George Iype in New Delhi
With a number of coalition partners angling for suitable ministerial berths in the
federal ministry, Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda is in for a tough time
when he returns from attending the World Economic Forum at Davos in
Switzerland.
United Front leaders have been informed that the
prime minister will expand his ministry by February 10.
Deve Gowda is expected to induct at least new six ministers, and UF partners
-- the prime minister's Janata Dal, Defence Minister Mulayam Singh
Yadav's Samajwadi Party, Home Minister Inderjit Gupta's Communist Party of India,
Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Telugu Desam Party,
Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah's National Conference and
Ajit Singh's Bharatiya Kisan Kamgar Party -- have begun vigorously
promoting their candidates for ministerial office.
The Janata Dal wants at least one more MP to be inducted in the ministry.
And the leadership's choice is the thakur leader from Bihar, Virendra Kumar
Singh. However, Mulayam Singh does not want Singh to be made a minister.
Instead, he has put forth the name of his aide, Rajya
Sabha MP Azam Khan. Yadav insists that Khan be given a Cabinet post.
The CPI which has two Cabinet ministers -- Agriculture Minister Chaturanan Mishra
is the other -- has told the prime minister that it wants party veteran Geeta Mukherjee
to be given priority over other aspirants for ministerial berths.
The Communist Party of India- Marxist, which supports the UF government from
outside, wants Xavier Arakkal, an Independent MP from Kerala, to be inducted
into the ministry. The CPI-M believes it is about time that a Keralite is made a minister
-- Kerala is the only south Indian state without representation in
the Deve Gowda government.
Chandrababu Naidu has demanded that his party -- the TDP -- should get one more Cabinet
post. The TDP has only one Cabinet minister, Yerran Naidu, who
heads the rural areas and employment ministry.
Sources said the AP chief minister is peeved that the TDP ministers have
been given 'light' portfolios by Deve Gowda. Naidu, whose relations with the prime minister
has deteriorated after the Alamatti dam controversy, wants his ministers to be given
important portfolios like civil aviation and industry.
Deve Gowda may also consider allocating a ministerial post each to the National
Conference and the BKKP, parties which entered the coalition much later. NC leader Saifuddin
Soz is considered a certainty for a Cabinet post, but Ajit Singh's entry into the federal government
has been opposed by the the Left parties. The Communists want the jat leader to be kept out
of government on the ground that he has recently been chargesheeted in the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha bribery case.
United News of India adds:
The prime minister held another
round of discussions with senior Congress leader K Karunakaran on Thursday
night in a bid to improve his strained relations with Congress
president Sitaram Kesri.
Deve Gowda, who left for Davos on Friday morning, will meet
Karunakaran again on his return.
The prime minister earlier met Karunakaran on January 27.
This meeting followed CPI-M general secretary Harkishan Singh Surjeet's parleys with
Karunakaran.
After Monday's meeting with Deve Gowda, Karunakaran briefed
Kesri about his discussions with the prime minister.
During Thursday's meeting, the prime minister is understood to
have given Karunakaran an assurance that his government would not take a final
decision on the sale of Maruti Udyog shares to Suzuki and the Tata-Singapore
Airlines proposal for domestic air transport without proper
consultations with the Congress leadership.
The Congress Parliamentary Party executive, on January 24, had
objected to these proposals.