Rajat Sharma

My Opinion

Kejriwal has many questions to answer

By enacting a dramatic demonstration about tampering of a dummy lookalike EVM inside the Delhi Assembly, Arvind Kejriwal has questioned the very integrity and credibility of a reputed Constitutional authority like the Election Commission.

Using legislative immunity, Kejriwal has sowed seeds of distrust in the minds of people on the way polling is being done. As per law, an FIR should be filed against Kejriwal. The problem with Kejriwal is that he considers himself a real life invincible Bahubali. If his party wins elections, he attributes it to popular support, and if he loses, he attiributes it to EVM tampering. After securing a landslide majority in Delhi assembly polls, Kejriwal dreamt of becoming India’s Prime Minister.

He used to blame all ills on Narendra Modi, but when his party lost elections in Goa, Punjab and Delhi, he lost his sleep. His partymen told him that his arrogance cost him the elections, but Kejriwal was unwilling to accept his mistake. This fake Bahubali faced fresh problems when his trusted Katappa levelled charges of bribetaking against him.

This surely necessitates a CBI probe. And, the Income Tax department must also investigate the sources and amount of donations collected by Aam Aadmi Party.

The man who rode the popular wave of expectations of probity in public life, must now reply to charges levelled against him before the public. This is what real democracy is all about.

Kejriwal has a knack of choosing fraudsters, bribe takers

In the ongoing mud-slinging drama unleashed on Delhiites by AAP leaders, Arvind Kejriwal and his cohorts have suspended ‘rebel’ Kapil Mishra, and Kejriwal himself, for the first time, tweeted cryptically ‘truth will prevail’. Let us see what happens at the special Delhi assembly session today. Even if, for a moment, we agree with Kejriwal’s assertion that Kapil Mishra’s charges are a bunch of lies, some questions do arise: Who made Kapil Mishra a minister for the last two years? He was one of Kejriwal’s select ‘diamonds’. Who made Satyender Jain a minister, against whom the CBI has started probe? Who made Jitendra Tomar a minister, who went to jail for acquiring a forged degree? Who made Sandip Kumar, implicated in sex scandals, a minister? Who made Asim Ahmed Khan a minister – the man who was caught taking bribe? All these were, what Kejriwal had claimed, “diamonds” – men of impeccable integrity. Now what can we say about the leader, who has selected liars, fraudsters and corrupt men as ministers? It is for the people of Delhi to decide.

Death sentence to Nirbhaya rapists should serve as a warning

The Supreme Court’s three-judge bench has upheld the death sentence given to four convicts in the infamous Nirbhaya gangrape case that rocked the nation’s conscience after December 16, 2013. I welcome this judgement as I believe, it should serve as a warning to future offenders. One of the rapists escaped the death sentence, because he was a juvenile (below 18 years) at the time of incident. He was sentenced to three years imprisonment under the Juvenile Justice Act and then released from jail. This juvenile’s act during the gangrape incident was horrendous, and he should have also been given the death sentence. We read news of rape incidents in newspapers almost daily, and watch faces of the accused on TV screens. Our blood boils when he see these offenders, and yet the common man, somehow or other, feels helpless. Because rapes continue to take place in our society. The Supreme Court verdict may strike some level of terror in the hearts of rapists, but what is required is this: Every mother should teach her son, every sister should teach her brother, to respect women. This is the only way out.

The secret of Swami Ramdev’s Patanjali success

I had once visited Swami Ramdev’s plant where his Patanjali brand products are manufactured.

‘Aaonla’ fruits were unloaded from trucks, then washed and pressed, and juice was packed in bottles, without being touched by human hand.

On Thursday, when Ramdev announced that his Patanjali venture’s turnover has crossed Rs 10,000 crore, I was reminded of what Prime Minister Narendra Modi said a few days ago in Haridwar, while inaugurating Ramdev’s Ayurvedic medicinal plant park. Modi had said, once Ramdev decides to do something, he achieves it by his sheer will, grit and determination.

Swami Ramdev is a Yoga guru, who has studied Ayurveda. He is a brand ambassador for his own venture and he knows the tricks of marketing and advertising. Last year, when his Patanjali venture’s turnover reached Rs 5,000 crore, he had announced he would achieve double the figure in the very next year, and he did.

On Thursday, Ramdev promptly announced he would achieve double of what his venture achieved this year, but I feel, the yoga guru has understated his claim. I would not be surprised if his turnover reaches Rs 50,000 crore next year. The secret of his success lies in the purity of his products.

His customers are satisfied and they spread the message about his products through word of mouth. Therein lies his real strength.

Terrorists in Kashmir seem to have run out of money

The spate of bank robberies in Kashmir Valley in the last few days points towards one thing: terrorists are fast running out of money. Their ‘supply line’ from Pakistan seems to have broken. Those funding the terrorists seem to be in trouble. But there is one more thing that needs to be underlined. The terrorists, out of frustration, have resorted to killing Kashmiri Muslims. The Hizbul Mujahideen outfit on Tuesday claimed it killed 2 bank security guards and three policemen while trying to rob a bank, but, late in the evening, it corrected its press release to say that it did not kill the security guards. Both the security guards were Muslims, and with their deaths, they leave behind families with four Muslim orphans and two widows. Clearly, terrorists have no sympathy for either Kashmiris or Kashmiri Muslims. Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti is right when she says that terrorists in the valley are destroying both Kashmir and Kashmiris.

Let our Army decide, how & when to teach Pakistan a lesson

There is continued anger among the people across the country over the beheading of two of our jawans. Our hearts cry out for the next of kin of those jawans killed. But, now is the time to keep our anger and emotions under control, and steel our determination to teach the enemy a lesson. Prime Minister Narendra Modi understands the anger and emotions across the nation, he also feels the pain in the hearts of people, but the decision to take revenge against the enemy must be left to our army. The Prime Minister cannot reveal such strategy on camera, or on social media. I have full confidence in our army. Pakistan will be taught a lesson soon, but as our Vice Chief of Army Staff said on Tuesday, the army will choose the place and timing on its own.

India must swiftly retaliate against Pakistan

There is nationwide anger and revulsion over the beheading of two of our martyred jawans by Pakistani army soldiers near the Line of Control on Monday. The anger is justified. No civilized army on earth ever beheads the bodies of dead soldiers. It runs against all canons of human behaviour, leave alone the Geneva Convention. The time is now ripe for a swift retaliatory action. I do understand that neither the top echelons of the government, nor the Defence Minister is going to share with the world at large, what they intend to do in retaliation. But the nation expects action, and fast.

Cheating at petrol pumps must be curbed

The Uttar Pradesh Special Task Force has done a commendable job in nabbing 23 persons on charges of cheating customers at several petrol pumps in Lucknow on Thursday. Our reporter says, chips had been inserted in nearly 99 per cent petrol pumps of Lucknow to cheat customers. The man who inserted the software chips had come from Delhi. I think this could be the handiwork of an inter-state gang. UP is not the only state where this nefarious activity was going on. There could be other neighbouring states like Rajasthan, Haryana and Delhi. Police in these states must coordinate with UP STF and nab the petrol pump owners cheating the customers.

Modi eyes Himachal Pradesh

On Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the UDAN low-cost air travel scheme from Delhi to Shimla, and in the process, he indirectly launched his poll campaign for the Himachal Pradesh assembly elections, due in November this year. Shimla had no air connectivity till yesterday, but now it is on the air map, thanks to the UDAN scheme. Modi publicly said, he wants poor and lower middles class people to travel in aeroplanes. I remember, Modi once telling me in the show Aap Ki Adalat, that he was a pucca Ahmedabadi, who knows how to travel to and fro at the cost of a single ticket. Modi has worked as a pracharak in-charge of BJP for many years in Himachal Pradesh. It has been a second home to him. He knows the lanes and bylanes of Shimla, and has innumerable old friends. On Thursday, he called out the names of his old journalist friends at the rally. Himachal Pradesh is the last bastion of Congress remaining in north India, and judging by the huge turnout at his rally, it appears that the BJP is confident of returning to power.

Kejriwal’s arrogance led to AAP’s defeat in MCD polls

The humiliating defeat faced by the ruling Aam Aadmi Party in the elections to three municipal corporations in the capital is the result of arrogance shown by party supremo Arvind Kejiwal. The Delhi chief minister quarrelled with almost every person worth the name. He quarrelled with the Lt. Governor, with the Centre, with founder-members of his own party and even denigrated constitutional bodies like the judiciary and Election Commission. Kejriwal used insulting words for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, described Election Commission as ‘Modi’s agent’, questioned the intentions of judiciary, denigrated the media, and levelled baseless allegations against persons of moral repute. The result was: the people of Goa and Punjab rejected his party in the assembly elections, voters in Rajouri Garden, Delhi, made the AAP candidate lose his deposit, and yet Kejriwal and his coterie did not correct their course of action. The electoral defeat in MCD polls was so humiliating that there is hardly any space left for the party to recover. Many leaders of Aam Aadmi Party are now raising questions about Kejriwal’s leadership, his arrogance and his style of working. The fall from grace for Kejriwal in the eyes of the public in a short span of two years is, indeed, shocking.

Centre must launch major operation to crush Naxalites

A US Department of State report has rated India’s Maoists as the world’s fourth most dangerous terrorist outfit, after Islamic State, Boko Haram and Taliban, in that order. The manner in which Maoists mutilated the bodies of our martyred jawans in Sukma is condemnable. There is nationwide anger over the massacre of 25 CRPF jawans and people expect the Centre to launch a major operation to root out Naxalites. We have to give more leeway to our security forces in conducting this operation. Let me share with you some facts which show that more people were killed by Naxalites, compared to Kashmir and the Northeast. In the last 12 years, there were 6100 victims of terror in Kashmir, 6360 people died in violence in Northeast, and 7442 people died at the hands of Maoists. Clearly, Naxalite terror is the biggest challenge facing the State. I have more facts to show that Naxalite violence has been curbed in a better manner during Modi regime compared to the previous regime, so far. The facts: In 2016, 65 jawans were martyred and 222 Naxalites were gunned down, in 2015, 59 jawans were martyred and 89 Naxalites were gunned down. Let’s look at the figures during UPA government. In 2013, 115 jawans were martyred and 100 Naxalites were gunned down, in 2012, 114 jawans were martyred and only 74 Naxalites were killed. Clearly, the trend has changed. Our security forces are having an upper hand in the battle against Maoists, but this is not enough. The barbaric attack on Monday, in which 25 brave jawans were martyred, clearly shows there were lapses, lack of intelligence and complacence. Such mistakes need to be corrected, soon.

Time to crush Naxalites in Chhattisgarh

Sukma in Chhattisgarh has always been the nerve centre of Maoist activity. On Monday, more than 300 Naxalites ambushed and martyred 25 CRPF jawans on the Dornapal-Jagargonda road. This attack reminds us of the Naxalite attack on a convoy of Congress leaders on May 25, 2013 in Darbha ghati, in which many senior Congress leaders, including V C Shukla, were killed. Monday’s attack was the biggest one in recent years. Chhattisgarh chief minister Dr Raman Singh has said that the Naxalites’ ire was over the construction of a vital road that passes through dense forests in Sukma district. He has said that if the road becomes operational, the backbone of Naxalite movement in his state would be broken. On Monday too, the CRPF jawans had been sent to provide protection to road construction workers. Our brave jawans had to lay down their lives for the nation, but their martyrdom will steel the nation’s resolve to crush Naxalites in Chhattisgarh.