Congress, AAP Express Outrage as Morbi Hospital Gets ‘Makeover’ Ahead of PM’s Visit

The hospital’s entry gates and some areas inside were re-painted, new tiles were placed on some walls, new water coolers were kept in place and bedsheets of wards where the bridge collapse victims are undergoing treatment were changed, according to reports.

New Delhi: Uproar by opposition parties Congress and Aam Aadmi Party has drawn attention to what reports have said were nightlong efforts to clean and decorate a civil hospital where some victims of the Morbi bridge collapse are being treated ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit today.

Sunday’s suspension bridge collapse at the Gujarat city has claimed 141 lives, according to reports.

NDTV has reported that its ground reporters visited the hospital to find that a “huge post-midnight makeover” was in progress to prepare the hospital for Modi’s visit.

Workers were seen cleaning and painting a portion of the 300-bed hospital, which is a two-storey structure of three wings, PTI additionally reported.

Six of those injured in the collapse are undergoing treatment at the hospital, while four to five other injured are being treated at a private hospital, PTI quoted a doctor as having said. So far, 56 people have been discharged, he added.

NDTV, however, reported that the number of those admitted at the hospital was more, around 13.

Portions of the entry gate have been painted in yellow, while some areas inside the hospital have got a coat of white paint. In addition, minor construction work, including the placing of new tiles on the walls, has taken place, according to PTI.

NDTV reported further that new water coolers were brought in, bedsheets in the two wards where the bridge collapse victims are undergoing treatment were changed, and that there was a “massive clean-up”.

While the hospital underwent what was reportedly a preparatory clean up, reporters from NDTV spoke to a man who was at the hospital looking for his missing family members. “I have searched high and low in the hospital, but no one is helping,” Vinod Dapat said.

Congress and AAP both tweeted images that showed repair work going on inside the hospital.

“They are not ashamed. So many people died, and they are preparing for an event,” Congress said.

In addition to still photos, AAP also posted a video of the hospital being painted.

“Morbi civil hospital is being painted overnight so that the poor condition of the building does not get exposed during PM Modi’s photoshoot,” AAP wrote.

Assembly elections will be held soon in the state, prompting quick assurances from the ruling BJP and loud demands for investigation and reparations from opposition parties.

As Gujarat CM, Madhavsinh Solanki Was the Precursor to Mandal Politics

He rode to power after uniting Gujarat’s marginalised classes, but was unable to politically empower these sections.

Madhavsinh Solanki, who passed away at the ripe old age of 93 on Saturday, will be remembered for being the precursor to what later came to be known as Mandal politics under V.P. Singh’s prime ministership which sought to empower the other backward classes (OBCs). He became Gujarat’s chief minister after leading the Congress to win 142 assembly seats in 1980, followed by 149 seats in 1985. Keen political watchers attribute Solanki’s success to uniting backward castes, Dalits, Adivasis and Muslims.

As the story goes among Congress circles, Indira Gandhi advised the party’s Gujarat leaders in the late 1970s to work out ways to “consolidate” four major sections of the population – backward castes, Scheduled Tribes, Dalits and Muslims. It prompted two senior Congressmen, Jhinabhai Darji and Sanat Mehta, to work out what later came to be known as the KHAM theory, uniting Kshatriyas (included the two main OBC groups Thakores and Kolis), Harijans (a term no longer used, refers to the Scheduled Castes), Adivasis and Muslims. They constitute nearly three-fourths of the state’s population.

Solanki’s job, as chief minister, was to galvanise the administration to implement the KHAM theory. Himself a Thakore, a community mainly consisting of descendants of the foot-soldiers during the British rule, he concentrated on the OBCs, to whom he gave 21% reservation. “This virtually led to the entire OBC population – nearly half the state’s population – to support Solanki”, said a senior Congress leader. “It showed during the polls, though at the expense of losing the support of the Patels and upper castes.”

Even though KHAM helped Congress win big – 142 seats in 1980 and 149 seats in 1985 – Solanki failed to politically empower any of the sections which had helped him become the chief minister. Facts show the majority of those who won on Solanki’s KHAM-cum-reservation campaign in 1985 were non-OBCs.

