A jubilee and a jamboree
T.S. SUBRAMANIAN
in Tirunelveli
THE All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) virtually launched
its Lok Sabha election campaign in Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry at its silver
jubilee conference held at Tirunelveli from January 1 to 3. The conference
identified the ruling DMK as the party's "principal enemy". Party general
secretrary and former Chief Minister Jayalalitha exhorted her supporters
to defeat the DMK and its allies in all the 40 constituencies.
The conference identified the issues on which the party would fight the DMK.
These included the "inefficient" public distribution system; the bus fare
increase; the "inept handling" of the Cauvery, Periyar dam and Kachativu
issues; the DMK's "kowtowing" to the forest brigand Veerappan; and its "failure
to stop the Sri Lankan Navy from killing Tamil Nadu fishermen". The other
issues on which the DMK would be challenged are the provision of 69 per cent
reservation for the backward castes, the communal violence that erupted in
Coimbatore in November-December, and last year's caste clashes in the southern
districts.
The highlight of the conference was the participation of leaders of the AIADMK's
alliance partners - BJP president L.K. Advani, Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam general secretary V. Gopalsamy, Pattali Makkal Katchi founder Dr.S.
Ramadoss, Tamizhaga Rajiv Congress president Vazhapadi K. Ramamurthi and
Janata Party president Dr. Subramanian Swamy.
While Advani defended his party's alliance with the AIADMK, Gopalsamy asked
what the 39 DMK and Tamil Maanila Congress (TMC) Members of Parliament had
done on issues that were crucial for Tamil Nadu, such as the dispute over
Cauvery water with Karnataka. He blamed them for not making efforts to secure
for Tamil the status of an official language of the Union Government. According
to Ramadoss, Advani had told him that if the BJP came to power it would allow
State governments to maintain their quota of reservation in their respective
States. Subramanian Swamy predicted that the DMK Government would not last
beyond April.
K. GAJENDRAN
At the
AIADMK silver jubilee conference venue in Tirunelveli.
The conference saw Jayalalitha and party chairman V.R. Nedunchezhiyan taking
different lines on the alliance with the BJP. Nedunchezhian sounded apolegetic.
"This is not a case of parties uniting on the basis of ideology," he said.
Chief Ministers C.N. Annadurai and M.G. Ramachandran had formed alliances
to fight the common enemy. "Similarly, Jayalalitha has formed this alliance
to defeat a hegemonistic enemy (DMK) and to help the formation of a stable
government at the Centre," Nedunchezhian argued.
Jayalalitha, on the other hand, affirmed that the alliance was based on ideology.
She said: "Our alliance with the BJP is meant to protect Tamil Nadu's interests."
The decision on the alliance was "final", she declared.
Jayalalitha described herself as a woman hounded by the DMK Government, which,
she said, had foisted cases on her, got her bank accounts frozen, seized
her jewellery, threatened to auction her house, and put her in prison for
28 days. "I am guiltless. My conscience is clear," she claimed. She regretted
that the Congress(I) did not speak up for her when she was jailed; it was
the BJP which spoke up for her, she said. Many parties treated the AIADMK
as an "untouchable" after its defeat in the 1996 elections, but the situation
had changed, she said, and added that all national parties vied with one
another to align with the AIADMK. She went on: "The AIADMK has the power
to determine the fate of India."
Introducing an element of drama, Jayalalitha returned to party treasurer
Sedapatti R. Muthiah Rs.1 crore that she had borrowed from the party to pay
her income tax arrears. She said that she had already paid back Rs.20 lakhs.
The conference was held on the occasion of the completion of 25 years by
the party, which was founded by M.G. Ramachandran in 1972 following his expulsion
from the DMK.
The entrance to the venue had fortress-like facades with rich zari work.
The dais was lavishly decorated. Huge cutouts of Jayalalitha which were a
prominent presence at the previous conferences, were conscpicuous by their
absence. Another notable absence was that of Jayalalitha's friend and confidante
Sasikala Natarajan, who too faces a number of cases.
The conference opened after procession, which took 17 hours to cross a point.
An exhibition of photographs on the history of the Dravidian movement drew
large crowds.
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