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Narendra Modi
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi took on West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee in Kolkata on Wednesday, saying that she had failed to bring about the change (poribortan) she had promised.
Lashing out at the Third Front leaders, Modi said, "Western states in India have developed more than the eastern states because no Third Front leader has ever ruled a western province."
Hitting out at the Left leaders' constant secular chant, Modi said they have never done anything for minorities.
Give us all 42 seats
Modi appealed to the voters to indulge in some experimentation for 2014. "People should send all 42 BJP candidates to the Lok Sabha from here and fix accountability for each of our actions. At the same time, people should also fix accountability of the state government for the change Banerjee promised," he said. What Modi can achieve in Mamata's Bengal
Amid chants of 'Modi, Modi' at the historic Brigade Parade Grounds, the Gujarat chief minister said the Third Front leaders in Delhi should hire a chopper to see the crowd here and realise the ground reality.
Modi said that all political calculations are going to fail in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls. "This is the first Indian polls since Independence where people not political parties are contesting elections. People have set the agenda for the polls this time." Modi said people are deprived of even basic amenities after 65 years of Independence.
Why does Bengal suffer?
Listing out his vision for eradicating poverty, Modi said, "Vikas bhi, imaan bhi, garibon ka samman bhi (Development, honesty and respect for the poor)."
Tracing ties of Bengal and Gujarat, Modi said many prominent Bengalis stayed in Gujarat for many years and contributed immensely to building the state. He lauded West Bengal as being the country's teacher in many aspects and said if India were to become a world leader, Bengal had to get back its former glory.
Referring to Jan Sangh co-founder Syama Prasad Mookerjee, Modi said the BJP was his brainchild which now occupies the mind of every Indian.
Blaming the 35 years of Left rule for lack of development in the state, Modi said the so-called party of workers and labourers did not change the plight of them either. Modi said it was his party's vision to recognise labour as investment and give the worker his right to dignity.
Projecting Gujarat as the role model of development, Modi said, "If Gujarat could have 24x7 supply of electricity, why is Bengal deprived of this?" He added that this was because no new power plants were set up in the state.
Lamenting the poor state of education in the state, Modi said, "Only 60 per cent of schools in West Bengal have toilets for girl students while many schools are not even electrified. How would kids learn computers then?"
Sudden love for Pranab
President Pranab Mukherjee found an unlikely sympathiser in Narendra Modi who said the Congress had continuously insulted the state by not making the senior party leader the prime minister. He said Mukherjee deserved to be the PM on many occasions in the past, but he was denied the chance every time.
Modi concluded his speech in a typical Bengali way by making crowds roar "cholbe na" to his vows of uprooting misrule from the state.
Rajnath bares love for Bengal
BJP chief Rajnath Singh showered lavish praise on prominent Bengalis including Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Swami Vivekananda, Rabindranath Tagore, Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, etc. Tracing the party's long ties with the state, Singh recounted and praised Jan Sangh co-founder Syama Prasad Mookerjee's contribution to the country.
Taking on the state's Left politics, Singh said the party destroyed the state's flourishing economy in its 35-year-old rule. The BJP chief said that if the Left's long rule could be credited for having started any industry, it should be the crime industry.
Congratulating the people of Bengal for uprooting the Left from the state, Singh took on the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress rule in the state, saying that she has yet not brought in the change she had promised. He did not say anything else against Banerjee.
Clearing the air on the 2002 Gujarat riots, Singh said the state did not witness any other riot since then and Modi should be credited for this. He said minorities in Gujarat had the highest per capita income in the entire country.
Magician PC Sircar and music director and singer Bappi Lahiri were also on the dais with him.

When Shahnawaz took on TMC

BJP leader Shahnawaz Hussain, who addressed the gathering before Modi, blamed the Congress for the frequent disruption in Parliament. "They say that we are not allowing Parliament to function, but the reality is that we have opened the veil of Congress."
Clearing the air about his party being labelled communal by rivals, Hussain said, "Congress is betraying the people but we want to fight on the issue of corruption and development. We will not divide our country into Hindu and Muslims. People have started believing that he (Modi) will harm Muslims but this is only a fear of the people."
Hitting out at Mamata Banerjee, he said, "TMC is close to Congress and they are like the same water in a different glass."
Hoping that people in West Bengal will vote for Modi in hordes, Hussain said, "We are at one seat now, but will soon be voted to power by people of Bengal. We are fighting for saving the nation."

