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India Today, January 11, 1999
Jan 11, 1999


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Birthday Blues

Delhi: Though the BJP doesn't have much to celebrate, Christmas was a special day for Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee as it marked his 75th birthday. Full-page newspaper advertisements stood conventional wisdom on its head, extolling Vajpayee's achievements as prime minister, even wishing him a long stint in South Block. Queues of well-wishers could be seen outside his 7 Race Course Road residence from dawn and anybody who is somebody was there on December 25 to make their presence felt. Quite unlike last year when Vajpayee was the leader of the Opposition and had celebrated his birthday by having a quiet lunch with 20-odd invitees. But then, being the prime minister is quite another matter. Except for the RSS it seems, for the Sangh members were conspicuous by their absence. Making a point perhaps ... that all is not merry within the parivar.

Still Cut UP

Chandigarh: Though they may have called truce officially, the running feud between Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and his friend-turned-foe SGPC chief G.S. Tohra is far from over. And if Badal is in no mood to compromise, his media managers are a step ahead in pursuing their boss' wish to cut Tohra down to size. Last week, the two leaders shared the dais at a function in Fatehgarh Sahib for the first time since hostilities broke out. A mellowed Tohra even tried to break the ice by presenting a saropa (shawl) to the Akali supremo, but Badal remained poker-faced and spurned the olive branch. Taking a cue from Badal's cold shouldering, the state Public Relations Department circulated official photographs of the function with Tohra neatly cropped out of the pictures. As for the SGPC chief, the man who until recently held the remote control to the Badal Government is seething at the unkind "cut" from his partymen.

Enemies Again

Delhi: Not too long ago, Samajwadi Party leaders looked to Sonia Gandhi for inspiration. But with a resurgent Congress plucking away at its vote bank, a livid Mulayam Singh Yadav has once again taken to anti-Congressism, even bestowing the party with the title of enemy No. 1, for long reserved for the BJP. That the SP means business became evident last week when party MP Mohan Singh tabled a private member's bill seeking withdrawal of Special Protection Group (SPG) security to all but the prime minister and his family. The SPG Act is due for review in March. Unable to take her on politically, Singh is presumably convinced that the best way to stop the Sonia blitzkrieg is to scare her into staying at home -- by denying her the security she requires to move around.

Dry Season

Delhi: Congress President Sonia Gandhi's sermon to her partymen to keep off alcohol seems to have had an electrifying effect this New Year's eve. Former Lok Sabha Speaker Purno A. Sangma, known for his lavish parties on Christmas and New Year's eve, opted to leave Delhi to celebrate with his constituents in the North-east. Other Congressmen known to throw grand parties on such occasions preferred to host lunches instead of inviting guests over for dinners. The idea was to keep their circle of friends happy without serving liquor in the afternoon.

 

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