Irked by Indrajit's isolation, CPI may withdraw support to United Front
George Iype in New Delhi
The Communist Party of India is reconsidering its support to the
United Front government after veteran CPI leader and Home Minister
Indrajit Gupta was isolated by Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda and
other ministers on the law and order situation in Uttar Pradesh.
The Communists feel their first experiment in sharing power
at the Centre has not enabled them to influence governance
or extend the party's base in a number of states.
Ever since Gupta and Agriculture Minister Chaturanan Mishra were
sworn in as the first Communist Cabinet ministers in independent India,
the CPI has been in a quandary over a number of
crucial policy issues which it hoped to implement once it was in power.
While Gupta has raked up more controversies than
any other minister in the Deve Gowda Cabinet, Mishra has been
unable to implement some of the commitments the CPI
promised in its election manifesto.
The latest controversy centering around Gupta was his announcement
in Parliament last week that the law and order situation in
UP under Governor Romesh Bhandari was 'heading towards
chaos, anarchy and destruction.'
The CPI is angry that Prime Minister Deve Gowda, instead of
defending Gupta and admonishing Bhandari, is isolating
the former in government. The prime minister told the Lok Sabha
on Tuesday, 'I cannot take action against the governor if
a murder takes place in UP.'
"We are concerned that the CPI minister's efforts to improve
the law and order situation in UP and other states is
being blocked by other UF coalition partners," CPI national
secretary D Raja told Rediff On The NeT.
The CPI leadership, he said, is taking up the question of proper communication
between UF ministers with the prime minister
and other senior Front leaders.
''No one will listen to a government if its top ministers speak
in different languages on the same issue," Raja said.
CPI sources said the party leadership will be forced to reconsider
its decision to take part in the UF coalition if the government
continues to ignore its ministers.
But senior UF leaders are said to be disenchanted with Gupta.
They say the home minister has been raking up unnecessary controversies
instead of taking some brave initiatives in trouble-torn Jammu
and Kashmir and the North-East.
The CPI is also upset by the fact that External Affairs Minister
I K Gujral, who is from Prime Minister Deve Gowda's Janata Dal,
has lately been commenting on India's internal security more than
the home minister.
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