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This Article is From Sep 26, 2012

Ajit Pawar's resignation: First for his party, decoding what he really wants

Ajit Pawar's resignation: First for his party, decoding what he really wants
New Delhi/Mumbai: When Ajit Pawar flourished his resignation as Deputy Chief Minister of Maharashtra, two political parties were seemingly caught off-guard. His own - the Nationalist Congress Party or NCP, which is headed by his uncle Sharad Pawar; and the Congress, with who the NCP has co-governed Maharashtra for 12 years now.

Both parties appeared to spend all of today trying to decode what Ajit Pawar really wants. He said last night that he has quit the government because he is tired of accusations that his decade-long term as Irrigation Minister was seeped in corruption. His party's leaders in Maharashtra, in a somewhat staged show of loyalty, met today in Mumbai and demanded that he withdraw his resignation, but said the final call should be taken by  NCP president Sharad Pawar.  

At the same time in Delhi, the party's second-in-command, Praful Patel, stressed that Ajit Pawar's resignation must be accepted  by chief minister Prithivraj Chavan, who belongs to the Congress. He also tried to dispel reports that Ajit's move is aimed as much at unnerving his uncle as the Congress. "There is no question of any division within the NCP. It is purely led by Sharad Pawar. Ajit Pawar acted on his own conscience with the permission of the party president," Mr Patel said.

Sharad Pawar sought to make it clear this evening that only he calls the shots in the NCP. He was emphatic that there was no mystery to his nephew's resignation - Mr Pawar has repeatedly said that Ajit Pawar took that step in consultation with him. He also reiterated that no one in his party would do nothing to endanger the coalition government in Maharashtra and that all decisions would be made by what he called the NCP's senior leadership.    

At their meeting in Mumbai, Ajit Pawar's supporters worked hard to prove the opposite. They brandished placards that borrowed the trademark slogan of  the anti-graft movement led by activist Anna Hazare. "Ajit dada, tum sangharsh karo, hum tumhare saath hain (Brother Ajit, you  continue your fight -we are with you)," the signs read. The irony of the message was unmediated. Some of Anna's closest aides have spent months campaigning against Ajit Pawar, who they say robbed the state's poor farmers by spending thousands of crores on irrigation projects that never materialized. (Read: Ajit Pawar's resignation must be accepted, says Arvind Kejriwal)

Ajit Pawar, sources in the NCP say, has been waiting to prove his shape-shifting potential to his uncle. So even as Sharad Pawar said last evening that no other ministers from the NCP would quit the Maharashtra government, all 19 sent their resignation letters to a party official.  It was little more than posturing, but for its own leadership and not the Congress, with who the NCP's relations have been fractious in recent months.

The alleged scam that has benched Ajit Pawar is based on his term as Water Resources Minister of Maharashtra from 1999 to 2009. A state Economic Survey showed that 40,000 crores have been spent in the last 10 years on irrigation, but only an additional 0.1% land benefitted. Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan has asked for a white paper or financial statement to post-mortem the negligible returns on the expenditure. 

Sources in the NCP say the party blames Mr Chavan and his team for leaking information against NCP ministers as part of his effort to clean-up a coalition that been held responsible for a series of scams, including siphoning flats meant for war widows and veterans in a Mumbai high-rise to politicians, bureaucrats and ineligible defence officers.On record, the NCP says it welcomes the white paper on irrigation as a chance to clear Ajit Pawar's name."The Deputy Chief Minister thought he should step down and give full support to white paper," Sharad Pawar said.  Privately, party sources say nothing could be farther from the truth.

The  activists and the opposition BJP charge Ajit Pawar with these broad categories:  they say he sanctioned inflated contracts to private firms who gave him kickbacks; he rewrote rules to give himself near-total powers to approve escalating costs of dams and canals ; when senior bureaucrats objected, pointing out that the consent of other officials was required, he ignored them.  

Activists say that one of the most flagrant instances of his abuse of power is that  in three months - between July to August 2009- he cleared an increase of 20,000 cores as the expense on 38 projects in Vidarbha. The opposition alleges that because the state elections were scheduled for October that year, Ajit Pawar wanted to milk his last few months in office to collude with private companies. Vidarbha, an area ravaged first by drought and then by farmer suicides, had prompted special financial packages from the Prime Minister; activists say this made it easier to push through irrigation projects in the region.

Later that year, the NCP-Congress combine won the election and Ajit Pawar then became deputy chief minister.

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