Smriti Irani introduces new “ABC” in Chhattisgarh politics
The Hindu
She vows to replicate Amethi success in Chhattisgarh, attacks Baghel government on women safety issues
Challenging Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) would replicate its Amethi electoral success in Chhattisgarh, Union Minister Smriti Irani introduced a new slogan — ABC or Amethi-Bilaspur-Chhattisgarh — in the poll-bound State on Friday
Ms. Irani was addressing party workers at the ‘Mahtari Hunkar’ rally organised by the BJP’s women’s wing in Bilaspur, 125 kilometres from the capital, Raipur.
The Union Minister, who had in 2019 defeated former Congress president Rahul Gandhi from the Amethi Lok Sabha constituency — once considered a pocket borough of the Gandhi family — said that Mr. Baghel, too, had campaigned for Mr. Gandhi in the last elections but the stocks of the party had been continuously diminishing there.
“If Mr. Baghel is listening to me, I wish to humbly tell him that in the last Assembly elections [2022], we had forced the Congress to lose their deposit in what was once their stronghold… Like Arun Ji [Sao, State BJP president] said [in his address] that my arrival is an indication of us handing them a similar defeat [for the Congress in next year’s Assembly polls]. So, Arun ji, it’s A for Amethi, B for Bilaspur, and C for Chhattisgarh,” said Ms. Irani.
She proceeded to launch an attack on Congress, especially cornering it on the issue of women’s safety. She claimed that 6,000 women had been raped since Mr. Baghel took over in 2018 and the police do not register cases till the victims’ resort to an extreme step such as dying by suicide.
‘Look at your record’
Earlier, Mr. Baghel questioned the BJP rally that focussed on women safety or the alleged lack of it in the State. Talking to presspersons, he said the BJP should look at other States where it was in power and its own record in Chhattisgarh where it ruled for 15 years before he was voted in.
In 2021, five women from Mayithara, four of them MGNREGA (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act) workers, found a common ground in their desire to create a sustainable livelihood by growing vegetables. Rajamma M., Mary Varkey, Valsala L., Elisho S., and Praseeda Sumesh, aged between 70 and 39, pooled their savings, rented a piece of land and began their collective vegetable farming journey under the Deepam Krishi group.