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This is an archive article published on October 4, 2007

Coalition mess: Kumaraswamy threatens polls

Putting the BJP in a bind and attempting to re-establish its secular identity, the Janata Dal (Secular)...

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Putting the BJP in a bind and attempting to re-establish its secular identity, the Janata Dal (Secular) on Thursday announced that it would continue sharing power with the BJP only if the saffron party removed the communal sting in its tail.

At a meeting of party workers on Thursday, while former Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda, the National President of the party, still left a 48-hour window for reconciliation, his son and Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy said he was willing to break his promise on power sharing with the BJP to ensure peace in the state. Calling for support from party workers, Kumaraswamy said he was ready to test his decision to break his promise in the “people’s court”.

Soon after the meeting with party workers, the Chief Minister called for an emergency Cabinet meeting. JD(S) sources said the Cabinet meeting would convene an Assembly session in the next 10 days where Kumaraswamy would test his majority in case the BJP withdraws support. Though the BJP ministers have submitted their resignations to Kumaraswamy, they continue to be in Government since the resignations have not been sent to the Governor. The Assembly session will also be used to buy time to explore an alternate arrangement to keep the BJP out of power, including support from the Congress, sources said.

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Deve Gowda, however, stated that his party’s political affairs committee would meet in New Delhi on Friday afternoon and subsequently seek an audience with BJP President Rajnath Singh. “The final outcome will be known in another 48 hours,” Deve Gowda said.

Earlier, looking back at his 2006 truck with the BJP, Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy listed out instances of communal problems in the state as reason for his call for discussions ahead of the October 3 power transfer. He cited the example of the recent attack on the home of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Karunanidhi’s daughter, the killing of two persons in a bus burning incident by people with alleged links to the BJP, and the trouble at the Datta Peeta shrine shared by Hindus and Muslims in Chikamagalur district.

“We need to talk on what they will do on these issues if we hand over power to them. Will they allow communal situations to flare up in the state? This is not child’s play, these are serious issues,” Kumaraswamy told his party workers. “There were communal problems in Mangalore during our tenure, but we controlled it quickly. What if such incidents occur again? We cannot transfer power without discussing these issues. We can discuss it even after October 5,” he said.

The Chief Minister said many of his MLAs had asked him to keep his promise to BJP leader B S Yediyurappa in order to avoid earning the reputation of being untrustworthy. “If tomorrow, after transferring power, there are communal riots in the state, what will be worse—the breaking of a promise or the breakdown of law and order. Within 48 hours of promising not to touch the Babri Masjid, through a court affidavit, it was broken,” Kumaraswamy stated.

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