Rajasthan assembly Polls 2018: Amit Shah to interact with youths on November 21 in Jaipur

The event will be held at Tagore School auditorium in Jaipur where nearly 4,000 youths will participate. The event will be live streamed and Shah will take questions from youths present there and also from those at six other locations — Bharatpur, Udaipur, Kota, Jodhpur, Ajmer and Bikaner.

 

BJP president Amit Shah will hold talks with youths of poll-bound Rajasthan on November 21 in Jaipur, Union minister Rajyavardhan Rathore said on Sunday.

The main event will be held at Tagore School auditorium in Jaipur where nearly 4,000 youths will participate. The event will be live streamed and Shah will take questions from youths present there and also from those at six other locations — Bharatpur, Udaipur, Kota, Jodhpur, Ajmer and Bikaner, Rathore said at a press conference in Jaipur.

Apart from these places, town hall meetings will be held in other 200 locations across the state where youths will be present, Rathore said, adding questions from youths who will be present at these locations will be registered beforehand and they will not be able to ask question during the programme.

“India is emerging as a strong nation due to the vision and energy of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Youths understand this. Social media has brought awareness among people on issues, be it political or any other. BJP has always has held dialogues with youths and therefore, the party present is going to communicate with the state’s youths on November 21,” he said.

Rathore said that questions can be asked through social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook. Assembly polls in Rajasthan will be held on December 7.

 

 

 

Note: RSS Feeds taken from respective websites

Rajasthan elections: Congress announces 10 new names in 3rd List Of Candidates

On Saturday, the Congress released its second list of 32 candidates, pitting Manvendra Singh, son of BJP veteran and former Union Minister Jaswant Singh, against Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje in her traditional Jhalrapatan seat.

 

The Congress on Sunday released its third list of candidates for 13 constituencies, leaving five seats to its allies in the December 7 Rajasthan Assembly polls.

Among the 13, three candidates have been named as replacements.

B.D. Kalia has been fielded from Bikaner West, replacing Yashpal Gehlot who will now contest from Bikaner East. The party had earlier named Kanhaiyalal Jhawar in Bikaner East.

In Keshoraipatan, C.L. Premi has been replaced by Rakesh Boyat.

The Congress left the seats of Bali to the Nationalist Congress Party, Mundawar and Kushalgarh to the Loktantrik Janata Dal and Bharatpur and Malpura for Rashtriya Lok Dal.

On Saturday, the Congress released its second list of 32 candidates, pitting Manvendra Singh, son of BJP veteran and former Union Minister Jaswant Singh, against Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje in her traditional Jhalrapatan seat.

The Congress, in its first list of 152 candidates released on November 16, fielded both its Chief Ministerial aspirants – Ashok Gehlot and Sachin Pilot.

While the two-time Chief Minister Gehlot is contesting from his traditional Sardarpura seat, Mr Pilot is in the fray from Tonk.

The party has also fielded former Union Ministers C.P. Joshi and Girija Vyas for the Nathdwara and Udaipur Assembly seats respectively.

 

 

 

Note: RSS feeds Taken from respective websites

Ranji Trophy Group C Round-up: Rajasthan, Assam Notch up Wins

Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Assam registered wins in their respective Elite Group C Ranji Trophy matches played across different venues in the country.

While Uttar Pradesh thrashed hosts Odisha by 10 wickets in Bhubaneswar, Assam defeated Tripura by a massive 211 runs in Agartala.

On the other hand, Rajasthan hammered Services by five wickets at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur, chasing a stiff 357-run target.

Rajasthan rode on a magnificent 159 by their opener Amitkumar Gautam, who struck 13 fours and six other hits over the fence.

Opener Gautam, who had fallen cheaply in the first innings, and his partner Chetan Bist (78) laid the foundation of the win with their 170-run stand for the first wicket.

23-year-old Gautam, a right-handed batsman, scored runs when his team needed the most. He hammered a listless Services attack as their bowlers leaked runs.

When Gautam fell, the job was nearly done as Rajasthan needed just another 25 runs. Then R K Bishnoi (26 not out) and T N Dhillon (10 not out) took their side home with five wickets to spare as Rajasthan earned six points from the game.

