DMK will go the Congress way and perish in 10 years, says Annamalai
The Hindu
Family thinks the party should be dependent on it, says BJP leader
The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam will go the Congress way and perish in another 10 years, said Bharatiya Janata Party State president K. Annamalai in Coimbatore on Monday night.
“DMK will vanish in a few years, as predicted by DMK MP [Tiruchi] N. Siva’s son Surya Siva, who recently joined the BJP. This is because the family that is running the DMK thinks the party should be dependent on it. It also thinks nobody should grow politically,” he claimed. “This is what the Congress thought 10 years ago and look where the party is now,” he said.
There was no difference between the two parties, according to him. The DMK was right now where the Congress was and in 10 years the party would vanish and thereafter political strategist Prashant Kishor would offer the very advice to the DMK that he had offered the Congress now – that non-family members should run the party, Mr. Annamalai said reacting to DMK Dharmapuri MP S. Senthilkumar’s claim that two BJP MLAs were in touch with him.
Mr. Annamalai charged the DMK had lied to the people in its election campaign by promising to revert to the old pension system for government employees. The party in the run-up to the Assembly election said one thing, but was now speaking the opposite.
This was not the DMK’s first doublespeak, he said and asked why the people should continue to trust the DMK.
On Sri Lankan financial crisis and the latest riots, he said India, which was now a board member at the International Monetary Fund, had asked for the country to be classified as a low income country by moving it from the middle income country category.
This would help the island nation have a longer loan repayment schedule. Likewise, India had also asked the IMF to extend loans to Sri Lanka on the same conditions that it was extending to the war-torn Ukraine.
he Tamil Nadu Government will take appropriate decision to protect the welfare and livelihood of Manjolai tea estate workers as Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, which is managing the tea gardens for the past 90-odd years, is about to wind up its operations in near future, Speaker M. Appavu has said.