Wednesday, Jul 03rd

Last update04:55:26 AM GMT

Font Size

Screen

Profile

Layout

Direction

Menu Style

Cpanel

Wooing votes at cost of public health

  • PDF

By Sidharth Mishra

Navratra are Ram Leela time in the national Capital. Given the Covid-driven restrictions the dramatic presentation of the life story of Prince of Ayodhya remained a low-key affair this year too. The Covid-restrictions may have reined in the dramatization on the stages but there continue to enough theatrics on the streets.

Political parties last week locked horns for allowing the festivity of Chhath. The said festival is still about 20-days away, to be celebrated six-days after Diwali. Delhi’s festivity calendar so far been known to have Diwali as the major landmark after Dusshera but the events of the last week showed that Diwali is being given a go by for Chhath.

If there are restrictions in place, they would first have to go away for Diwali and then only for Chhath. Diwali festivities in Delhi is best known for the multiple Diwali melas held across the city but nobody really seems to be missing them.

The restrictions last year did not allow the melas, and the chances of the same returning with the same robustness is unlikely this year too. To add to it are the near ban on the bursting of the crackers, which is so closely identified with Diwali but nobody is complaining, and rightly so.

A city which witnessed a mayhem this summer with funeral pyres burning in plenty, ideally should not have its political parties fighting for removing restrictions which seeks to keep the deadly virus away. But then in politics more than dousing the fire of the pyres, appeasing the sentiments of an electorally strong community matters.

With the Delhi Municipal Corporation elections scheduled for April next year, street theatres are a necessity to garner votes, at least that’s what the political parties across the spectrum think. Chhath is the main festival of the migrants from Bihar, Jharkhand and parts of Uttar Pradesh. Today they are spread in good numbers across all the 70 assembly constituencies of the national Capital.

Given the political sensitivity of the people coming from the state and their large presence giving them electoral sinews, wooing them is the single-point agenda of the political parties, who are demanding removal of Covid restrictions for celebrating Chhath festival. Under attack from political rivals of Aam Aadmi Party’s like the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Congress, which is trying to regain the migrant votes, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal last week finally urged Lt Governor Anil Baijal to allow Chhath puja celebrations in the public places.

The political parties have ostensibly taken to the streets following an order issued on September 30 by the Delhi Disaster Management Authority (DDMA), which prohibited Chhath celebrations at public places, in view of the threat posed by Covid-19. Now in a letter to Baijal, Kejriwal has written that “as the Covid situation in the city was under control,” the L-G could call a meeting of the Delhi Disaster Management Authority (DDMA) to discuss the ban on the celebrations at public places.

Migrants in the city have been the worst sufferers during the lockdowns imposed in the past two years, losing life and job, in many cases forcing reverse migrations. It’s fact that be it the city government led by Kejriwal or the civic bodies controlled by the BJP, both failed to provide the requisite succour to the migrant population.

Now with elections looming large, parties think it’s time for them to make amends and redeem themselves in front of the electorally strong community, whom they all had let down during their hour of crisis. Let there, however, be no doubts that this search for catharsis and making amends for their past deeds comes with an eye for votes in the municipal polls.

(The writer is an author and President, Centre for Reforms, Development & Justice) 

 

By Sidharth Mishra

Contact us

  • Add: 1304 Satpura Appt.
    Kaushambi, Delhi NCR, INDIA
  • Tel: (+844) 456 789 101
You are here: Home