Wednesday, February 1, 2012

India’s low-caste queen launches re-election bid

Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh state Mayawati gestures as she addresses an election rally at Sitapur, near Lucknow, India. -AP Photo

SITAPUR: India’s “Dalit Queen,” a low-caste firebrand in power in the country’s most populous state since 2007, launched her re-election bid Wednesday vowing to continue working for the downtrodden.

Crowds of supporters from India’s Dalits, formerly “untouchables” or the lowest social class, cheered and waved as she swooped down in a helicopter before appearing on stage clutching her trademark leather handbag.

Mayawati, who uses one name, rules deeply impoverished Uttar Pradesh where she has helped elevate the status of the low castes, but is also accused of letting the state slide further into corruption and dysfunction.

She has also faced criticism for spending more than a billion dollars building giant statues of herself and her party symbol of an elephant, as well as memorials to past low-caste icons, in parks in the state capital Lucknow.

“It is the first time for this state that our government took up the cause of the Dalits and the deprived, as well as Muslims who were always neglected by successive regimes,” she said in an hour-long speech.

Uttar Pradesh, which goes to the polls next Wednesday to elect a new state assembly, has a population of 200 million, about the size of Brazil’s, and some of the most entrenched poverty in the world.

Around 30 per cent of the population lives below the poverty line and the rural female literacy rate is 56 per cent, according to government data.

The state is influential in national politics as a power base — Mayawati once said she hoped to rule the nation — and is the home constituency of India’s dynastic Gandhi family, which has dominated post-independence India.

A Muslim singer was chosen to warm up the crowds, signalling the importance of the minority religious community in the state’s politics.

Mayawati, 56, dressed smartly in beige, sat alone on a raised armchair at the front of the platform before rising to speak as her ministers and the local candidates stood discreetly at the back.

The crowd of as many as 50,000, many of them families of low-caste farm labourers, were packed into a field in the town of Sitapur, about a two-hour drive northwest from Lucknow.

Many said the election of Mayawati as chief minister in 2007 had helped improve their lives as they were less often victims of persecution and harassment from higher castes.

Some described being forced to carry cow dung, or having new clothes ripped by the resentful higher castes. Others said they were previously prevented from drinking from the same wells as higher castes or eating near them.

“We have got tremendous relief. Now we don’t have to work under duress,”said Lakhan Pasi, a 24-year-old labourer with two children. “That is why we will stick with Mayawati.”

Few seemed bothered by the allegations of corruption that swirl around her, or the criticism of her extravagant spending on her statue parks.

“It was only one percent of the budget on statues, and she made all these new parks,” said Kuldeep Bhati, 35.

In a speech focused largely on attacking her opponents, she promised 24-hour electricity to every home in her next term and said economic growth in Uttar Pradesh had increased during her reign.

She dwelt at length on the alleged corruption in the rival Congress party, which is in power in the national government and is pushing her in the state polls.

Rahul Gandhi, the heir-apparent of the Congress party and next in line in the Gandhi family, campaigned in Sitapur on Tuesday but in front of far smaller crowds.

Congress, Mayawati said, was stuck with an “anti-Dalit mindset”.

“It cannot tolerate the daughter of Dalits ruling the state because Congress is basically anti-Dalit,” she said.

After her speech, she waved briefly at the crowds before heading for her helicopter as supporters rose to their feet and started dancing.

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