Brief Scores:

At Jaipur: Services 228 and 264 against Rajasthan 136 and 357/5 (A V Gautam 159, Chetan Bist 78). Rajasthan won by five wickets.

At Bhubaneswar: Odisha 256 and 221 (Sandeep Pattnaik 46, Shivam Mavi 5-68) versus Uttar Pradesh 437 and 44/0 (Madhav Kaushik 22 not out). Uttar Pradesh won by 10 wickets.

At Agartala: Assam 327 and 239/6 Declared (Riyan Parag 80) versus Tripura 139 and 216 (Harmeet Singh 33, Mukhtar Hussain 5-73). Assam won by 211 runs.

At Porvorim: Goa 468/9 Declared versus Jammu and Kashmir 271 and 242/5 (Ian Chauhan 113 not out). Match Drawn. Goa take first innings lead.

No Muslim among 162 BJP candidates in Rajasthan Polls : Is party back to Hindutva?

Of the 162 BJP candidates, announced so far in two instalments for the 200-member Rajasthan Assembly polling for which is due on December 7, one absence the observers have marked is of any Muslim candidate, strengthening the perception that the party is playing the Hindutva card.

Mahesh Sharma, Union Minister of State for Tourism and Culture, who comes from Alwar, strongly denies the Hindutva slant, yet there are others in the party who say the BJP knows it well that Muslims in Rajasthan don’t constitute a vote bank.

One of the sitting MLAs, Habibur Rehman from Nagaur, on Wednesday joined the Congress when he failed to find his name in the list released on Sunday.

Rahman said the BJP is playing the Hindutva card in Rajasthan.

Another state minister Yunus Khan too failed to find his name. But, unlike Rehman, Khan has expressed his loyalty to the party.

Soon after the BJP released its first list of candidates, general secretary of BJP’s Minority cell M Sadiq had written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressing his concern as to how party members would reach out to the community if Muslims don’t get the party nomination.

The BJP in 2013 had fielded four Muslim candidates. Two of them were elected: Habibur Rehman from Nagaur seat and Yunus Khan from Deedwana.

“The BJP is a democratic party unlike the Congress where a board decides a candidate. The candidates are selected keeping in mind a variety of factors, including candidates’ strengths,” said Mahesh Sharma.

Avinash Rai Khanna, BJP’s Rajasthan election in-charge, said party candidates are shortlisted after ‘raishumari’ in consultation with grassroots workers as well as top leaders. He said the final BJP list is yet to come and until then no conclusion should be drawn on the composition of candidates based on caste and religion.

Rajasthan Congress vice-president Archana Sharma said, “The BJP could not perform in the state. Now they are trying to polarise the situation. But this won’t work… Rajasthan is no Uttar Pradesh.”

Salawat Khan, General Secretary, BJP Minority Morcha, said in the last elections, the party gave four tickets to Muslims. “So far we have not been given any party nomination. We are still hopeful that the party would consider candidates from the community,” he said.

In 2013 polls, the BJP had swept 163 of 200 assembly seats in Rajasthan.

 

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

CriCLive : Cape Town Blitz vs Tshwane Spartans, 1st Match

Open Link Below and click on Live Link

 

Live Stream @ super leagues

 

Match Info

Match:CTB vs TS, 1st Match, Mzansi Super League 2018

Date:Friday, November 16, 2018

Time:05:00 PM GMT

Venue:Newlands, Cape Town

Cape Town Blitz Squad:

Dale Steyn, Samuel Badree, Dawid Malan, Farhaan Behardien (c), Quinton de Kock (wk), Dane Piedt, Asif Ali, Jason Smith, Andile Phehlukwayo, Malusi Siboto, Sibonelo Makhanya, George Linde, Ferisco Adams, Kyle Verreynne, Anrich Nortje, Janneman Malan

Tshwane Spartans Squad:

AB de Villiers (c), Sean Williams, Eoin Morgan, Rory Kleinveldt, Dean Elgar, Jeevan Mendis, Robbie Frylinck, Andrew Birch, Gihahn Cloete (wk), Theunis de Bruyn, Sikandar Raza, Lungi Ngidi, Shaun von Berg, Eldred Hawken, Tony de Zorzi, Lutho Sipamla

Sachin Pilot Or Ashok Gehlot? Wary Congress Fields Both In Rajasthan Polls

Both Sachin Pilot and Ashok Gehlot will contest the December 7 Rajasthan election, the Congress party has decided as it tackles a much-reported rift between its two top leaders in the state, both chief ministerial aspirants.

