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3 Bs locked in combat

The newly-carved SAS Nagar constituency is set to witness a high-profile contest involving SAD’s Balwant Singh Ramoowalia, former deputy speaker and PPP candidate Bir Devinder Singh and Congress MLA Balbir Singh Sidhu. Who will win is anybody’s guess.

Updated on: Jan 20, 2012 01:29 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , SASNagar
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With an MLA, a former MP and a former deputy speaker in the fray, the SAS Nagar electoral battle promises to be a cracker.

Former-Punjab-deputy-speaker-Bir-Devinder-Singh-left-along-with-Manpreet-Badal-HT-Photo
Former-Punjab-deputy-speaker-Bir-Devinder-Singh-left-along-with-Manpreet-Badal-HT-Photo


The assembly constituency comprises Mohali town and 82 surrounding villages. A majority of its area was carved out of the Kharar segment.

Originally envisaged as an IT hub, Mohali has witnessed a realty boom in recent years, especially after SAS Nagar was accorded district status by then Congress government in 2006. With agricultural land fetching prices as high as Rs 1.5 crore per acre and an international airport coming up, residents’ expectations have shot up, making it a high-stakes seat.

The SAD-BJP combine has fielded ex-MP Balwant Singh Ramoowalia, who merged his Lok Bhalai Party (LBP) into the Shiromani Akali Dal in November last year. Former Vidhan Sabha deputy speaker Bir Devinder Singh is the People’s Party of Punjab candidate, while the Congress nominee is sitting Kharar MLA Balbir Singh Sidhu. “I was a union minister and the minister-in-waiting when Queen Elizabeth came to India. I also received South African leader Nelson Mandela. Besides, I have worked as a lawyer in the Supreme Court. So, I am better than my rivals,” argues Ramoowalia.

The PPP candidate recalls that he had refused to inaugurate a community centre at the last moment due to insanitary conditions, had pulled up government school teachers for poor performance of students and moved around in the constituency with a battery of officials to solve people’s problems.

“I am sure you remember all this,” he tells people. He also takes credit for daring to speak about then chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh’s alleged involvement in the Ludhiana City Centre scam.

Sidhu argues that Ramoowalia as well as Bir Devinder are outsiders. “I am from this area and have stood by you for the past 20 years. So much development has taken place here. Now, the district headquarters needs better infrastructure and we have to complete the projects which were abandoned after the Congress was voted out of power in 2007,” says the Kharar MLA.

In the 2007 elections, Sidhu had bagged 85,092 votes to defeat SAD candidate Jasjit Singh Bunny, son of senior Akali leader late Capt Kanwaljit Singh, by a margin of about 13,000 votes.

With Kanwaljit’s family out of the picture, Sidhu is confident of doing an encore, despite being pitted against two seasoned politicians.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Gurpreet Singh Nibber

Gurpreet Singh Nibber is an Assistant Editor with the Punjab bureau. He covers politics, agriculture, power sector, environment, Sikh religious affairs and the Punjabi diaspora.

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