Political pygmies determined to make their presence felt against star adversaries in UP

Chandra Shekhar Azad

Lucknow: Chandra Shekhar ‘Azad’ and Amit Jani are relatively unknown entities in Uttar Pradesh politics. They have hit headlines occasionally with their fledgling outfits but now they are ready to make news with their electoral debuts.

Azad who heads the ‘Bhim Army’, a Dalit outfit, is contesting elections against Prime Minister Narendra Modi from Varanasi. Jani who is the leader of the ‘Nav Nirman Sena’, has said that he will contest against Samajwadi Party (SP) president Akhilesh Yadav from Azamgarh.

Azad became famous in 2017 when his name came up in the Thakur-Dalit caste riots in Saharanpur. His ‘Bhim Army’ outfit which initially started as an organisation providing primary schooling to mostly Dalit kids but has now grown into a formidable political force in western Uttar Pradesh.

Azad spent over a year in jail where he was booked under the National Security Act and his popularity seems to have risen with his stint behind the bars. When he was recently hospitalised after being arrested for alleged violation of prohibitory orders, Congress general secretary in charge of Eastern Uttar Pradesh, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra visited him in a Meerut hospital, which pointed to his growing political clout.

Initially seen as a possible ally of the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), the ‘Bhim Army’ is now striking out independently and also posing a threat to Mayawati’s party.

Azad recently held a road show in Varanasi and his team is already working in Varanasi trying to enlist the support of Dalit youth, boatmen and other marginalised communities. He wants the SP, BSP and the Congress not to field candidates but support him instead.

Jani, on the other hand, started out as a SP youth leader and made headlines in 2012 when he vandalised a statue of BSP supremo Mayawati here. The then Chief Minister Akhilesh promptly disowned Jani who then formed his ‘Nav Nirman Sena’.

He has been jailed on a number of occasions for announcing training camps for Hindus to fight terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir. He claimed that he wanted to nurture a new generation of ‘Hindutva warriors’ to fight terror outfits. “Uttar Pradesh needs a Balasaheb Thackeray and that is why I am here,” he had said rather pompously recently.

About his decision to pit himself against SP chief Akhilesh Yadav, Jani said: “Akhilesh has wronged his father Mulayam Singh and his uncle Shivpal Yadav and is not what a youth leader should be. That is why I am challenging him.”

Though even a political novice can see that both Azad and Jani stand no chance against the political stalwarts they are challenging but their presence in the electoral area has given ample fodder to the media.

 

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