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HOME | NEWS | ELECTIONS '98 | CAMPAIGN TRAIL |
February 17, 1998
NEWS
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Campaign Trail/Archana MasihIn Hoshangabad, David may have the last laugh
The safari suit, red tilak sporting Sartaj Singh is Hoshangabad's old warhorse. A constituency which his own party workers confess has been receiving much attention after Arjun Singh entered the electoral fray. Although Sartaj Singh has won the seat thrice in a row from 1989 onwards, Hoshangabad was just another of Madhya Pradesh's 40 constituencies till the former Congress chief minister arrived as his rival. Until now, Sartaj Singh has been lying low as an MP restricted to his constituency -- distributing 3,500 cricket sets in 1,800 villages, apart from hand pumps, boundary walls etc from his MP's constituency fund. The pug nosed Sikh is blasé about all this attention. "You see for yourself what my support is like. My people won't let me down. Arjun Singh will lose," says the mild mannered MP as he waves to a passerby who has stopped to take a closer look at him. "Arjun Singh may have the money, but our Sartajbhai has bahubal (might)," adds an enthusiastic supporter with a furious nod of the head.
"How many villages remain?" he asks. "Twelve more," replies the enthusiastic former legislator. "Sir, we have to visit all. They are all waiting for us." Taking heed, Sartaj Singh braces himself for yet another long journey. Helping him in his fight with the Raja of Churhat are his wife, two of his three daughters married in Bhopal and Ujjain and his brother-in-law, Ricky from Delhi. "His wife goes with the lady party workers within the city," says Ricky who last visited Itarsi when Sartaj Singh was campaigning in the 1996 election.
"One reason for this could be because Sartajji's business is almost finished. He is known to be an honest man, and no one is giving him funds," reveals one Itarsi resident. Once a businessman dealing in wood and charcoal, family members reveal that his interest in business dwindled after his entry into active politics. "All politicians make money after they get elected, but the 5 trucks that Sartajji once owned have been sold," discloses one BJP worker. Sartaj Singh and his supporters are confident that since he is a local and accessible to the electorate, this election will see him through to Parliament again.
Although born in MP, Sartaj Singh moved to Itarsi from his original home in Rawalpindi after Partition. He had to take early responsibility of his family after his father died suddenly. "Since he bore the responsibility of getting his sister and three daughters married, Sartajji often says that fighting an election needs the same mental and financial preparation as a wedding ceremony," adds brother-in-law Ricky, a businessman himself.
This time, one BJP activist tells us, the 20,000 to 25,000-strong party cadres in the district are charged up as never before "Arjun Singh's presence has put more energy into us. We have to work harder," they say. Though they swear that Sonia Gandhi's entry has not made any difference, their ruffled feathers can hardly be hidden. One of them urges Sartaj Singh to urge voluble BJP general secretary Sushma Swaraj to visit Hoshangabad. ''Soniaji was here the other day, if Sushmaji comes, it will appeal to the women," they tell the candidate. Sartaj Singh's next stop is Kolla Khari -- the 13th village on his itinerary. His speech begins... " Seventy per cent of the nation depends on agriculture. Whoever works for farmers will rule this country, not those who open fire at unarmed farmers." The crowd rises to a thunderous response. The reference is to the Multai firing in neighbouring Betul district where the police shot dead 17 agitating farmers on January 12; Madhya Pradesh, of course, is ruled by the Congress party. The candidate had struck a chord with the village of soyabean farmers.
While Sartaj Singh bent to touch the feet of the village's 'Piyaribaba', the microphone was grabbed by a young enthusiast who sang a poem by Vajpayee. However, Kamalabai and Radhabai chose to stay away. So did most of the women in the few villages we visited. "This time we will give the lotus a try. At least Sartaj Singh came to our village. Arjun Singh said he would, but didn't. We had spent so much money for his welcome," grumbled Radhabai.
Sartaj Singh is gracious about his rival and explains that Arjun Singh often gets restricted because of his 'Z' category security cover, a legacy of the Congressman's brief tenure as Punjab's governor in 1985. At the tea stall at Seoni-Malwa, the mood is different. Villagers express their avowed support for Arjun Singh and the Congress. Especially, the young farmer in front. This reason, of course, was most apolitical: "After all, my name is also Arjun Singh." Photographs: Jewella Miranda |
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