India Today Newsnotes

India Today, January 18, 1999
Jan 18, 1999



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Damage Control

Delhi: It was perhaps nothing more than a coincidence, but Atal Bihari Vajpayee and VHP supremo Ashok Singhal thought of Amartya Sen around the same time. Just when Singhal was shooting his mouth off about Sen's Nobel Prize being part of a "Christian conspiracy", the prime minister was writing a polite letter to the professor explaining why he could not meet him this time due to travel constraints. When Singhal's statement created the predictable furore, Vajpayee's advisers were quick to control the damage. Invitation cards for a tea party that Air-India had planned for Sen at the India International Centre were superscribed with the words "Venue shifted to 7 Race Course Road". Air-India of course made its presence felt by honouring Sen with a lifetime free-flying pass.

Chilly Conditions

Shimla: Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Prem Kumar Dhumal has ordered his ministers to stay put in their offices in Shimla from Monday to Friday. Though a part of the BJP-led coalition's image-building exercise, the move has expectedly met with murmurs of protest from colleagues who cite freezing conditions in the hilly capital as a deterrent. Besides, they say that Dhumal's order runs counter to the BJP slogan of "government at your doorsteps". It's a different matter that Dhumal rarely misses an opportunity to take to the skies in the state-hired helicopter or hit the road in his brand-new Mitsubishi Lancer. Suffice to say that preaching comes naturally to the lecturer-turned-politician.

Torch-bearen

Chandigarh: Former prime minister I.K. Gujral is loath to visiting his constituency Jalandhar where he's often greeted with a host of memorandums. Little wonder then that he began the new year by attending sundry functions in Chandigarh, hoping his two-day stay in the "city beautiful" would be a good outing away from foggy Delhi. At one function Gujral honoured Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal with the "Punjab Ratan Award". In return, Badal praised him as the "only prime minister" who had done justice to Punjab. At another venue, however, Gujral had a taste of "civic woes" when power-failure forced him to read out his presidential address with the help of torchlights. Despite praises heaped on him by the organisers, a cut-up Gujral could barely hide his displeasure at Chandigarh's falling standards. In the end, it was hardly a trip worth remembering for the "Punjab da puttar".

Spreading the News

Bangalore: On the first day of the BJP's National Executive meeting in Bangalore, Doordarshan (DD) led its night news bulletin with AIADMK supremo J. Jayalalitha's demand for an inquiry into the sacking of navy chief Vishnu Bhagwat. Union Information and Broadcasting Minister Pramod Mahajan did not hide his anger at what he thought was a faux pas on the part of dd. So the next day he sent his personal secretary and a state BJP leader to the DD Kendra in Bangalore to ensure that the national executive meeting was the lead news item. All of which simply goes to prove that Prasar Bharati or not, some things never change. Like DD.

Birthday Bashing

Lucknow: January 5 was the birthday of Chief Minister Kalyan Singh and Union HRD Minister Murli Manohar Joshi. While there is growing pressure from within the party to replace Kalyan, Joshi is being projected as his likely successor. Warring camps of the state BJP had organised different functions in Lucknow -- billed as a show of strength between the stalwarts -- to celebrate their birthdays. Kalyan himself headed one function, while his arch rival within the party, Lalji Tandon, was in charge of Joshi's celebrations. Rival factions may have put up a united face during the party's National Executive in Bangalore, but back in Lucknow the two camps have started flexing their muscles once again.

 

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