Delhi's best-known former policewoman, Kiran Bedi, 65, has been officially named the BJP's chief ministerial candidate in the coming assembly elections.
Ms Bedi had expressed a wish to contest against Aam Aadmi Party chief Arvind Kejriwal from his home turf New Delhi constituency - making for a US Presidential style battle. But the party has decided that she would be contesting from Krishna Nagar.
The country's first woman IPS officer, Magsaysay award Winner, Asian lawn tennis champion and activist, Ms Bedi had stepped into active politics last week.
Her advent brought fresh enthusiasm among the party workers. But it reportedly ruffled the feathers of a section of veterans, who resented the primacy given to a newcomer.
BJP president Amit Shah, who had formally inducted her into the party last week, said the decision to make her the party's chief ministerial candidate was "supported by all members".
Ms Bedi's foray into politics comes in the wake of her association with Gandhian Anna Hazare's India Against Corruption movement.
Though earlier she had expressed a disinclination for politics, last year, in an interview to NDTV she admitted that she was ready to take the plunge.
Today, she said it was Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "inspirational leadership" that propelled her to join the BJP.
Union Minister Arun Jaitley, who was present at today's media conference, said Ms Bedi has an "image of credibility and she has been seen as a crusader".
That was the image the Anna movement, too, had banked on. The movement became a runaway hit with the middle classes, and in turn, helped push Mr Kejriwal, one of its leaders, to the chief ministership of Delhi. But the launch of AAP had also caused the first cracks in the Team Anna, with Mr Hazare himself and Ms Bedi opposing the formation of a political party.
Her advent in politics, thus, drew barbs from the Congress and caused eyebrows to lift in the Aam Aadmi Party.
But Ms Bedi is no stranger to controversy.
As a young officer of the traffic police, she was dubbed "Crane Bedi" for towing away illegally parked vehicles - including that of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
In 2007, superceded for a promotion, she quit the police force after long and well-appreciated tenure that included a spell at the United Nations in New York and a string of awards, among them the prestigious Magsaysay Award for her reforms at Delhi's Tihar Jail. It became a matter of debate, with Ms Bedi being criticised by a section for her exit.
"When I was overlooked for the police commissioner, I left because the work that I was given was not challenging enough," she said today.
Ms Bedi is also the founder of two non-profits -- Navjyoti and India Vision Foundation -- which work in the fields of education, vocational skills and healthcare for the rural and urban poor.
She has been voted India's most admired and most trusted woman by The Week and Readers Digest.
Ms Bedi had expressed a wish to contest against Aam Aadmi Party chief Arvind Kejriwal from his home turf New Delhi constituency - making for a US Presidential style battle. But the party has decided that she would be contesting from Krishna Nagar.
The country's first woman IPS officer, Magsaysay award Winner, Asian lawn tennis champion and activist, Ms Bedi had stepped into active politics last week.
Her advent brought fresh enthusiasm among the party workers. But it reportedly ruffled the feathers of a section of veterans, who resented the primacy given to a newcomer.
BJP president Amit Shah, who had formally inducted her into the party last week, said the decision to make her the party's chief ministerial candidate was "supported by all members".
Ms Bedi's foray into politics comes in the wake of her association with Gandhian Anna Hazare's India Against Corruption movement.
Though earlier she had expressed a disinclination for politics, last year, in an interview to NDTV she admitted that she was ready to take the plunge.
Today, she said it was Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "inspirational leadership" that propelled her to join the BJP.
Union Minister Arun Jaitley, who was present at today's media conference, said Ms Bedi has an "image of credibility and she has been seen as a crusader".
That was the image the Anna movement, too, had banked on. The movement became a runaway hit with the middle classes, and in turn, helped push Mr Kejriwal, one of its leaders, to the chief ministership of Delhi. But the launch of AAP had also caused the first cracks in the Team Anna, with Mr Hazare himself and Ms Bedi opposing the formation of a political party.
Her advent in politics, thus, drew barbs from the Congress and caused eyebrows to lift in the Aam Aadmi Party.
But Ms Bedi is no stranger to controversy.
As a young officer of the traffic police, she was dubbed "Crane Bedi" for towing away illegally parked vehicles - including that of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
In 2007, superceded for a promotion, she quit the police force after long and well-appreciated tenure that included a spell at the United Nations in New York and a string of awards, among them the prestigious Magsaysay Award for her reforms at Delhi's Tihar Jail. It became a matter of debate, with Ms Bedi being criticised by a section for her exit.
"When I was overlooked for the police commissioner, I left because the work that I was given was not challenging enough," she said today.
Ms Bedi is also the founder of two non-profits -- Navjyoti and India Vision Foundation -- which work in the fields of education, vocational skills and healthcare for the rural and urban poor.
She has been voted India's most admired and most trusted woman by The Week and Readers Digest.
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