Behind Mau switch for Mukhtar’s son, SP bid to ‘avoid criminal tag’
Ansari is a history-sheeter in Mohammadabad police station of Ghazipur district with 38 cases filed against him in various police stations in a number of districts, including Lucknow, Ghazipur and Mau. He has been acquitted in most of these cases though.
Mukhtar Ansari (Express photo by Vishal Srivastav/File)
By getting jailed gangster-turned-politician Mukhtar Ansari’s 29-year-old son Abbas Ansari to file nomination from the Mau constituency as a candidate of its ally Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP) instead of his father, the Samajwadi Party (SP) seems to have made a bid to avoid being branded a “party of the mafia”. Currently lodged in Banda jail, Ansari is Mau’s sitting MLA.
In their election campaigns, top BJP leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah and UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath have relentlessly targeted the SP for “giving tickets to criminals” – an allegation denied by SP president Akhilesh Yadav, who, in turn, has levelled a similar counter-allegation at the BJP.
You have exhausted your monthly limit of free stories.
Read more stories for free with an Express account.
Ansari, who has won the Mau seat five times since 1996, was set to contest the election. His lawyer Daroga Singh said last Friday that the MPs/MLAs special court, hearing a plea filed by Ansari, gave him permission to file nomination papers from jail.
Ansari is a history-sheeter in Mohammadabad police station of Ghazipur district with 38 cases filed against him in various police stations in a number of districts, including Lucknow, Ghazipur and Mau. He has been acquitted in most of these cases though.
According to the UP police, 96 members of “Ansari’s gang” have been arrested and 85 of them booked under the Gangsters Act so far. The arms licences of 72 of his associates have been cancelled or suspended, while police have seized, attached, freed or demolished properties worth Rs 192 crore linked to Ansari and his associates.
Ansari’s lawyer said Tuesday that the decision to field Abbas was taken as his father wanted to “transfer his legacy to the son”.
A senior SP leader, however, said that Akhilesh has made up his mind not to field any of the “controversial figures in the upcoming polls to get rid of the tag of being a party for gangsters”.
Story continues below this ad
“It has been Akhilesh ji’s resolve not to fall in the trap laid out by the BJP. If Mukhtar, Atiq Ahmed and Imran Masood had contested, it would have helped the BJP because even if the SP won their seats, it would have resulted in a bigger loss for the party by impacting other seats,” said the leader, adding that “The party has promised these leaders that they will be taken care of after the polls once the SP forms government.”
Abbas filed nomination Monday on a ticket of the SBSP led by Om Prakash Rajbhar, who is considered close to Ansari. SP sources say that although Rajbhar tried to persuade Akhilesh to field Ansari, the SP chief did not agree in order to avoid “polarisation of Hindu votes”.
Mau has a sizeable number of Muslim and Rajbhar voters, and with Abbas being the only Muslim candidate in the fray, SP leaders are hopeful of a “big victory” here. The BSP has fielded its UP unit chief Bheem Rajbhar from Mau, while the BJP has given ticket to a first-timer Ashok Singh.
Asad Rehman is with the national bureau of The Indian Express and covers politics and policy focusing on religious minorities in India. A journalist for over eight years, Rehman moved to this role after covering Uttar Pradesh for five years for The Indian Express.
During his time in Uttar Pradesh, he covered politics, crime, health, and human rights among other issues. He did extensive ground reports and covered the protests against the new citizenship law during which many were killed in the state.
During the Covid pandemic, he did extensive ground reporting on the migration of workers from the metropolitan cities to villages in Uttar Pradesh. He has also covered some landmark litigations, including the Babri Masjid-Ram temple case and the ongoing Gyanvapi-Kashi Vishwanath temple dispute.
Prior to that, he worked on The Indian Express national desk for three years where he was a copy editor.
Rehman studied at La Martiniere, Lucknow and then went on to do a bachelor's degree in History from Ramjas College, Delhi University. He also has a Masters degree from the AJK Mass Communication Research Centre, Jamia Millia Islamia. ... Read More