Pune:Nationalist Congress Party (SP) MLA Rohit Pawar's mother Sunanda has emphasised the need for party factions led by veteran politician Sharad Pawar and Maharashtra deputy CM Ajit Pawar to come together as voices for unity emerged from both rival camps.
Sunanda Pawar on Friday said she is just echoing the sentiments of the people of Maharashtra and party workers when she speaks about the need for rival factions to unite, weeks after the ruling NCP led by Ajit Pawar and opposition NCP (Sharadchandra Pawar) bitterly fought against each other in assembly polls.
A united family is a strength, she asserted, adding generations of the Pawar household have stayed together through thick and thin all these years.
The NCP split in July last year after Ajit Pawar joined the Eknath Shinde government. The Election Commission of India later gave him the party name and 'clock' symbol, while Sharad Pawar's faction was christened NCP (Sharadchandra Pawar).
The two factions have since been bitter rivals, the acrimony marked by stinging statements against each other and peaking with duels in Lok Sabha and assembly polls for Baramati, the family's turf for over half a century.
Speaking to reporters, Sunanda Pawar said deputy CM Ajit, his son Parth and her son Rohit had all come together to wish the former Union agriculture minister when he turned 84 on Thursday. The celebrations were held at Sharad Pawar's 6 Janpath residence in New Delhi.
Asserting that she did not see anything political in this show of unity from the family, Sunanda Pawar said, "As far as sentiments of party workers are concerned, they are right in their belief that if the party stays united instead of remaining bifurcated, it will have its strength all over the state. I respect these feelings of party workers." She was responding to media queries about the general feeling among party workers of the need for a united NCP.
"Party workers are important for the party, and the leadership should understand their sentiments," she asserted, though she added that she had nothing to do with politics and had been working in the social field all these years.