Digvijay: No regrets for criticising PC
Declaring that he has “no regrets” for his public criticism of home minister P. Chidambaram’s counter-Maoist strategy focusing “only on the law and order angle”, Congress general secretary Digvijay Singh says he had conveyed his concerns to the “right quarters” in the Congress leadership before penning his comments.
“I wrote the article (criticising Mr Chidambaram) because I felt strongly on the issue of the ordinary people living in the Maoist-affected areas,” Digvijay Singh said in an interview at the Congress headquarters here.
“You cannot change the ground situation unless you win over the people in the Maoist-hit areas. You cannot solve the problems with bullets. We have to win the hearts and minds of the people in those areas and wean away them from the influence of the extremists,” Mr Singh, 63, who was chief minister of Madhya Pradesh from 1993-2003, said.
In an article published in an article, Mr Singh had strongly criticised Mr Chidambaram’s anti-Maoist strategy. He said Mr Chidambaram’s approach was a “narrow sectarian view, treating it as a purely law and order problem”.
The article came eight days after Maoist rebels had shot dead 75 troopers of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and a state police constable in Dantewada in Chattisgarh April 6.
Following the publication of the article, party spokesperson Janardhan Dwivedi had said that “Singh should have raised his opinion in the party fora”. The Congress leader responded by saying: “I had raised the issue at the right quarters in the party before.”
According to Mr Singh, his raising the Maoist issue with the Congress high command had the desired impact. “A change is seen in the official policy already.”
“Congress states like Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra have been more successful in controlling the Maoist challenge than those ruled by other parties,” he claimed. According to him, the situation in Chattisgarh is worse “primarily because of the wrong policies” of the state government”. He claimed his views on the Maoist challenge and the strategies to face them have been consistent. “I have first hand knowledge of the situation,” he said. He had written: “In this (Maoist) issue, I have differed with Mr Chidambaram’s strategy that does not take into consideration the people living in the affected areas, who ultimately matter. He is treating it as a purely law and order problem without taking into consideration the issues that affect the tribals. When I raised these issues with him, he said it was not his responsibility.” —IANS
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