by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics
Patna : Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Tuesday announced scholarships for students of government-affiliated madrassas. He also pledged to appoint Urdu teachers in all high schools.
“Students of government-affiliated madrassas will be provided scholarships,” Nitish Kumar said at a function here to mark Urdu Day.
He said the government would strengthen madrassa infrastructure in the state.
He also expressed regrets for not learning Urdu during his student days.
“It is my desire that all should learn and study Urdu. Both Hindi and Urdu are Hindustani languages. The government will work for the promotion of Urdu.
“It is wrong to associate Urdu with a particular community,” he added.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics
Patna : RJD chief Lalu Prasad has termed Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar a “fake socialist” who has joined hands with communal forces and is afraid of them.
His comment comes ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit here on Saturday to attend the centenary celebrations of Patna University.
“He is a fake socialist. Real socialist neither joins hands with communal forces nor is afraid of them,” Lalu Prasad tweeted.
He added “Ye asal mein Godse aur Hitler ka bada wala pujari hai (He is actually a big follower of Godse and Hitler).”
In the last week of July, Nitish Kumar had dumped the RJD and Congress to join hands with BJP and form the government. In August his party JD-U formally joined the BJP-led NDA.
Lalu Prasad has earlier called Nitish Kumar the Paltu Ram of politics for breaking the Grand Alliance and forming a new government with the BJP.
Nitish Kumar had in 2013 dumped the BJP and joined hands with the RJD and Congress.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Opinions

Sushil Kumar Modi and Nitish Kumar (For representational purpose only)
By Amulya Ganguli,
Nitish Kumar must have realised by now that his ‘ghar wapsi’ hasn’t helped him. The BJP is treating him more like an unwanted guest than the repentant prodigal son.
The Bihar Chief Minister’s sense of being redundant in the BJP’s scheme of things is likely to intensify in view of the reports that the BJP intends to contest 25 of the 40 parliamentary seats in Bihar in 2019, leaving a paltry nine to the Janata Dal-United.
Of the remaining six, the BJP is considering giving four to the Lok Janshakti Party of Ram Vilas Paswan, another somewhat morose camp follower of the saffron brotherhood, and two to Upendra Kushwaha’s Rashtriya Lok Samata Party (RLSP).
If this kind of seat-sharing really does take place, then Sharad Yadav may well have the last laugh. His glee will be shared by Lalu Prasad for more than one reason.
First, the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader knows that he will be able to present the downsizing of Nitish Kumar in the saffron camp as an insult to Bihar.
Secondly, Lalu Prasad is aware that the more Nitish Kumar sinks in public estimation, the greater will be the RJD’s gain.
The only way out for the Chief Minister is to focus on development. Considering, however, that ‘vikas’ is Narendra Modi’s trump card, the BJP will take care to project any sign of growth in Bihar as the Prime Minister’s achievement rather than the Chief Minister’s.
Therefore, Nitish Kumar can be said to be caught between a rock and a hard place.
On one side is the Modi-Amit Shah duo who are perhaps the most hard-boiled pair in the country today, combining their political and official clout with a highly effective publicity machine backed by scores of vitriolic trolls and abusive bloggers who saturate the Internet with their extravagant praise for Modi and venomous tirades against his purportedly anti-national and anti-Hindu opponents.
Nitish Kumar is hardly visible in the company of these boastful, swaggering allies.
On the other side for him is the equally cunning and resourceful Lalu Prasad, whose self-confidence will be boosted by the possibility of the minorities turning to him in even greater numbers at a time when the Hindutva brigade is growing stronger in the absence of a major challenge from its adversaries.
As a result, Lalu Prasad’s fabled MY (Muslim-Yadav) combination in Bihar comprising 16 per cent Muslims and 11 per cent Yadavs will be as stable as ever.
These supporters are unlikely to be bothered by the charges of corruption against father and son in the Yadav family. Lalu Prasad has successfully weathered such storms before, including being debarred from holding office, but his support base has remained solid.
The RJD may also be able to rope in a section of the Janata Dal-United who are with Sharad Yadav. If the latter’s claim that 72 of the 125 national executive members of the party are with him is true, then Nitish Kumar may well think that he has made the biggest mistake of his life.
Even if the Chief Minister cannot be compared, as a commentator has done, with the other Kurmi leader in the BJP’s company, Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Anupriya Patel, there is little doubt that Nitish Kumar will continue to play second fiddle to Modi and Amit Shah in the foreseeable future.
His position may suffer a further decline if the BJP goes ahead with a rally of Kurmis to demonstrate that it doesn’t want to depend only on Nitish Kumar to secure the votes of the Kurmis, who comprise six per cent of Bihar’s population.
However, their traditional connections with the Koeris or Kushwahas (nine per cent) raises the voting percentage to a respectable figure.
In Modi’s cabinet, Minister of State for Human Resource Development Upendra Kushwaha represents the Koeris. The Kurmis and Koeris are associated with Luv and Kush, the sons of Lord Ram.
For Nitish Kumar, who was considered to be prime ministerial “material” when in the “secular” camp not long ago, his present status in the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) cannot be a matter of pride.
True, there is no final word in politics. If the economic slowdown, farmers’ distress, the sense of insecurity among Muslims — as noted by former Vice President Hamid Ansari — and the belief among the so-called Left-Liberals that the country is becoming increasingly intolerant erode the BJP’s support base in next year’s assembly elections, then the BJP may lose some of its arrogance, thereby giving the likes of Nitish Kumar more political space.
But it goes without saying that he will find it extremely difficult to regain his earlier prominence in national life.
Instead, he will be seen as someone who was spooked by the RJD’s formidable presence in Bihar to run for cover, presumably because the Janata Dal-United’s own vote bank of Kurmis and a few other non-Yadav castes is not substantial enough.
(Amulya Ganguli is a political analyst. The views expressed are personal. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com)
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics
Patna : A portion of a canal that was to be inaugurated on Wednesday by Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar collapsed a day earlier, embarrassing the government.
The incident occurred in Bhagalpur district on Tuesday evening, forcing the Chief Minister to cancel his scheduled visit to the area on Wednesday.
A portion of the Rs 389.31-crore Bateshwarsthan Ganga Pump Canal Project collapsed, resulting in the inundation of residential areas and the National Thermal Power Corp (NTPC) plant in Kahalgaon.
The project got under way in 1996-97 and took years to get ready.
According to officials, the canal was a joint scheme of Bihar and Jharkhand under which 18,620 hectares of land in Bhagalpur and 4,038 hectares in Godda district of Jharkhand would be irrigated.
The project has a total irrigation capacity of 27,603 hectares, of which 22,816 hectares is in Bihar and 4,887 hectares in Jharkhand.
The Planning Commission had approved the project in 1977 at an estimated cost of Rs 13.88 crore.
The Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) demanded a high-level probe into the incident.
RJD chief Lalu Prasad blamed rampant corruption and alleged that poor quality of construction caused its collapse.
“The canal collapsed due to rampant corruption,” RJD spokesperson Shakti Yadav said.
—IANS