A breakup worked out by social scientist Ghanshyam Shah suggests only 31 out of 149 seats Congress won went to OBCs, consisting of Kshatriyas, Kolis and Ahirs; 29 to “middle castes”, consisting of non-OBCs, especially Patels; 36 to upper castes (Brahmins and Banias); and eight to Muslims. Congress won 25 of 26 seats won by Scheduled Tribe candidates and all 13 won by Scheduled Castes.

With his exit, Congress’s downfall began

In his second term, which began in 1985, Solanki was forced to resign within months after his victory, at the insistence of the Congress high command – especially Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi – following a violent anti-reservation agitation in the mid-1980s which turned communal. With Solanki’s ouster, the Congress’s downfall began. Amarsinh Chaudhury, an Adivasi, was installed chief minister and forced to suspend the reservations given to the backward castes.

A senior Congress leader conceded that soon, the Congress began losing its core base of OBCs, Adivasis and Dalits. “Unable to keep the flock together, many leaders also began switching over to the BJP,” the leader said.

Solanki was brought back to power in 1989 for a short period, but it didn’t help. Made minister for external affairs in 1991, he put in his papers the next year after meeting the Swiss foreign minister who reportedly told him to halt inquiries into the Bofors scam.

I was witness to his weak handling of the ministry during my Moscow stint as a foreign correspondent (1986-1993). On coming out of the meeting he had with his then-Soviet counterpart, I asked him about the issues that were discussed during the talks. After detailing discussions on several subjects, he said, “We also discussed some outstanding issues.” I asked him what those were. Indian ambassador A.S. Gonsalves intervened, perhaps sensing that Solanki would blurt out differences on the non-proliferation treaty. Later, the then-political counsellor in the Indian embassy, told me, “Solanki had a short nap during the meeting. He looked bored.”

A suave politician, Solanki would proudly say how he helped trigger major social sector shifts – one of them being pan-Indian. He told me about a conversation he had with Indira Gandhi, who expressed “extreme concern” over the high dropout rate among school-going children. “I offered her the solution to provide mid-day meals in schools. She readily accepted this and asked officials to work out details,” he told me.

The mid-day meal scheme was not just adopted in Gujarat but across India and continues to be a major social support system. Another major policy shift which Solanki talked about was bringing down the very high dropout rate among Gujarati girls – one of the highest in India. “We decided to provide free education to girls right up to the university,” he told me, regretting, though, that it was discontinued by Narendra Modi after he became the chief minister of Gujarat in 2001.

Remained private after retiring

One who shied away from public appearances after he said goodbye to active politics in 1991, he lived a quiet life at his residence in Sector 19 in Gandhinagar. Solanki is known to have grievances against Sonia Gandhi’s top aide Ahmed Patel, who died of COVID-19 a few weeks ago. He made a short appearance in a Congress rebel meeting in Gandhinagar, held to hold Ahmed Patel responsible for the party’s “humiliating” defeat in the December 2002 assembly elections.

Popular among the numerically strong OBC Thakore sub-caste, to which he belonged, he was constantly approached by candidates to campaign during polls to galvanise OBC voters. A senior Congress leader, whom I met in 2007 in the North Gujarat town Patan, lamented, “If only Solanki had come to campaign just once, we would win this seat. Without him, this seems difficult.”

Solanki refused to talk politics during personal meeting, or even criticise Modi—except to regret how two of the schemes which he had envisaged – midday meal and free education to girls – had been undermined after Modi came to power. He would instead give details about the new books which he had read, ranging from Hitler’s Mein Kempf to a book on how western medicines were based on traditional home remedies that Indians use in their daily lives. One of those who was called to speak at the golden jubilee celebrations of Gujarat in 2010 in the state assembly, Solanki didn’t utter any work of criticism against either BJP or Modi.

