New Delhi:Pushing for President's rule in Uttar Pradesh, RLD chief Jayant Chaudhary on Tuesday said the entire state machinery under the Yogi Adityanath government is trying to suppress the truth of what happened in Lakhimpur Kheri and clamping down on the opposition.
The Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) president, one of the few leaders to reach the Uttar Pradesh district where eight people, including four farmers, were killed during a farmers' protest on Sunday, said he had to employ “guerrilla tactics” to do so.
"Reaching Lakhimpur was a tough task because Yogi has put the entire government machinery to work towards thwarting the Opposition. There needs to be a separation between the state and the party which is not there in UP… from the district magistrate to state-level officials, police, it seems everyone has taken membership of the BJP," Chaudhary alleged in a phone interview to PTI.
Chaudhary, who took 13 hours to reach Lakhimpur Kheri from Delhi, several hours more than it would take to cover the 420 km-odd distance, also met the families of some of the farmer victims to learn their story of loss.
All roads to Lakhimpur Kheri, about 130 km from Lucknow, have been blocked for opposition leaders with most, including Congress' Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and Bhupesh Baghel as well as SP chief Akhilesh Yadav, being stopped from entering the district.
It is a "worrisome trend" that no one in the bureaucracy has raised questions over orders given by the political class, Chaudhary said, adding that he was surprised to hear Additional Director General, Law and Order, Prashant Kumar saying that political people are not allowed in the district.
"What does that mean, do you not have faith in the political process? Why do they fight elections if they don't have faith in the political voice? It is across the board, you see different parties... senior leaders are still in confinement. It is a shameful incident and reflects the callous attitude of the administration," Chaudhary said.
Four of the eight dead in Sunday's violence in Lakhimpur Kheri were farmers, allegedly knocked down by vehicles driven by BJP workers travelling to welcome Uttar Pradesh Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya to an event in the area. The others were identified as BJP workers and their driver, allegedly pulled out of the vehicles and lynched by the protesters.
The Uttar Pradesh Police has lodged a case against Union Minister of State for Home Ajay Mishra's son Ashish but no arrest has been made so far.
Giving details of his journey to Lakhimpur Kheri, glimpses of which he put out on Twitter, Chaudhary said it was a "tough journey" that meant walking some distance (his face covered with a ‘gamcha') and changing vehicles. He reached there Monday evening.
"I had to change many roads as soon as I got advance information that a particular road had been sealed. We could not communicate with anyone as we had switched off our telephones. I had to send people who were with me on a different route, so a lot of guerilla tactics had to be employed… it is again frightening to have to do those things," he said.
He backed the demand from some Opposition quarters to impose President's rule in the state.
The application of President's rule requires certain conditions, like the government not fulfilling its mandate and putting people's lives in danger, Chaudhary said, adding that the criteria was being met in Uttar Pradesh.
"The minister who is in-charge of the home department has egged on supporters to take on farmers. His son after that had taken his vehicle and deliberately (mowed down farmers), it was an intentional crime, it was premeditated, it was not spur of the moment or an accident," Chaudhary alleged.
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