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India Today, January 4, 1999
January 4, 1999


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Heroes, Villains and Zeroes '98

DIVIJAY SINGH
Winner Takes All

After a windfall victory in the Assembly elections he is set to play a major role if the Congress comes to power at the Centre.

FACT FILE

Digvijay Singh The 52-year-old chief minister of Madhya Pradesh stuck to his words and won a second term. his schemes and grassroots approach helped him survive the anti-incumbency factor.

I have the analytical mind of a technical man
--Digvijay Singh,
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister

Though blessed with the height of a basketball player (6 ft 2 in), Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijay Singh had for long been vertically disadvantaged -- in political terms -- by too many "tall Congressmen" from his state. Arjun Singh, Shyama Charan Shukla, Vidya Charan Shukla, Motilal Vora -- they're legion.

However, in the assembly polls in November Digvijay, or Diggy Raja, netted the clinching point as he snatched the state from the jaws of the BJP, which was banking upon an anti-incumbency wave. The victory put the scion of the princely family of Raghogarh in Congress President Sonia Gandhi's A-team. She patted him on the back in the gaze of television cameras, and his selection for the second term was hitchless, though not without the envious frowns. An astute state-level politician, Digvijay has seen Madhya Pradesh's towering Congressmen losing their popular base, and bargaining power, after being sucked into national politics. The 52-year-old politician now wants to preserve his state citadel even though the party, which stands a good chance of capturing power at the Centre, may require his talent in Delhi. Keen not to lose his grip on home turf, Digvijay says, "In the next five years, I must take Madhya Pradesh out of the bimaru trap and convert it into a model state."

HEROES
Amartya Sen: The Nobel Indian
Nuclear Tests: What a Blast
Gallantry: Knight Service
Neemuch eye donors: A People with Vision
N Chandrababu Naidu: Hard Drive
Tata Indica: Swadeshi on Wheels
Development: Independent Action
NRI Bonds: Unlikely Harvest
Avelin Mary: Mission Possible
Asian Games: Runaway Winners

Daler Mehndi: Just Dalerious
Kuchh Kuchh Hota Hai: Picture Perfect
Sachin Tendulkar: Stroke of Genius
VILLAINS
Bal Thackeray: No.1 Yet Again
Jayalalitha: Tantrum Amma
Romesh Sharma: Fixer's Fixer
Yashwant Sinha: Rolling Back
Romesh Bhandari: Teed Off
Onion: Pungent Reminder
Sports: Politics at Play
UTI: Unfaithfully Yours
Dropsy: Death by Default
Salman Khan: Misplaced Machismo
ZEROES
Jain Commission: Who Done It?
L K Advani: Me Two
Kushabhau Thakre: Who?

Sitaram Kesri: Creature the World Forgot
Talbott-Jaswant Talks: It's the Weather, Stupid
P V Narasimha Rao's The Insider: Pen-ful Debut
Indo-Pak Dialogue: Dumb Charade

Amitabh Bachchan's Major Saab: Sunshine Boulevard
Sushma Swaraj: Calamity Behen
Laloo-Mulayam Entente: Thud Front
Sharad Pawar: Zero Power
I K Gujral: Bus to Pakistan
SIGNPOSTS
Ajit (1922-1998)
Protima Bedi (1948-1998)
Om Prakash (1919-1998)   
Pradeep (1915-1998)
P N Haksar (1913-1998)
E M S Namboodiripad (1909-1998)
Lalita Pawar (1916-1998)
Vinod Mishra (1947-1998)
Raman Lamba (1960-1998)
Gulzarilal Nanda (1898-1998)
Persis Khambatta (1948-1998)
Laxmikant Kudalkar (1937-1998)

 

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