The collapse of Solanki’s KHAM coalition came in handy for Modi to woo the Congress’s OBC politicians. One of them was Udesinh Baria, whom I met covering an election. A top Solanki loyalist and an influential OBC leader from Godhra, Baria kept meeting Solanki to pay his obeisance even after joining the saffron party. According to Baria, in a bid to woo him, Modi said, “I have great respect for Madhavsinh. But in politics, you must move forward to work for a cause. I am an OBC, and so are you. We must come together.”

Making Hardik Patel Working President Is Gujarat Congress’s Power Move Aimed at Patidars

Patel formally joined the Congress only 15 months ago, ahead of the 2019 parliamentary elections. His meteoric rise to the top in this span has surprised many party veterans in the state.

New Delhi: In an attempt to put its house in order, the Congress on Saturday appointed the firebrand Patidar leader Hardik Patel as its working president in Gujarat. The hope is that the move will help reignite the Patidar community’s support for the Congress.

Having lost eight legislators since March 2020, the Congress was forced to concede an extra seat to the BJP in the recently-concluded Rajya Sabha polls. Although he campaigned for the Congress in the 2017 state assembly polls, Patel formally had joined the Congress only 15 months ago, ahead of the 2019 parliamentary elections.

His meteoric rise to the top in this span has surprised many party veterans in the state.

On Sunday, Patel thanked the Congress leadership of the state, and said that the challenge in front of him is to ensure an absolute majority for the party in the 2022 assembly polls.

Ahmedabad Mirror reported that the decision to elevate him to a leadership position was taken by the All India Congress Committee around ten days ago on the recommendation of the Gujarat incharge Rajeev Satav, but the state leaders were not informed about it. Sources told the daily that even senior leader Ahmed Patel, who belongs to Gujarat, was not kept in loop.

Patel, who belongs to Viramgam in Ahmedabad district, had led the 2015 Patidar agitation in Gujarat. What had begun with a demand for OBC reservation for the community under the banner of Patidar Anamat Andolan Samiti (PAAS), the agitation, under his leadership, slowly morphed into a social movement against low-quality private education and poor employment opportunities in the state.

Patel, along with Alpesh Thakor from the Thakor community and the Dalit leader Jignesh Mevani, had emerged as the most prominent opposition voices, who rose in politics from different social movements. While Thakor fought the assembly elections as a Congress candidate, the other two only campaigned for the party from outside. The Congress, as a result, put up a spirited fight against the dominant BJP in the 2017 assembly polls.

However, with Thakor defecting subsequently to the BJP, and many other elected MLAs abandoning the Congress ship, Patel had emerged as the prime contender to steer the party in the state.

Patel’s electoral ambition received a jolt when he was barred from contesting elections after a lower court in Mehsana convicted him in July 2018 in a rioting case. The high court later granted him bail and suspended his jail sentence. By giving him the leadership baton, the Congress expects him to steer the party in the upcoming bypolls in eight assembly seats. The 26-year-old, also known for his fiery speeches, is perhaps the youngest ever Gujarat Pradesh Congress Committee working president.

Also read: Hardik Patel Arrested for Evading Sedition Case Trial

The All India Congress Committee (AICC)’s general secretary K.C.Venugopal on Saturday announced that along with Patel’s appointment, the party also approved the appointment of  three district Congress Committee presidents — Mahendrasinh Parmar for Anand, Anand Chaudhary for Surat and Yasin Gajjan for Devbhoomi Dwarka.

Within minutes of his appointment, Patel announced his plans to do a road show in as many as 6,000 villages in north Gujarat and Saurashtra regions. “I am taking off in a car to cover 6,000 villages, to make a note of and discuss all their issues. And we shall win all the eight (assembly) seats (scheduled for September-October later this year),” Patel told the Indian Express. He will begin his journey from Rajkot’s Khodaldham temple, which is believed to be the most important shrine among the Leuva sect of the Patidar community.

Manish Doshi, spokesperson for the GPCC, welcomed his appointment. “The Gujarat Congress welcomes the appointment of Hardik Patel as working president. He is a kind of leader who has fought battles for social justice, be it the issue of unemployment among youth or farmers’ plight. He has shown his leadership through the battles he fought for the society. With his appointment, the Congress will only benefit and its fight against the BJP-led state government, which believes in negative governance, will be strengthened,” he told the Indian Express.

