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CLOSE TO THE GROUND
The kumhars, in addition to other social groups, will discover in Laloo
Yadav their messiah. The man is already the role model for milkmen and
cowherds across the country. Yadav is also the hero of toddy-sellers in
Bihar and Jharkhand.
Not all, however, are happy. Some of Yadav’s critics, who also claim to
have some knowledge of geology, argue that in the end, the railways
minister’s proposal may prove to be unviable and costly. After all, it
takes centuries to form the upper crust of the earth which the kumhars
will be using. Moreover, it will also be hard to ensure a regular supply
of earthen ware to the gigantic network of Indian railways. The move is
therefore more populist than pragmatic.
Of course. It goes without saying that there is hardly anyone to beat
Laloo Yadav in this game. The earth be damned, through the kulhars,
Yadav has managed to ensure that more votes are cast for his party.
Whether the stress on earthen cups manages to uplift the poor kumhars is
a matter of secondary importance only.
Sop opera
Anyone who has watched Laloo Yadav for the last 15 years will know that
he will do a follow-up on the kumhars as he had done with the Pasis (a
caste which lives on brewing toddy and selling it in Bihar). The
Rashtriya Janata Dal leader had once picked up a Pasi youth at his
public meeting and made him announce the wonderful gift he had given the
community by waiving the tree tax they had been paying since the days of
the raj. Now Yadav can pick up a potter at his future election meetings
and make him tell the crowd how he had tried to restore their
traditional source of living.
Who framed Yadav?
There is hardly anyone who can match Yadav’s skills in communication.
His predecessor, Nitish Kumar, had failed to widen his support base
despite getting a 2,250 megawatt super thermal power plant in Barh,
setting up a railway zonal office at Hajipur, getting underway the
construction of a railway bridge on the Ganges and introducing a
plethora of trains in Bihar. Kumar ate humble pie in Barh. But Yadav,
one can be sure, will make the kumhars sing paeans for him.
To this correspondent, Laloo Yadav had once said, “Don’t write against
me. If I am not around, you too will not survive. Who will you write on
if I go out of power?” At that time, he was at the Indira Gandhi
Institute of Medical Sciences, Patna, where he was incarcerated as an
undertrial prisoner in connection with fodder scam cases in 1997. He was
mightily peeved at some of the reports on the fodder scam which decried
him. He had then pleaded, “Why are you people carrying out my media
trial...My opponents have framed me...I am innocent.”
From Bihar’s verdict on this man, many seem to have taken him for his
word. But even in those difficult times, Laloo Yadav had not
disappointed even the most lowly of journalists. Then, as now, Yadav’s
colourful personality assured one of a readable story.
(courtesy The Telegraph)
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