“I and Sachin Pilot will both fight the Rajasthan assembly elections,” Ashok Gehlot, a former chief minister, told reporters in Delhi, Sachin Pilot by his side.

Sachin Pilot added: “On Congress president Rahul Gandhi’s instruction and on Gehlotji‘s request, I have decided to contest the assembly elections.”

Who among the two would contest the election has been the subject of much speculation in the run-up to the polls. Both are seen as the Congress’s candidates for chief minister; the party hopes to win back the BJP-ruled state riding on what it sees as anti-incumbency.

“We have said many times that whatever Rahul Gandhi decides on CM (chief minister) and we will abide by that. It’s a tradition for Congress in Rajasthan to not declare CM before elections,” Mr Gehlot told reporters.

The Congress in Rajasthan is deeply divided between factions loyal to Ashok Gehlot, the veteran, and 41-year-old Sachin Pilot, the state Congress chief, representing a younger leadership.

The party was seen to be reluctant to field either of them, if only to avoid the inevitable tussle for the top post if it does win.

The party’s Rajasthan unit advised its leadership to follow the Madhya Pradesh model of not declaring a chief ministerial face; a similar rivalry for the top job is seen between Kamal Nath and Jyotiraditya Scindia.

A section in the party believes both should stay out of the contest and focus on campaigning across the state as they are seen as crowd-pullers. Another section feels the two should contest – Ashok Gehlot from his seat Sardarpura and Sachin Pilot from a seat in Ajmer – his old parliamentary constituency – or Dausa, from where his father was an MP.

Sachin Pilot was minister in the Manmohan Singh government but lost the 2014 Lok Sabha polls from Ajmer. Earlier this year, he did not contest the by-elections for the seat, which the Congress won by a huge margin.

This morning, the BJP parliamentarian from Dausa, Harish Meena, quit his party and joined the Congress, delivering a blow to the ruling party.

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Former Rajasthan DGP Harish Chandra Meena quits BJP, joins Congress

  • Harish Chandra Meena, during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, had defeated Kirori Lal Meena
  • Congress announced both Pilot and Gehlot will be contesting upcoming Rajasthan Assembly elections
  • Assembly elections in Rajasthan are due on December 7

Harish Chandra Meena, the former DGP of Rajasthan who fought and won from Dausa Parliamentary constituency on a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ticket in 2014, joined the Congress today. Meena was welcomed in the party by former Rajasthan chief minister and Congress general secretary Ashok Gehlot. Rajasthan Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) chief Sachin Pilot and Congress’s state in-charge for Rajasthan Avinash Pande were also present.

“I have joined the Congress today without any pre-condition,” Meena mentioned.

Harish Chandra Meena, during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, had defeated Kirori Lal Meena, who had contested on the ticket of National People’s Party (NPP), by a margin of more than 45,000 votes. Kirori Lal Meena later joined the BJP and is now a Rajya Sabha MP from the BJP. Also in the fray during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections was Harish Chandra – Meena’s brother, and Congress leader Namonarain Meena, stood third in the contest.

The Congress also announced that both Pilot and Gehlot will be contesting the upcoming Rajasthan Assembly elections.

Within the political circles it was being speculated that the senior leadership of the Congress was not in favour of either Sachin Pilot or Ashok Gehlot contesting the upcoming Assembly elections. However, the matter was put to rest after it was declared that both will be contesting the upcoming elections.

“Both Sachin and I will contest the upcoming Assembly elections,” Ashok Gehlot mentioned.

Sachin Pilot can contest the upcoming Assembly elections from Ajmer whereas Gehlot can be the Congress candidate from Sardarpura.