Amit Chavda, the current GPCC president, also congratulated Patel on Twitter. With Patel’s appointment, the party is clearly trying to engineer a social coalition of dominant Patidars and the OBC community in the state. Along with the OBC leader Chavda, the Congress will be led by two Patidar leaders from now on – Patel as the working president and the leader of Congress in the assembly Paresh Dhanani.

Unlike the senior state leaders of the party, Patel and Dhanani are known to be fiercely critical of the ruling BJP and the Vijya Rupani-led state government. Their elevation, it is expected, will infuse Congress with new energy and fresh ideas to counter the dominance of the BJP in the state. However, Patel’s appointment is also likely to rock the existing power structure within the party, currently helmed by leaders like Bharatsinh Solanki, Arjun Modwadia and Siddharth Patel .

Gujarat: 25% of Infants Admitted in Govt Hospitals in Rajkot, Ahmedabad in December Died

Rajkot and Ahmedabad civil hospitals recorded 269 and 253 child deaths respectively between October and December 2019.

New Delhi: There have been a total of 199 reported infant deaths in two government hospitals in Rajkot and Ahmedabad in December alone. The number of infant deaths constituted almost 25% of the total number of admissions in that month, according to a report in the Times of India.

Of the total number of infant deaths in December 2019, Rajkot Civil Hospital accounted for 111 of them, which constituted 28% of the total admissions in December. As per data released by the state health department, Rajkot and Ahmedabad civil hospitals recorded 269 and 253 child deaths respectively between October and December 2019.

Of the 388 admissions to the newborn ICU in December at the Rajkot Civil Hospital, 160 cases were referred from other health care facilities. The Ahmedabad Civil Hospital admitted 415 children in December of which 243 had been referred from other health facilities.

Also read: Ground Report: Infant Deaths at Kota’s J.K. Lon Hospital Were a Matter of When, Not If

According to a report in The Hindu, the Rajkot civil hospital recorded as many as 1,235 infants deaths in 2019.

The deputy chief minister of Gujarat and health minister Nitin Patel said that the high infant mortality rate was unfortunate ‘but within limit’. Patel also claimed that the spike in the number of deaths was attributable to the fact that patients from outside the state were being treated at state-run hospitals.

After the state’s Congress president Amit Chavda claimed that the number of deaths could run into thousands if hospitals across Gujarat are considered, Patel accused the grand olf party of attempting to deflect attention away from the recent infant deaths at the J.K. Lon hospital in Kota in Congress-ruled Rajasthan.

“I would like to ask the Congress governments in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh why patients from these neighbouring states come to Gujarat hospitals for treatment if they have good health care systems in place?” Patel said.

While Patel admitted that the deaths were on the higher side, he termed it a “cyclical phenomenon” and claimed that the state government had managed to reduce the infant mortality rate to below 25 from 30 in three years.

Patel also attributed the high number of infant deaths to factors such as underweight children, unhealthy mothers, improper pregnancy practices and lack of awareness about the health of the mother and the child.

Also read: 8 Ways in Which India’s Public Healthcare Can Change for the Better

Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani, however, did not comment on the issue and walked away when he was asked about the reports of the deaths of over 100 infants in Rajkot and Ahmedabad hospitals.

BJP Fields Ex-Congress MLA Alpesh Thakor in Gujarat Bypoll

Thakor contested elections on Congress ticket in 2017 but later resigned to join the BJP.

New Delhi: Former Congress MLAs, including Alpesh Thakor, were, on Sunday, named by the BJP as its candidates for bypolls in Gujarat as it announced 38 nominees for assembly by-elections to be held across several states on October 21.

Thakor, who was elected on a Congress ticket in 2017 and resigned to join the BJP, will contest from Radhanpur, the seat he had won. Another Congress defector, Dhavalsinh Narendrasinh Zala, will also contest from Bayad on a BJP ticket.

Also read: Alpesh Thakor’s Decision to Leave the Congress Is a Calculated Risk

The BJP’s central election committee finalised the names.