In another dig at Narendra Modi, Finance Minister P Chidambaram on Saturday said the BJP Prime Ministerial candidate was giving his "first lesson in economy" and denied he had ever said that buying gold causes inflation.

"After history lesson, Narendra Modi has delivered his first lesson in economics...I recall having said on many occasions that buying gold, which is almost entirely imported, worsens current account deficit (CAD). I don't recall saying that buying gold causes inflation," Chidambaram said in a statement here.

He was apparently referring to several goof-ups by Modi in his recent speeches relating to ancient history and some other events

With an obvious tinge of sarcasm, Chidambaram asked economists to "take note of the new lesson" by Modi.

The Finance Minister was responding to the reported remarks of Modi at an election rally at Jodhpur in which he had said that Chidambaram has attributed inflation to buying gold.

"I am not as educated as him...but I know inflation is not because of buying gold but due to corruption," Chidambaram's statement quoted Modi's remarks in newspapers.

Modi has been under attack from opponents over his remarks in election speeches which were not in sync with historic facts. Earlier at a rally in Patna, Modi said that Chandragupta belonged to the Gupta dynasty.

At the same rally, he praised the "might of Bihar" saying that Alexander's army conquered the world but was defeated by the Biharis. In reality, Alexander’s army neither crossed the Ganga nor was it defeated by Biharis.

At Kheda in Gujarat, Modi had slammed Congress for not bringing back the ashes of freedom fighter Shyamaji Krishna Varma from Switzerland. Instead of naming Shyamaji Krishna Varma, he referred to Shyama Prasad Mookherjee, who founded the Jan Sangh which later became the BJP.

However, he later apologised for the mistake. 
Source:  DNA India
 In his promotional campaigns, Arvind Kejriwal says that by 15 December, his Aam Admi Party would have catapulted to power in Delhi and by 29 December he will have a special session of the Assembly convened at Ramlila Maidan and will pass Anna Hazare’s Jan Lokpal Bill. Behind the unusual buoyancy is perhaps another advertisement, which states that Yogendra Yadav has predicted that his party will win 47 seats, a landslide victory with a three-fourth majority. By that implication, Delhiites will now queue up at polling stations on 4 December to simply fulfill a formality and then await the inevitable.

If it were true, the easiest of all 70 Assembly seats should be the one Arvind Kejriwal, his party’s obvious chief ministerial candidate, is contesting for his own election to Delhi Vidhan Sabha — from Gole Market constituency. He has by choice pitted himself against Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit. The BJP has entered the fray by nominating Vijendra Gupta, a weighty former Delhi unit party chief who steadily rose in the party ranks after first getting elected to the Delhi University Students Union. The contest in Gole Market should thus be the most interesting to understand the prospects of the AAP, unless Kejriwal springs a surprise and files his nomination from some other constituency or from more than one constituency. While various opinion polls offer somewhat contradictory pictures, ranging from Kejriwal’s own prediction of 47 seats to 18 seats for the AAP as predicted by the latest C-Voter survey and a whopping 19-25 seats in the CNN-IBN/CSDS count to a low of 8 seats by the India Today-ORG opinion polls, no one has, however, reflected on the personal fate of Kejriwal and other prominent AAP leaders.

Read full article at First Post

A home ministry task force wants New Delhi to have control over law & order in Hyderabad for a decade after Andhra Pradesh is divided, raising the hackles of the main separatist Telangana Rashtra Samithi.

The recommendation, justified on the ground of "fear psychosis" among professionals from Seemandhra (the coastal and southern parts of Andhra Pradesh from which Telangana is sought to be separated) comes amid a frenzy of activity which could determine the fate of the bifurcation of India's fourth-largest state.

The task force headed by K Vijaya Kumar, a former director general of the Central Reserve Police Force and senior security advisor to the home ministry, visited Hyderabad last week before making its recommendations to a ministerial panel that will decide on the issues relating to bifurcation.

"There is fear psychosis in Seemandhra professionals in Hyderabad that they will be driven out and forced to sell their concerns under distress after division of the state. Pertinently, most of the private educational institutions and hospitality sector in and around Hyderabad are owned by people of Seemandhra origin," according to the task force's report seen by ET.

Panel to meet this week

"As concerns of people of Seemandhra region are primarily Hyderabad-centric, GoM (the group of ministers) may think in terms of keeping safety, security, law & order and protection of properties pertaining to Hyderabad under the control of a central authority, who may be governor of the state," according to the task force's report.

