Premium
This is an archive article published on February 20, 1999

Bhandari dines with PM & digests embarassment

NEW DELHI, FEB 19: Will he, won't he? The guessing game over Bihar Governor Sunder Singh Bhandari's fate ended this morning when he agree...

.

NEW DELHI, FEB 19: Will he, won’t he? The guessing game over Bihar Governor Sunder Singh Bhandari’s fate ended this morning when he agreed to stay on in his office following the intervention of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh.

With the spadework done by the RSS which advised Bhandari to meet Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee on Thursday night, it was left to Home Minister L K Advani — whose earlier announcement that the Governor may be replaced “to provide an apolitical administration” had sparked off the controversy — to plead with Bhandari to continue.

With the four-day-long drama “resolved amicably,” the Samata Party, the BJP’s ally in Bihar, welcomed his decision to stay on. Spokesperson Jaya Jaitley said her party had no objection to Bhandari being the Constitutional head of the State and made it clear that it was not putting any pressure for his replacement.

Story continues below this ad

“The proposal had come from the Home Minister Advani and we had simply said it was a good idea that a Governor should be apolitical,” she explained.

She said whoever was the Governor, the party wants the balance of social justice be maintained in matters of transfer of officials.

Senior Samata Party leader and Union Railways Minister Nitish Kumar, in the meanwhile, demanded the dissolution of the Bihar assembly and the holding of elections at the earliest.

Advani rang up Bhandari this morning to apologise for the remarks which had so “embarrassed and upset” the veteran RSS leader. In a statement issued later in the day, Advani remarked: “I spoke to Shri Bhandari this morning and conveyed to him the Government’s desire that he should continue as the Governor of Bihar.”

Story continues below this ad

“My reference to the possibility of `an apolitical administration’ for the state during the President’s rule had created an unfortunate misunderstanding,” he added.

According to Advani, his statement had no relation whatsoever to the abilities and administrative competence of Shri Bhandari ji “who is one of the ablest leaders of the country, held in high esteem by all because of his simplicity and integrity.”

The issue, according to him, had now been sorted out. “The Prime Minister has requested him to attend the National Development Council meeting as the representative of Bihar. Shri Bhandari ji has agreed to attend,” Advani further pointed out. With the issue being resolved, Bhandari attended the NDC meeting alongwith a retinue of officials, satisfied with the explanation offered to him by Advani.

Signs that he would continue as the Governor of Bihar had started emerging yesterday only. Speaking to reporters, he had said that he continue to be the Constitutional head of the state and that the officials were in regular touch with him to seek his advice. He had also defended the transfers in the state bureaucracy.

Story continues below this ad

He is learnt to have told people close to him that he would go back to Bihar only on the request of the RSS as it was on its intervention that he agreed to accept the Governor’s post in the first place. RSS general secretary H V Seshadri rang him up again yesterday and urged him to meet Vajpayee over dinner at which meeting the Vajpayee apparently persuaded him to continue pending Advani’s personal and public `sorry’.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement