Unconfirmed reports say that a drinks party was arranged in the night. The officials’ version is that they were asked to procure liquor for the party from anywhere possible. Two excise department officials were reportedly entrusted the responsibility of procuring the stuff from various liquor shops in Puttur as well as Sullia Taluk.
The officers were Yaqub Khan and Krishna Naik. The procurement was not limited to ordinary liquor. Using their clout and keeping the dignity, they collected only foreign liquor. And everything was free of cost. But no one knows if at all anyone from Karandlaje’s side had entrusted the job to them and if so how many bottles in fact were used for the wedding party’s consumption. It is being whispered in party circles that deputy chief minister B S Yadiyurappa and many other MLAs were present at that party.
But the liquor shop owners did not keep quiet by watching this drama. Finally, they complained to MP and state BJP president Sadananda Gowda, who immediately sought government action.
If Shobha Karandlaje in fact is not involved in the whole episode, who was trying to use her name to disparage her?
If there were no secret orders to procure liquor, would the officials have had the guts to misuse the name of an MLC, knowing very well the risk involved?
Is Shobha Karandlaje’s name being unnecessarily, but intentionally, dragged every now and then into controversies of this kind, making use of certain section of the media which is opposed to deputy CM Yediyurappa? Is it just because she is being considered to be close to Yediyurappa?
Shobha Karandlaje with Yediyurappa during the Ullal by-election campaign
After the BJP’s debacle in Ullal, where Shobha Karandlaje was put in charge of the campaign by none other than Yediyurappa himself, is it that others in the party are going after her throat?
How come anti-Yediyurappa games are in circulation as the date of handover of CM’s post in the coalition government is closing in with Yediyurappa being tipped to be the next CM?
One cannot help recalling a comment made by union railway minister Lalu Prasad Yadav in the Lok Sabha about three years ago. Flaying the virulent attack on Congress president Sonia Gandhi by the BJP members who were hell-bent on preventing her from becoming the PM, he had theorized that it was common for male and female politicians to be jealous of a good-looking woman.
By natural corollary, does the theory hold good here too?
Over to political experts.
0 comments:
Post a Comment