National

Nitish Kumar's “My Brother” Jab At BJP Over Karpoori Thakur's Bharat Ratna


Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar pays respects to Karpoori Thakur on his birth anniversary.

Patna:

Political rhetoric over the decision to award ex-Bihar Chief Minister and OBC leader Karpoori Thakur a posthumous Bharat Ratna – less than three months before the general election – ramped up Wednesday with Nitish Kumar, the current Chief Minister, taking a jab at the ruling BJP.

Standing beside Mr Thakur’s son – Ram Nath, a Rajya Sabha MP from his Janata Dal (United) – Nitish Kumar stressed the JDU “been demanding the Bharat Ratna” since Karpoori Thakur’s death in 1988″.

“Karpoori Thakur worked for the upliftment of all sections of society… the poor, the backward, and the most backward. He even banned liquor. We have been praising his work (and) started this campaign since his death,” Mr Kumar told reporters, “We have been demanding Bharat Ratna since the beginning.”

READ |ย Ex-Bihar Chief Minister Karpoori Thakur Gets Posthumous Bharat Ratna

“He (Karpoori Thakur) never made his son his successor… but my brother (referring to Ram Nath Thakur) was a minister (from 2005 to 2010, in the second Nitish Kumar ministry) and is now in the Rajya Sabha.”

The Bihar Chief Minister also took a dig at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, declaring he expected him to “claim full credit” for conferring the award on Karpoori Thakur. “I was told by Ram Nath Thakur… the Prime Minister had called him up after the announcement. The PM has not called me so far…”

“It is possible that he may claim full credit for the move,” he said, after an event this morning to honour Karpoori Thakur on his birth anniversary.

Nitish Kumar’s comments have been seen as a fresh chapter in a race by Bihar politicians to claim credit for the award to Mr Thakur, with the BJP accusing the opposition of trying to profit from his legacy.

READ |ย On Bharat Ratna For Karpoori Thakur, Bihar Leaders’ Credit Contest

RJD patriarch Lalu Prasad Yadav, also a former protege of Karpoori Thakur and ex-Chief Minister, had said the man remembered even today as ‘Jannayak’, ought to have received the award a long time ago.

Mr Thakur’s son was earlier also part of the Bihar cabinet when Lalu Yadav was Chief Minister.

In his swipe at the BJP, Lalu Yadav pointed out the recognition for Karpoori Thakur came not only just before the Lok Sabha poll but also on the heels of a controversial statewide caste-survey, which said over 60 per cent of the state’s 13.1 crore people are from backward or extremely backward classes.

“… the centre ย (only) woke up when present Bihar government conducted caste census and increased scope of reservation for benefit of Bahujans,” Lalu Yadav, whose RJD is allied with the JDU, said on X.

Lalu Yadav’s son, Tejashwi Yadav, who is the Deputy Chief Minister, also hit out at the BJP-led centre.

The Congress has also chipped in, with party MP Rahul Gandhi acknowledging the “welcome” award but also insisting that a “true tribute” to Karpoori Thakur, and his efforts to improve the condition of marginalised communities, would be for the BJP to order a national caste census.

READ |ย “Politics Of Symbolism”: Rahul Gandhi On Karpoori Thakur’s Bharat Ratna

“The country now needs ‘real justice’ not ‘politics of symbolism’,” he said.

The BJP has hit back via Union Minister Giriraj Singh, who said, “Nitish Kumar and Lalu Yadav played in the lap of Congress for years. Why did they not get this done?”

Ravi Shankar Prasad, another BJP leader from Bihar, criticised “previous governments” of the state. “Some thought only about their own families. The Modi government thinks about the country. Someone might be our opponent… but if he has done something for the country, he will be honoured,” he said.

Karpoori Thakur, born on January 24, 1924, and who died on February 17, 1988, was the first non-Congress socialist leader to become Chief Minister of Bihar, a post he held twice in the 1970s.

READ |ย Karpoori Thakur Was Nitish Kumar, Lalu Prasad Yadav’s Mentor

He is credited with beginning Bihar’s alcohol prohibition policy, back in 1970. He was inspired by heavyweights like Ram Manohar Lohia who spearheaded the socialist movement in post-Independent India, and, in turn inspired current leaders like Nitish Kumar and Lalu Yadav.

With input from agencies

NDTV is now available on WhatsApp channels. Click on the link to get all the latest updates from NDTV on your chat.





Source link