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Nothing unusual about Mayawati's absence from Hathras

In July this year during the political crisis in Rajasthan, Mayawati’s BSP issued a whip asking six MLAs, who had won on its ticket in 2016, to vote against the Ashok Gehlot’s Congress government in the assembly.

October 12, 2020 / 19:13 IST
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On October 6, members of the Jatav Mahapanchayat and other Dalit community leaders torched effigies of Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati in Agra’s Jagdishpur.

The protestors were unhappy over the former Uttar Pradesh chief minister’s ‘silence’ on the alleged gangrape and murder of a 19-year-old Dalit woman in a village in Uttar Pradesh’s Hathras district, 200 kms from New Delhi.

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“BSP’s mission to speak for Dalits ended with the death of (its founder) Kanshi Ram. Leaders from all political parties visited Hathras and stood in support of the victim’s family, but Behenji did not meet the family even once,” Ramvir Singh Kardam, the president of Jatav Mahapanchayat, told reporters.

Kanshi Ram, who founded the BSP in 1984 and then ceded the leadership to his protégé Mayawati, died in 2006, and is known for his bicycle journeys. Mayawati is often referred to by her admirers and supporters as 'Behenji' (sister/ elder sister).