Uttar Pradesh's ruling party has been witnessing a fierce fight between Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav and his uncle Shivpal, state SP chief, despite repeated attempts by party patriarch Mulayam Singh Yadav to broker peace.
With top leaders of socialist-leaning parties present at the event, a move seen as an attempt by Samajwadi Party supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav to forge an alliance ahead of the assembly polls hardly a few months away, the two exchanged cutting remarks that exposed the deep divisions within.
"Some people get things because of fate, some through hard work and some as part of inheritance. But some keep doing hard work through their lives and don't get anything," he said.
Asserting that he had done good work and cooperated with Akhilesh in the last four years, an emotional Shivpal said," I want to tell popular CM Akhilesh that whatever sacrifice you want from me, I will make. I never want to become Chief Minister. You can insult me, sack me as many time (as minister) as you want, but I am prepared to give even my blood for the party."
Pointing towards Gayatri Prasad Prajapati, a minister in his government who he had sacked over graft allegations but later reinducted on Mulayam's insistence, Akhilesh said," Prajapati has presented me the sword. You give me sword and don't want me to use it." The Chief Minister was apparently hinting at opposition from Shivpal's camp over sacking of ministers facing corruption charges.
He had also sacked Shivpal Yadav from the ministry in a tit-for-tat action after Mulayam expelled cousin Ram Gopal Yadav. Ram Gopal, a Rajya Sabha MP, has been backing the Chief Minister in his fight against his uncle.
However, RJD supremo Lalu Prasad, whose youngest daughter
is married to Mulayam's grand nephew, made an attempt to paper over the divide in the SP's first family when he declared everything was all right within the party.
"They stand together...There is no rift or fighting. I ask Akhilesh babu to respect his seniors and hoist the flag of victory in Uttar Pradesh once again," he said before making the feuding uncle-nephew duo stand beside him, holding aloft their hands that held the swords.
Mulayam, who till a few days ago, was seen siding with Shivpal and friend Amar Singh, had surprised many when he flagged off the rath, in a bid to show all was well within the party. Amar Singh, who has been accused by Akhilesh of conspiring against him and the party, was conspicuous by his absence at today's event despite it being a Mulayam's show, an so was SP's Muslim face and minister Azam Khan. Singh and Khan have been at daggers drawn for years now.
Shivpal had snatched away the microphone from Akhilesh's hands at a party event recently and called him a "liar" when the Chief Minister accused Amar Singh of hatching conspiracy against him.
A Majority of Muslims have been backing Mulayam since the Babri Masjid demolition, but a section of the party feels that they may shift to Mayawati's BSP due to the infighting in the Samajwadi Party.
Though the veteran socialist warhorse spoke about the sacrifices made by the socialists, ranging from Ram Manohar Lohia, Jayaprakash Narayan, Raj Narain and Karpoori Thakur, he made no protestation of the unity in the party which he was seen doing in the recent weeks.
Asking the gathering to unite to stall BJP's march to
power, Lalu said, "I stopped Ram rath at Samastipur (of L K Advani) and recently in Bihar polls. Now, with UP elections round the corner, BJP is again remembering Ram. We will stop them."
On talks of forging a grand alliance, Lalu said,"How a coalition is formed? It is formed by sitting like this."
JD(U)'s Sharad Yadav hinted at his party's readiness to form a coalition of socialist parties. "Mulayam has the strength. He will unite everyone," he said. JD(U) president and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had expressed his inability to attend today's event on account of 'chhath' festival.
"UP elections will not only be deciding the fate of the state but of the entire country. Forging an alliance or a coalition is not an easy job. A lot of fights do happen. This is not the time to think what we will get (by forging a coalition) but what people of the state will get," he said.
Former Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda, whose party hardly has any stakes in UP or the Hindi heartland, urged the 'Janata Parivar' leaders to "come together and unite" against the "communal" forces.
"I strongly believe the secular forces will come together under the leadership of Mulayam. There is some friction within SP. I ask SP to stay united and lead the charge against communal forces," he said.
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