CONGRESS
Untimely ReminderAhluwalia's letter to Sonia on poll panels could prove more than just an
embarrassment.
By Harinder
Baweja
The fires are raging again. In 1984,
the rising flames had been snuffed out along with 2,733 lives. It had drained Bhagwanti
Kaur of all emotion -- she lost 11 members of her family in the anti-Sikh riots. But 14
years later on exactly the same day, October 31, memories come rushing back. The marauding
mob. The politicians exhorting them. The shrieks of her father, husband and brothers as
they begged for mercy. As the tears roll down, all Bhagwanti can say is, "Once again
it has boiled down to politics.''
Indeed it has. It was a scathing six-page letter that
Congress leader S.S. Ahluwalia shot off to party chief Sonia Gandhi on October 31 that
brought back the memories. Besides reminding the her of the plight of those widowed and
orphaned during the riots, Ahluwalia also questioned the appointments Sonia had made to
various election and campaign committees. They included senior party leaders H.K.L.
Bhagat, Sajjan Kumar and Dharam Dass Shastri, among the prime accused in the '84 riots.
Sonia found herself caught on the wrong foot. Just last month
she had laid down a stringent code of conduct for party members through an ethics
committee. Ahluwalia, a part of the "shouting brigade'' that kept former prime
minister P.V. Narasimha Rao on the edge at 10 Janpath's behest, was this time taking on
the lady herself. Mocking her efforts at emerging as Mrs Clean and establishing her hold
on the party.
"We are not giving Bhagat and others tickets. They are
senior Congressmen and we are only using their experience,'' Delhi Pradesh Congress
Committee (DPCC) chief Sheila Dikshit offered by way of an explanation.
But as Ahluwalia's letter points out, para 10 of the code of
conduct passed by the Congress Working Committee on September 15 stipulates that "a
Congress member shall not associate or have any connection with any criminal element nor
shall propose to support any candidate with a criminal record for any party or public
post''. Ironically, the ethics committee's report was adopted with a quote of Mahatma
Gandhi: "An ounce of practice is more than tonnes of preaching."
Lest the message did not get across, Ahluwalia drew parallels
between the plight of the '84 widows and Sonia's own widowhood. He said it was her moral
responsibility to provide justice to the victims. To rub it in, the former MP drew on her
famous Amethi speech -- her first in public -- when she unnerved the the Narasimha Rao
government by saying her husband's killers were roaming free four years after the
assassination. "The entire world knows that the anti-Sikh riots were engineered by
powerful Congress leaders and then Congress MPs and ministers like Bhagat, Kumar, Jagdish
Tytler and Shastri," said Ahluwalia.
What is now worrying senior Congress leaders of the DPCC is
that the BJP has lost no time in turning the controversy into an election issue.
The Sikh community, which accounts for 11 per cent of the
electorate in Delhi, is being arduously wooed not only by the BJP-Akali Dal combine, but
also by the Congress. To the Congress, it is a big challenge as on November 4, Guru
Nanak's birth anniversary, the Sikh clergy in the Capital issued an appeal to the
community asking it not to vote for that party. In a position to affect the results in
five to seven constituencies, the Sikh support can prove crucial for both the BJP and the
Congress, especially since there is no third front in the battle for the 70-member Delhi
Assembly.
Ahluwalia's letter offers a glimmer of hope for the BJP
struggling to retain power. "Sonia Gandhi apologised for Operation Bluestar and the
Sikh riots but through the appointments, she has only shown that a leopard never changes
its spots,'' says BJP General Secretary M. Venkaiah Naidu.
Sonia has issued a show-cause notice to Ahluwalia for going
public with the issue. But the fact is the party fears that he is on his way to joining
the BJP or the Samata Party in Bihar. Any action initiated against him may actually lead
to a step in that direction. It's that much more difficult because November 25 is fast
approaching. That is the day, Bhagwanti and others like her will walk to the polling
station. Memories intact. |