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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, September 07, 2001 |
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Nitish clips Digvijay's wings?
By Sandeep Dikshit
NEW DELHI, SEPT. 6. The cold war between the Railway Minister,
Mr. Nitish Kumar, and the National Democratic Alliance convener,
Mr. George Fernandes, appears to have taken a chilling turn.
Mr. Kumar has clipped the wings of Mr. Fernandes' protege, Mr.
Digvijay Singh, while re-allocating him work in the Railway
Ministry. The tasks delegated to Mr. Singh are considerably less
consequential compared to his earlier stint in the Ministry when
Mr. Kumar and Mr. Fernandes got along well.
The seeds of the conflict sown after Mr. Fernandes' ouster from
the Cabinet germinated on August 1, the day the Prime Minister,
Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, took umbrage at the behaviour of the
NDA partners and even suggested a code of conduct for the
members. The same evening, after a telephonic talk with Mr.
Fernandes, Mr. Vajpayee restored Mr. Singh's Railway portfolio,
while keeping Mr. Kumar and the other Minister of State for
Railways, Mr. O. Rajagopal, completely uninformed.
The NDA convener had phoned the Prime Minister after Mr. Singh,
who had been made the Minister of State for Commerce and
Industry, refused to take up the new charge till his earlier
portfolio in the Railway Ministry was restored. After the
telephonic conversation, Mr. Vajpayee allowed Mr. Singh to
straddle both Ministerial boats.
Mr. Singh, designated Minister of State for Railways, Industry
and Commerce, was allowed to function freely by Mr. Kumar but his
position in the Rail Bhavan was nebulous. Neither did he have
adequate staff nor was he aware of his exact responsibilities.
Mr. Kumar got the opportunity to get even a month later when in
the latest Cabinet re-shuffle, Mr. Singh was divested of the
Commerce and Industry portfolio and asked to concentrate only on
the Railways.
The redistribution of work that took place on Wednesday last
stripped Mr. Singh of all the functions that earlier gave him
elbow-room to act as a potentate in the Railway Ministry. No
longer can Mr. Singh (along with Mr. Kumar) address issues such
as the performance of Railways and the safety and security of
trains. Nor can he monitor the performance of the cash-flush PSU,
IRCON.
Mr. Singh has also been left out of one principal centre of state
patronage for out-of-work party supporters - approval of items
for inclusion in the works programme (basically track
maintenance) between Rs. 50 lakhs and Rs. 5 crores. He has also
been stripped of the high-profile assignment of replying to
questions posed in Parliament.
All these tasks were handled by Mr. Singh when he had shared the
tasks of the Minister of State for Railways with Mr. Bangaru
Laxman, and before the equations between the two Samata Party
leaders had soured. The ball is now in Mr. Fernandes' court to
square the score with Mr. Kumar.
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