CONGRESS WILL GET A HISTORIC MANDATE: SACHIN PILOT

Earlier, sounding upbeat about his party’s chances, Sachin Pilot had mentioned to India Today that the Congress will get a historic mandate in the upcoming Rajasthan Assembly elections.

Pilot, while speaking with India Today, claimed that the BJP deserves to be booted out claiming that practical, implementable promises will be announced and the the Congress will deliver them on the ground.

“Mr Gandhi has started a campaign in Rajasthan two months ago and we are taking it forward.”

– Sachin Pilot

“I can’t predict numbers but I can tell you that five years of our work and our travel with all our leaders contributing to make the party strong, we will get a historic mandate. We have shown this in the by-elections when the entire might of the BJP and the government was deployed at the by-elections and we defeated them convincingly in all the by-elections. So, so far, there have been 22 seats where by-election polls have taken place and the Congress party has won 20 of those 22. It tells you something about which way the wind is blowing. We are going with a positive agenda. Mr Gandhi has started a campaign in Rajasthan two months ago and we are taking it forward. We are going to the taluka, to the block, tehsil, and panchayat level. Our booth workers are very active and I think the contest is going to be between the performance of Vasundhara ji’s government, to what she had promised and to what the Congress can actually deliver. No jumlas, no false promises,” Pilot said in an interview

Assembly elections in Rajasthan are due on December 7. Both the BJP and the Congress have, at least on the face of it, been exuding confidence.

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Telangana Polls : KCR files nomination for Gajwel

Telangana Rashtra Samithi president and caretaker chief minister K Chandrasekhar Rao on Wednesday filed his nomination papers for contesting the assembly elections from Gajwel assembly constituency in Siddipet district.

KCR submitted the papers at the Revenue Divisional Office at Gajwel town exactly at 2.34 pm, which is believed to be an auspicious time fixed by his family priests.

He was accompanied by his nephew and state irrigation minister T Harish Rao and a host of party leaders.

Before filing the nomination papers, the TRS chief conducted special prayers at Lord Venkateshawra Swamy temple at Konaipalli village of Nagunuru block, about 30 km from Gajwel.

The temple was decorated with flowers on the occasion of KCR’s special prayers. Temple priest Brahmadev Tripathi and several other senior priests blessed the chief minister.

He placed the nomination appears at the feet of the god, before putting his signature on them.

Later, he addressed the villagers briefly saying that the village and the temple had been sentimental for him since he entered politics in 1983. He vowed to develop the village on all fronts and bring waters of Kaleshwaram lift irrigation project to the village by next year.

“I will come to this temple with Kaleswaram water to perform pooja to the Lord”, he promised.

Interestingly, Gajwel assembly constituency has also a strong sentiment attached to it. Ever since it was formed in 1978, no MLA has been elected for two consecutive terms from this constituency, which was once part of Medak district.

Though two former MLAs — B Sanjeeva Rao and J Geetha Reddy represented this constituency for twice in the past, they got elected in different years, but not consecutively.

In 2014, KCR won the election for the first time on TRS ticket over TDP candidate Vanteru Pratap Redddy with a margin of over 19,000 votes, while then sitting Congress MLA T Narsa Reddy came third. Pratap Reddy is now contesting on the Congress ticket, while Narsa Reddy is supporting him.

If the Gajwel jinx for the elected candidates works out this year, too, KCR won’t be able to win the elections again from this constituency. But the chief minister appeared confident of breaking this jinx.

“With the blessings of Lord Venkateshwara and the people of Konaipalli, I am confident of winning the elections again. And the TRS is going to return to power by winning more than 100 out of 119 assembly seats,” he said.

Meanwhile, Harish Rao also filed his nomination papers for contesting the elections from Siddipet constituency. Before praying to the Lord Venkateshwara of Konaipalli, Harish also prayed at a dargah and a church before proceeding to the returning officer’s office to submit his nominations.

M Madhusudhanachary, the speaker of the recently dissolved Telangana Assembly, also filed his nomination from Bhupalpally constituency.