The task force also wants students to be treated as locals in Hyderabad and Telangana for 10 years. Moreover, it said government employees must be allowed to continue serving in Telangana if they want to. The panel of ministers is due to meet again this week and is scheduled to make its views known before the winter session of Parliament begins.

Hyderabad, which Congress has said will remain the joint capital for 10 years, is the biggest bone of contention. Home to MNCs such as Microsoft and Google, it is also the base for some of India's top pharmaceutical companies, among them Dr Reddy's Laboratories. Migrants from Seemandhra account for a significant part of the city's entrepreneurship as well as its professional workforce.

Read Full Article at EconomicTimes
Amid heavy security, 18 constituencies in the Naxal strongholds of Bastar and Rajnandgaon went to polls today in Chhattisgarh, marking the beginning of the battle of the ballot in five states, considered a semi-final to the Lok Sabha elections in 2014.

As voting began, fresh violence was reported from Bastar, where a BSF jawan has been injured in a blast in the Kanker region.Yesterday, two personnel of the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) were injured in a landmine blast in Rajnandgaon.

Chief Minister Raman Singh and his three ministers in the BJP government are among 143 candidates contesting from 12 constituencies in Bastar division and six constituencies of Rajnandgaon district with an electorate of 29,33,200 in the first of the two-phase polls to the 90-member assembly.

Mr Singh, who is aiming at a hat-trick against the Congress, is contesting from Rajnandgaon, where Naxals struck on the eve of polling. Two ITBP jawans were injured in a blast triggered by Naxals when a polling party was heading towards Baldongri booth.

Maoists have put up posters calling for the boycott of elections in the state.

Out of the 18 seats going to polls today, BJP had won 15 while Congress had bagged three in the last election.

Barely six months ago, Naxals had ambushed a convoy of Congress leaders in Bastar, killing 27 people and virtually wiping out the entire party leadership, including state Congress chief Nand Kumar Patel, his son Dinesh, tribal leader Mahendra Karma who had founded the Salwa Judum and former legislator Uday Mudliyar. Senior leader Vidya Charan Shukla, 84, succumbed to his injuries two weeks later.

Police personnel are keeping a hawk eye in the state and along its borders with Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh.


"A large number of security personnel have been deployed across the state. I am very confident of peaceful elections in the state," Chhattisgarh's Director General of Police (DGP) Ram Niwas told PTI.


He said the police had done micro-level planning to ensure a violence-free election.


"We have been getting support from people also who are giving us crucial information related to security arrangements. They have also helped in detection of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) from some of the areas," said the DGP.


Polling in 12 constituencies of Bastar and one in Rajnandgaon district will be held from 7 AM to 3 PM.

Source: NDTV


At least 85,000 personnel from central paramilitary forces have been deployed on poll duty in the state.


The chief minister's main rival is Congress' Alka Mudliyar, wife of killed Congress leader Uday Mudliyar.


Raman Singh had defeated Uday Mudliyar with a margin of 32,389 votes in the last election.


Devati Karma, wife of Mahendra Karma, has been fielded from Dantewada-ST seat.


The Naxal ambush in May 25 has been raked up during campaigning in the southern part of the state, which saw high-profile visits by Congress president Sonia Gandhi, her son and party vice president Rahul Gandhi as well as Gujarat Chief Minister and BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi.


Tribal Welfare Minister Kedar Kashyap had won the Narayanpur segment in 2008 against Congress candidate Rajnuram Netam by a huge margin of 21,635 votes. This time, the main opposition party has fielded a low-profile party worker, Chandan Kashyap, from this seat to take on Mr Kashyap.


Sports Minister Lata Usendi had previously defeated Congressman Mohan Markam from Kondagon seat in a close contest by 2,771 votes. Mr Markam has been provided a second chance from this seat.


Forest Minister Vikram Usendi has been fielded from Antagarh seat which he had won against former Congress MLA Manturam Pawar in the last elections with a margin of a mere 109 votes.


The sole sitting MLA of Congress in Bastar, Kawasi Lakhma, has been renominated from Konta seat.


The constituencies going to polls today are Khairagarh, Dongargarh, Rajnandgaon, Dongargaon, Khujji, Mohla-Manpur, Antagarh, Bhanupratappur, Kanker, Keshkal, Kondagaon, Narayanpur, Bastar, Jagdalpur, Chitrakot, Dantewada, Bijapur and Konta.


A total of 4,142 polling booths have been set up for the first phase of which 1,517 have been declared as sensitive while 1,311 have been declared as hyper-sensitive stations.
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