Of the 38 assembly seats for which bypolls are to be held, ten are in Uttar Pradesh, six in Gujarat, five in Kerala, four in Assam, two each in Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Sikkim and one each in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Meghalaya, Odisha, Rajasthan and Telangana.

Bypolls will be held for 51 assembly seats on October 21, along with the state elections in Haryana and Maharashtra. The BJP is likely to name the candidates for the remaining seats soon.

Hardik Patel’s Poll Hopes Squashed After Gujarat HC Refuses to Stay Rioting Case Conviction

With April 4 being the last date for filing of nominations in Gujarat, Hardik has only a few days left to challenge the judgement in the Supreme Court.

Ahmedabad: Patidar leader Hardik Patel’s hopes of fighting next month’s Lok Sabha polls hit a major roadblock with the Gujarat High Court on Friday dismissing his plea to stay his conviction in a 2015 rioting case.

With April 4 being the last date for filing of nominations in Gujarat, Hardik has only a few days left to challenge the judgement in the Supreme Court.

Hardik, who joined the Congress on March 12, had expressed his willingness to contest the election from Jamnagar Lok Sabha seat.

During the earlier hearings, the Gujarat government had strongly opposed his plea saying that Hardik has criminal antecedents with 17 FIRs registered against him, including two cases of sedition.

After the high court’s judgement, Hardik’s lawyers said they would first study the order and then decide about approaching the Supreme Court.

Also Read: The Rise and Fall of a Patel Patriot

Justice A.G. Uraizee took into account the submissions made by the Gujarat Government while rejecting Hardik’s petition seeking a stay on the conviction awarded to him by a sessions court, which was coming in his way for contesting the April 23 Lok Sabha polls.

In his order, Justice Uraizee noted that convictions can be stayed only in exceptional cases and Hardik’s case does not fall into that category.

Citing the state government’s submission, the court said as many as 17 FIRs were registered against Hardik in Gujarat.

The court also noted that no relief can be granted after looking at Hardik’s criminal background.

In July last year, the sessions court at Visnagar in Mehsana district sentenced Patel to two years of imprisonment for rioting and arson in Visnagar town in 2015 during the Patidar quota stir.

In August last year, the high court suspended the lower court’s order sentencing him to two years’ jail term in the 2015 rioting case, but did not stay his conviction.

BJP Wins Jasdan Bypoll, Reaches Three-Figure Mark in Gujarat Assembly

BJP candidate Kunvarji Bavaliya defeated his nearest rival, Congress nominee Avsar Nakiya, by a margin of 19,979 votes, officials said.

Ahmedabad: The ruling BJP comfortably won the bypoll from Jasdan Assembly seat in Gujarat on Sunday, taking its tally in the House to 100.

BJP candidate Kunvarji Bavaliya defeated his nearest rival, Congress nominee Avsar Nakiya, by a margin of 19,979 votes, officials said.

Bavaliya retained the Assembly seat in Rajkot which he had won as Congress candidate in 2017.

With this, the BJP now has 100 MLAs in the 182-member Gujarat Legislative Assembly, while the Congress tally has come down to 76. The saffron outfit had won 99 seats in the 2017 assembly polls and the Congress 77.

Also Read: Gujarat Waives Rs 625 Crore Energy Bill Dues of Rural Users

At the end of the counting of votes, Bavaliya secured a total 90,262 votes as against Nakiya’s 70,283, the officials said.

A total 2,146 votes were cast as NOTA, they said.

Polling for the Jasdan Assembly seat was held on December 20 and a voter turnout of 71.27% was recorded.

The by-poll became a battle of prestige between the ruling BJP and the opposition Congress in the wake of the latter winning the just held assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh.

The by-election was necessitated after Bavaliya, an influential Koli community leader who had won the seat on a Congress ticket in 2017, resigned from the party and also the assembly, and joined the BJP.

Bavaliya, who quit as an assembly member on July 2, was made a Cabinet minister in the BJP government the same day.

As the Congress candidate in 2017, Bavaliya had won over BJP’s Bharat Boghara by a margin of 9,277 votes.