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Chhattisgarh polls: Areas not even on Google maps will vote for first time

Many areas of Chhattisgarh will vote for the first time in 20 years

 

Crossing rivers barefoot, wading through jungles just sanitised by the accompanying security personnel and even airdropped by choppers into the Naxal-affected interiors, many on poll duty in Chhattisgarh feel like the real-life version of the protagonist from Bollywood dark comedy “Newton”, while some say they feel more like a revolutionary such as Bhagat Singh.

They are public sector undertaking (PSU) employees, teachers, anganwadi and panchayat workers, among numerous others braving the treacherous terrain of the infamous Bastar region, which appear even more dangerous after a recent spurt in Naxal attacks ahead of the polls.

Many areas of Chhattisgarh will vote for the first time in 20 years, while some security and local administration officials proudly declare that a few of those are yet to make it to the Google Maps.

Talking to them, the immediate recollection is of Rajkumar Rao-starrer “Newton”, a film that took a satirical look at the Naxal problem through the eyes of a poll officer.

From walking up to 10 km to crossing rivers and spending nights in Naxal-hit areas, the poll officers will have to go past numerous hurdles and face life-threatening challenges to do their duty, but none of them is complaining.

A few of them admit that they are a bit afraid, but they also assert that they still want to do this.

A 25-year-old Anganwadi worker, the mother of two children, from Sukma district, says she is doing this for her father and brother, both of whom were part of the Salwa Judum and killed by Naxals.

Salwa Judum (meaning “Peace March” or “Purification Hunt” in Gondi language) was a militia mobilised and deployed as part of anti-insurgency operations in Chhattisgarh, aimed at countering Naxal violence in the region. The militia, comprising local tribal youth, received support and training from the Chhattisgarh government. It was banned by a Supreme Court order in 2011.

“I always wanted to do something revolutionary like my father, so I am doing this for him and my brother. We need peace and hopefully, a successful election will lead to that,” the woman, whose husband is in the police and who has left her kids with her mother-in-law, said.

“This is no less than a revolution for me, she added with tears in her eyes.

For another 22-year-old panchayat worker from Sukma, who has been asked to go to the hypersensitive polling booth at Chintalnar, it is a moment of pride as he will be the first person from his village to sit in a chopper.

“I am the only person from my block panchayat who is taking part in this exercise as my other colleagues are married. Being a bachelor, I was chosen. I am scared, but it is okay as I will be the first person from my village to sit in a chopper,” he said with a broad smile on his face.

The poll parties going to the hypersensitive booths on the 80-km stretch from Dornapal to Jagargunda were mostly airlifted and had reached their respective destinations a day or two before the polling day, Sukma Collector Jai Prakash Maurya said.

A teacher from Bijapur district, in his late 30s, who is going to the Usur block on poll duty, said he belonged to a family of freedom fighters and was always inspired by Bhagat Singh.

“I always told my students in the village that you should do something for the country. Now, it is my turn to do something. If you ask me how do I feel, I don’t know, but I might be doing something like what Bhagat Singh did,” he said.

All the 437 polling booths in Sukma and Bijapur districts have been declared as “sensitive”.

Bijapur Collector KB Kunjam said about 80 polling parties were airlifted and 76 relocated to a safer position, but there were still 40-odd booths that were extremely risky.

“Some of the poll officers conveyed to us that some of the polling booths, including those in schools, were painted with messages of boycotting the polls. So, we are making temporary arrangements,” he told PTI.

Both Maurya and Kunjam said some of the poll parties were dispatched two days before the polling.

Besides the local police, Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel and at some places, Border Security Force (BSF) and Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) jawans would accompany them, they said, adding that necessary security arrangements were put in place.

“This election process is like a war for us against Naxals, but without guns and with voting machines,” Maurya said.

On the request of the district collectors, the names of the poll officers have not been mentioned.

 

 

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Chhattisgarh Elections : Maoists attempt to scare voters, 2 kg IED triggered near Tumakpak camp

Voting began in 10 out of 18 Assembly constituencies in the first phase of Chhattisgarh elections on Monday under a tight security blanket comprising over 1.25 lakh police and paramilitary personnel. Minutes after Chhattisgarh goes to polls, Maoists attempt to scare voters, 2 kg IED blasted by Maoists near the Tumakpak camp, all safe so far.