Congressman and Kannada
journalist, H.K.Veeranna Gowda. A scout jambooree had been held
on the former Palace Orchard ground before the Congress session.
The venue of the 1960 Congress was named after Karnad Sadashiva
Rao (1881-1936) well-known Congressman and freedom fighter of
Dakshina Kannada. He had dedicated himself to the cause of
freedom and died of fever contracted at the Faizpur Congress of
1936.
The venue of the 1924 Belgaum Congress had been named Vijayanagar
after the Vijayanagar empire. Historically, it has been more
significant than the 1960 Congress. It was the Belgaum Congress
which ratified the pact between Gandhiji and the Swarajists,
C.R.Das and Motilal Nehru, on the question of Council entry.
Annie Besant, who had opposed the pact, arrived late and after
the ratification. It was also at Belgaum that Gandhiji stipulated
spinning of Khadi and constructive work for Congress members. He
was yet to come out in support of complete Independence. In his
address, he preferred a federation of friendly independent States
to complete Independence as the political goal of the Congress.
However, Bangalore City had hosted three AICC sessions, the most
famous of which was the July 1969 session which led to the famous
Congress Split which occurred the next month. S.Nijalingappa was
the AICC President then and Indira Gandhi Prime Minister.
An AICC session was held in the City in 1952 when K.Hanumanthaiya
was the Chief Minister of Mysore (the reorganisation of the State
was four years away). Jawaharlal Nehru was both Prime Minister
and Congress President. He had taken over the reins of the party
after the forced exit of Babu Purushotthamdas Tandon who had
become AICC President at the Nasik Congress of 1950 defeating
Nehru's candidate, Acharya J.B.Kripalani. Tandon was later to be
honoured with Bharat Rathna.
The other AICC session was in 1965 when Lal Bahadur Shastri was
Prime Minister and K.Kamaraj AICC President. S.Nijalingappa was
the Chief Minister.
All the three AICC sessions were held at the same venue, Glass
House in Lalbagh.
As regards the present realities, the Congress of today is not
the one it was in 1960. The party has weakened at the all-India
level, and a large number of former Congressmen are to be found
in the other political parties, including the BJP and more so in
the Janata Dals. Congressmen are no longer the "simple folk" they
were even in 1960. Elderly partymen remember that at the
Sadashivanagar Congress, the party delegates from various parts
of the country had stayed in tents. But this time the KPCC has to
provide accommodation to the expected 10,000 delegates in hotels.
The leaders will be housed in luxury hotels except perhaps the
party President, Ms. Sonia Gandhi, who might stay at the Raj
Bhavan. It has been noticed that for many years now, the AICC
leaders, who visit the City, prefer to stay in five-star hotels,
and the rooms booked for them in the Kumarakrupa State Guest-
House are not occupied.
The prominent political leaders of today who were active during
the 1960 Congress session include Mr. Ramakrishna Hegde, who was
then a minister in the then Mysore State, Mr. V.S.Krishna Iyer,
who was the Secretary of the Exhibition Committee, Mr.
Haranahalli Ramaswamy, Chairman of the State's Administrative
Reforms Commission, who even then was an MLC, and Mr.
M.Rajashekaramurthy, BJP MP, and the Speaker of the Legislative
Assembly, Mr. M.V.Venkatappa, who was a member of one of the
committees of the Sadashivanagar Congress.
Though most of the open spaces in the City have disappeared, it
is fortunate that the vast Bangalore Palace Grounds are available
for such meets as the Congress plenary session. It is one of the
two venues under consideration by the party. The other is the
Kanteerava Indoor Stadium.
The prohibitive cost of hosting such party jamboorees is also
weighing on the minds of the State unit leaders though they do
not envisage any problems as they are in power in the State.
Another problem relates to the dearth of dedicated party workers.
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