India Today Newsnote
Feb 28, 2000

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India Today issue dt February 28, 2000For Old Times Sake
Delhi: The much talked about relationship between Prime Minister A.B. Vajpayee and Home Minister L.K. Advani is now on a honeymoon mode. Recently, the two went together to the Films Division auditorium on Mahadeo Road to watch the film Pukar, with Vajpayee's adopted daughter and son-in-law and Advani's children in tow. After the show, the two men reminisced about similar experiences earlier: watching Ray's Pather Panchali in Calcutta and Raj Kapoor's Phir Subah Hogi in Delhi. Within days, Vajpayee put protocol behind and drove to Advani's Pandara Park residence to spend four hours together over dinner. Obviously they were not humming old numbers.

Land Sale, No Bar
Hyderabad: Governments the world over are known to disinvest to raise funds. But Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu is a trendsetter even here. He is said to be keen on selling government land at prime locations. Prisoners in two crowded jails in the city and one in Visakhapatnam will soon be moved to new locations to make room for realtors.The price: over Rs 350 crore. The money, of course, should come in handy for implementing Naidu's prison reforms.

Enemy as Mediator
Patna: Ask Mulayam Singh Yadav who is in the forefront in the fight against communalism and chances are he will point to himself. Ditto for Laloo Prasad. So why aren't the two Yadavs joining hands to fight the common enemy? Perish the thought. Last week, the duo, once close friends, were together in Patna airport's VIP lounge, not ready to even acknowledge each other. It was for L.K. Advani who walked in a little later to help them break the ice.

Dancing to Own Tune
Bhubaneswar: Has anyone seen Giridhar Gomang of late? With poll fever at a pitch, he should have been campaigning for the Congress but after his inept handling of the administration, has been told to stay away. Last heard, he was in Calcutta with a tribal music troupe, rehearsing for public renditions of the Changu dance. Having danced to the tune of the Congress leadership for long, he is dancing to his own tune for a change.

CONFESSIONAL

Last year, Purno Sangma led the chorus to bar foreign- born Indians from holding high office. His inclusion in the Constitution review panel has caused a stir.

Your presence in the committee has sparked off a controversy.
The controversy is being created by a section that feels since I was the first to raise the issue of debarring people of foreign origin from holding high office, I will do it again. They are right, I will try again.

That's your only agenda?
My interest is the issue. I am not focusing on any individual.

Aren't there other issues you should look at?
I intend to be a watchdog for the interests of SCs, STs, minorities and the weaker sections. But if they try and tamper with Article 370, I will oppose it.

Your party had opposed the committee. So how come you are in it?
The NCP had opposed it initially because we thought the basic structure of the Constitution would be tinkered with. We feared there would be an attempt to foist a presidential form of government on us. But the prime minister has made it clear there are no such moves.

Will you finally join the Sangh Parivar?
There is no question of that happening since I don't subscribe to its ideology.

-Javed M. Ansari


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