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AAP mum on key state issues, but vocal against Badals

Much water has flown down the bridge since the Maghi Mela at Muktsar in January for the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) Punjab unit as unlike the previous conference, which was attended by all four MPs of the state, Sangrur MP Bhagwant Mann was accompanied by only a handful of leaders at the Baisakhi Mela on Tuesday, somehow confirming rumours of a rift within the party unit.

Updated on: Apr 15, 2015 10:08 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Talwandi Sabo
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Much water has flown down the bridge since the Maghi Mela at Muktsar in January for the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) Punjab unit as unlike the previous conference, which was attended by all four MPs of the state, Sangrur MP Bhagwant Mann was accompanied by only a handful of leaders at the Baisakhi Mela on Tuesday, somehow confirming rumours of a rift within the party unit.

Only a few senior leaders such as Sucha Singh Chhotepur, HS Phoolka and Sanjay Singh, the latter from New Delhi, made it to attend the event.

The leaders kept criticising the state government but refrained from addressing key issues like declaring Chandigarh as capital of Punjab only and the water dispute with Haryana. About the absence of MPs Dr Dharamvira Gandhi (Patiala), Sadhu Singh (Faridkot) and Harinder Singh Khalsa (Fatehgarh Sahib), Sanjay Singh denied having any rift within the party. “MPs might be occupied with something else. It is not necessary that every leader of the AAP state unit must participate in this rally,” he said.

Mann, however, clarified that Sadhu Singh could not join the rally due to health issues and also warned that any AAP member who attends the meeting called by Yogendra Yadav would have to face strict action.

The leaders asked people to gear up for the 2017 assembly elections and invited them to a rally to be held on April 22 in New Delhi in protest against the land acquisition bill passed by the central government.

Sanjay Singh, who came from Delhi to attend the rally, said the state will have to end dynastic politics which is prevalent in almost all over the country. “From Kashmir to Odisha every state has been controlled by one family or the other. Be it the Abdullah clan in J&K or the Badals in Punjab, we will never follow dynastic politics.”

He accused the state government of spoiling the future of youth in Punjab by promoting drugs.

Before Mann came to speak, Chhotepur took a jibe at the comedian-turned-politician by asking the impatient crowd to leave if they had only come to listen to chutklas (jokes).

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Mohammad Ghazali

Mohammad Ghazali is a multimedia correspondent with Hindustan Times based in Punjab. He was earlier associated with Media Network of India as a research associate with Paranjoy Guha Thakurta in New Delhi. Having a post graduate degree from Asian College of Journalism, his area of interest includes Indian politics and economy.

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