[The sense of doom returns.
Of course, it was always there. But, at least to an extent, at the
back of the mind.
Now, it is right in front, staring hard into eyes.

"The chants of “Sabka saath sabka vikas” on Saturday gave away to
frenzied cries of “Jai Shree Ram” and “UP mein rahena hoga toh Yogi
Yogi kahena hoga” as the BJP’s Gorakhpur MP, Ajay Singh alias Yogi
Adityanath, known for his divisive past and politics, was anointed as
the next chief minister of Uttar Pradesh."]

http://www.asianage.com/india/all-india/190317/focus-on-mandir-in-run-up-to-2019-general-elections.html

Focus on Mandir in run-up to 2019 general elections

THE ASIAN AGE. | SANJAY BASAK AND YOJNA GUSAI

Updated : Mar 19, 2017, 6:43 am IST

After demonetisation, Modi’s 2nd gamble ahead of 2019, claims BJP leader.

New Delhi: ***The chants of  “Sabka saath sabka vikas” on Saturday
gave away to frenzied cries of “Jai Shree Ram” and “UP mein rahena
hoga toh Yogi Yogi kahena hoga” as the BJP’s Gorakhpur MP, Ajay Singh
alias Yogi Adityanath, known for his divisive past and politics, was
anointed as the next chief minister of Uttar Pradesh.*** [Emphasis
added.]

Sources said putting the Hindutva hawk and founder of the Hindu Yuva
Vahini at the helm of affairs in UP was a “conscious decision by the
BJP top brass in consultation with the RSS”. The decision to pick
Adityanath as chief minister was sealed at a meeting between BJP chief
Amit Shah and RSS’ second-in-command Bhaiyyaji Joshi in Mumbai last
week.

The BJP now appears all set to step up the politics of polarisation
ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha polls in order to consolidate the entire
Hindu votebank, cutting across caste dynamics, with Uttar Pradesh seen
as the gateway to New Delhi, some in the party feel. One of the main
things that Yogi Adityanath is expected to focus on is the
construction the Ram temple at the disputed site at Ayodhya.

Talking about the decision, a BJP leader said: “After demonetisation,
this is Modi’s second gamble before the 2019 elections.” It was,
however, also felt in some circles that Adityanath’s choice as chief
minister runs the risk of the resurrection of a decimated Opposition
in UP as well as across the country.

Moderates in the BJP who had been claiming that the UP mandate was a
vote for “development” appeared stunned and till the last moment some
top UP leaders kept saying that “it could not be true”.

The decision to make Adityanath chief minister was a closely guarded
secret and a number of other names, including that of Union minister
Manoj Sinha, were kept in circulation to keep everyone guessing.

A top Cabinet minister, speaking to this newspaper late on Friday
night, said: “It’s decided. Manoj Sinha will be the CM.” Unaware of
the developments behind closed doors, a confident and beaming Mr Sinha
went Saturday morning to temples in Varanasi to offer prayers. By the
afternoon he was snapping at the media, and accusing them of dragging
his name into the race “unnecessarily”.

To find out the reasons for this somewhat contentious decision, this
newspaper spoke to several senior BJP and RSS leaders. Sources said
even before the UP polls were under way, the RSS and BJP decided to
“seriously start the process of building the much-promised Ram Mandir
at Ayodhya if the BJP won the polls.” Both outfits felt the
construction of the “much-awaited Ram temple will galvanise the
majority of the Hindu community in the BJP’s favour before the 2019
general election.” For this, they needed a strong Hindutva icon and
therefore zeroed in on Adityanath.

Yet Yogi Adityanath was not given any clear indication during the
campaign, but merely told he “will have no reason to complain... and
be given a major responsibility if the party came to power in the
state”.

While the BJP refused to give any commitments, two top RSS leaders
reassured Adityanath that “his name for the CM’s post will be
seriously considered”. At the same time it was made clear he could be
made chief minister only if the BJP managed to come to power in the
state on its own. Adityanath apparently promised that the “Ram Mandir
will be a reality” if he was made CM,” sources said.

Before the UP elections, a conscious decision was taken to play to the
Hindu gallery when the BJP decided not to give tickets to a single
Muslim candidate, the sources said. The party’s historic victory, with
well over 300 seats in the 403-member Assembly, vindicated the party
strategy to stick to the Hindu votebank and “isolate” Muslims as far
as electoral politics was concerned.

In the entire UP campaign, the BJP kept two narratives running side by
side. One was of development while the other was of strident Hindutva.
It may be recalled that before the UP election, a survey was done of
party cadres to decide on the main electoral plank. A majority of BJP
workers and leaders said “Hindutva and nationalism” should be the main
planks in UP.

While speaking about development, top BJP leaders including the Prime
Minister touched on communally-sensitive issues during the campaign.
At the same time, Adityanath and other saffron fringe elements kept
their divisive rhetoric going.

Adityanath had earlier attacked Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan,
saying he “should remember that if people boycott his films, he would
also have to wander in the streets like a normal Muslim... These
people are speaking in the language of terrorists. I think there is no
difference between the language of Shah Rukh Khan and Hafiz Saeed”. He
had also earlier targeted Mother Teresa for “conspiring to
Christianise India”.



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Peace Is Doable

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