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This is an archive article published on April 14, 2024

In Bastar, BJP, Cong campaigns flag vikas as theme song – rail line to speciality hospitals

Cong ended BJP’s 21-year winning streak in Bastar in 2019, this time BJP debutant Mahesh Kashyap hopes to get the better of Cong veteran Kawasi Lakhma

Kawasi LakhmaLakhma told The Indian Express: “There is no railway line connecting Bastar with Raipur."

From the demand for railway connectivity to the pitch for better access to government schemes and health care — such development issues seem to be dominating the campaign for the Lok Sabha election in Chhattisgarh’s tribal-dominated Bastar constituency, which has always been in the news for the Maoist presence.

The planks of the leading contestants in Bastar, which goes to the polls in the first phase on April 19, are centred on vikas (development).

The Congress has fielded six-time MLA and former minister Kawasi Lakhma, 70, from the seat, while BJP candidate Mahesh Kashyap, 49, is making his poll debut.

Talking to The Indian Express, Kashyap says his “top priorities” are a railway line till Jagdalpur, greenlighting the construction of a four-lane road till Jagdalpur and the construction of super-speciality hospitals.

“There are no good hospitals in Bastar and people go to Visakhapatnam or Raipur for treatment. Indravati river is our lifeline but water is getting diverted towards the jungle in Odisha. I plan to ensure there is no water-crisis in future,” he says.

Lakhma told The Indian Express: “There is no railway line connecting Bastar with Raipur. There should be two – one connecting Chhattisgarh with seven districts which this Lok Sabha seat covers, and another connecting it with Bhadrachalam and Warangal in neighbouring Telangana. I want Bastar to be connected with all major cities in India.”

Several civil society activists in the area also speak of the development challenges that the region faces.

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Basant Lal Jha, who has been associated with the cause of education in Bastar for years and has founded two colleges and helped build four schools in Bastar, speaks of the “quality of teachers”. He adds that quality education is key in the Naxal-affected area.

A senior civil surgeon working in a government hospital in Bastar speaks of many patients in the region being “referred to avail treatment elsewhere”.

He says: “In remote villages, we need to develop a telemedicine system so specialist doctors sitting in command centres can attend to patients. We need to make sure doctors are available in remote areas and a super-speciality hospital needs to be made operational soon and strengthened.”

Five-time ex-North Bastar MP Arvind Netam, a former Union minister in the Indira Gandhi cabinet, flags “employment” and “climate change” as major issues.

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“Due to deforestation of especially Sal trees and mining activities, there is a lot of water and air pollution. In the years to come, there will be a crisis for drinking water… Where will these tribals go when they lose their jal, jungle and jameen (water, forest and land)?”

Bastar region         BJP     Congress Victory Margin
2008 Assembly polls (8 seats)     2,98,086     2,22,832     75,254
2009 Lok Sabha     2,49,373     1,49,111     1,00,262
2013 Assembly polls (8 seats)     3,32,412     3,41,872     9,460
2014 Lok Sabha     3,85,829     2,61,470     1,24,359
2018 Assembly polls (8 seats)     3,36,301     4,45,546     1,09,245
2019 Lok Sabha     3,63,545     4,02,527     38,982
2023 Assembly polls (8 seats)    4,87,399     4,05,753     81,646

The contests over the years

The Bastar parliamentary constituency comprises eight Assembly seats across six districts: Sukma, Bijapur, Dantewada, Narayanpur, Bastar and Kondagaon.

The BJP had won Bastar from 1998 until 2019. The party’s Baliram Kashyap represented the seat from 1998 until his death in 2011. His son Dinesh Kashyap won it in 2014.

The BJP’s winning streak was ended by the Congress’ Deepak Baij in 2019, when he won with a margin of 38,982 votes.

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Though Bastar has been seeing a bipolar contest between BJP and Congress, the CPI and the BSP may prove to be significant for determining the poll outcome. In 2019, about 41, 667 chose the NOTA option, followed by the CPI who got 38,395 votes. The BSP got 30,449 votes.

Kashyap believes that the BSP has become weak, adding that “due to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s guarantees”, he will be “able to pull CPI and NOTA votes”.

“I will win by a margin of 1.50 lakh to 2 lakh votes. Lakhma will know what real election is for the first time,” Kashyap claims,

attacking Lakhma for his alleged links with Maoists.

“He (Lakhma) escaped the Jhiram Ghati incident (a 2013 Naxal attack that killed several Congress leaders), while all senior leaders died. Why does he keep winning from a Naxal-affected area? Our Bastar is getting a bad name in the country due to Naxals. If he becomes a parliamentarian then you can imagine what happens to Bastar,” Kashyap told a gathering at Bailkonta village earlier this week.

Jayprakash S Naidu is a Principal Correspondent for The Indian Express, currently serving as the state correspondent for Chhattisgarh. With an extensive career in frontline journalism, he reports on the political, security, and humanitarian landscape of Central India. Expertise and Experience Specialized Conflict Reporting: Jayprakash is a leading voice on the Maoist/Naxalite conflict in the Bastar region. His reporting provides a critical, ground-level view of: Internal Security: Tracking high-stakes encounters, surrender programs for senior Maoist leaders, and the establishment of security camps in formerly inaccessible "heartland" villages. Tribal Rights & Displacement: Investigative reporting on the identity and land struggles of thousands of displaced tribals fleeing conflict zones for neighboring states. Governance & Bureaucratic Analysis: He consistently monitors the evolution of Chhattisgarh as it marks 25 years of statehood, covering: Electoral Politics: Analyzing the shift in power between the BJP and Congress and the impact of regional tribal movements. Public Policy: Reporting on landmark infrastructure projects (e.g., mobile connectivity in remote zones) and judicial interventions, such as High Court rulings on civil and family law. Diverse Investigative Background: Prior to his current focus on Chhattisgarh, Jayprakash held reported from Maharashtra, where he specialized in: Crisis & Disaster Management: Notable for his extensive coverage of the Cyclone Tauktae barge tragedy (P-305) and the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on frontline personnel. Legal & Human Rights: Investigative pieces for platforms like Article-14, focusing on police accountability and custodial deaths across India. Environmental & Social Justice: Authoritative reporting on the Hasdeo Aranya forest protests and the approval of major tiger reserves, highlighting the tension between industrial mining and environmental preservation. ... Read More

 

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