http://www.indiaenews.com/politics/20071002/73199.htm

Ambedkar golden jubilee fails to reunite RPI factions

By Shyam Pandharipande. Maharashtra, India, 02:01 PM IST


Even as the constitution drafted by Dalit icon B.R. Ambedkar continues
to guide India's destiny and helps keep the republic intact, his
followers remain splintered. They will hold separate golden jubilee
functions of the party of his dream here Wednesday.

While the Republican Party of India (RPI) led by Bihar Governor R.S.
Gavai's son Rajendra and claiming to be the 'original' RPI will
celebrate the function at an obscure place in the city, the
RPI-Athavale faction led by Member of Parliament Ramdas Athavale has
organised a grand show at the Kasturchand Park here.

Ironically, Ambedkar's grandson Prakash -- who leads the third major
faction of the party styled Bharatiya Republican Party-Bahujan Maha
Sangh (BRP-BMS) -- has said that he will stay away from both
celebrations, declaring that the real Republican Party has long ceased
to exist.

The RPI was founded by Ambedkar's chosen lieutenants on Oct 3, 1957,
-- 10 months after his death and a year after he embraced Buddhism
along with thousands of his scheduled caste followers. An estimated
700,000 people had attended the foundation ceremony at Nagpur's
Deeksha Bhoomi.

The party was formed as per the blueprint that the Dalit icon had
handed down to his political heirs, days before his death on Dec 6,
1956. Ambedkar's mandate was to set up a broad-based version of two
parties he had earlier launched -- the Labour Party in 1936 and the
Scheduled Caste Federation in 1942.

Billed to be a big draw on Wednesday, the RPI-Athawale function is
expected to be graced by a galaxy of national and state level leaders
of Congress, Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), both the communist
parties and those of some smaller secular parties. Athavale claims
that 300,000 workers drawn from 30 states will attend the
celebrations.

In contrast, Rajendra Gavai's 'original' RPI has decided to keep its
golden jubilee celebrations limited to the party loyalists.

The young son of the Bihar governor talked deferentially about the
senior leaders. 'I will gladly take a small seat in any corner of the
dais offering bigger chairs to Athavale and Ambedkar should they deign
to grace the 'original RPI' function,' Rajendra told IANS.

But pointing to the Gavai-led party's alignment with the Congress,
Prakash Ambedkar has dubbed it the 'Congress-RPI' while describing the
RPI led by Athavale as 'NCP-RPI'.

An embittered Ambedkar told IANS that the offer coming from an 'NCP
serf' is not worth looking at. He also refused to have anything to do
with the 'Congress satrap' -- meaning R.S. Gavai.

Ramdas Athavale, recalling that he was unanimously elected president
of the unified Republican Party in 1995, told IANS that he would
initiate fresh unification moves immediately after Wednesday's
function.

'I am willing to offer the pride of position of 'party leader' to
Prakash Ambedkar, the post of secretary to Rajendra Gavai and make the
People's Republican Party chief Jogendra Kawade the organising
secretary,' Athavale said. 'I will, of course, be the president.'

Referring to some RPI puritans who disapprove of the idea of opening
up the party to communities other than Scheduled Castes, Athavale said
a party restricted to Dalits could not have a political future.

'Dr. Ambekar had himself realised this when he lost the Lok Sabha
election from Dadar in 1952 and a by-election from Bhandara,' Athavale
said, adding that a combination of 40 percent Dalits and 60 percent
non-Dalits would be right for the new party.

'We will take up major economic and developmental issues concerning
the masses like increased irrigation facilities, a people-oriented
Special Economic Zones policy and redrafting of forest related acts to
safeguard forest dwellers' rights,' Athavale said.

Referring to the growing clout of the Mayawati-led Bahujan Samaj Party
(BSP), Athavale said he was going to move the Supreme Court to claim
back the 'Elephant' symbol for the RPI that the BSP uses now.

The RPI, which in 1967 won 12 percent votes in Maharashtra and had
nine Members of Parliament and 29 members in different state
legislatures declined in strength after forging an alliance with the
Congress following the elections. Split in several factions, it lost
the status of a recognised party.

Following unification in 1995, the party won four Lok Sabha seats and
regained recognition only to lose it again after the second split in
1999. The point of difference that caused the second split -- which
persists even now -- was whether to be aligned with Congress or NCP.

With the party remaining splintered, the division in the Scheduled
Caste votes has helped other parties.

The ego clashes and battle of supremacy among top RPI leaders are
coming in the way of Ambedkar's party, and the party workers and
followers, whose pressure brought about the short-lived unification in
1995, are hoping for another miracle.

By Shyam Pandharipande (Staff Writer, (c) IANS)

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