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The Hindu
The Hindu
National
Omar Rashid

Ahead of 2022, Nishad Party seeks larger share in power from ally BJP

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. File

The Nishad Party, an Other Backward Class (OBC) based ally of the ruling BJP in Uttar Pradesh, has demanded a larger share in power ahead of 2022 Assembly polls, even showing interest in the Deputy Chief Minister post.

Nishad Party president Sanjay Nishad, a self-proclaimed ‘political godfather of fishermen,’ has said the BJP failed to fulfil the promises made by it in 2019, when his party dumped the SP-BSP alliance and switched over.

Interacting with reporters in Lucknow on Wednesday, Mr. Nishad issued a warning to the BJP saying that its ally would not be able to win again in U.P. if it hurt the Nishads. “If BJP gives us dukh, they will also get dukh [If the BJP causes us misery, it will also face misery],” he said. “If they want to come to power, they will have to please the Nishads,” he stated. He claimed that the BJP had promised him that he would either get a Rajya Sabha berth or a high-profile ministerial berth in U.P.

“Our community aspires to have a CM. All other communities have had a CM. My people in their hearts want to see Dr. Sanjay [himself] as a CM. I have given a message to the BJP government that if it makes Dr. Sanjay the new CM or present [me] as a deputy CM face, look how they form the government in 2022,” Mr. Nishad told a television channel here.

Mr. Nishad later met Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya. Mr. Maurya described it as a courtesy call.

Yogi Adityanath, RSS leaders meet U.P. Deputy CM Keshav Prasad Maurya 

The Nishads, a riverine community, along with their connected sub-castes Mallah, Kewat, Dheevar, Bind, Kashyap and others, are an important segment of the non-Yadav backward vote in the State. Among their political icons are bandit-turned-politician Phoolan Devi. The Nishad Party emerged into the political scene ahead of the 2017 Assembly polls, projecting itself as the voice of the backward riverine castes with the demand of their inclusion in the Scheduled Caste list. In 2017, it managed to secure over 5.40 lakh votes in the 72 seats it contested, mostly in east U.P., but failed to open its account.

2018 Gorakhpur win

In 2018, it forged an understanding with the SP and the BSP, helping the former win the crucial Lok Sabha bypolls in Gorakhpur and Phulpur, the political fields of Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and Mr. Maurya respectively. Mr. Nishad’s son Praveen Nishad, an engineer, won from Gorakhpur on a SP ticket.

Mr. Nishad then resolved to mobilise the “85%” (OBC, Dalits and Muslims) against the BJP in the 2019 Lok Sabha election. However, just three days after he had extended support to the SP-BSP, he walked out of it, accusing the two parties of not following coalition ‘dharma’ and ignoring his party in official campaign material and their non-committal attitude over seat arrangement.

Central leadership will decide next CM in U.P., says Minister

Eventually, the BJP allotted one seat to the Nishad Party — Sant Kabir Nagar for Mr. Praveen — but he had to contest on a BJP ticket. He won.

The father-son duo recently met top BJP leaders, including Amit Shah and J.P Nadda in Delhi with their demands, which included “due respect” for the party, scrapping of certain laws on the Nishad community’s rights on land pattas and issuing SC Majhwar community certificates to the Nishads.

Mr. Nishad claimed the BJP was losing support among the Nishads for allegedly ignoring the party during bypolls and zilla panchayat polls. He said he had communicated to Mr. Nadda that the Nishad Party and the BJP were a “natural alliance.”

Descendants of Nishadraj

The Nishads claim they are descendants of Nishadraj, the boatman who, as per Hindu beliefs, helped Lord Ram along with his wife and brother cross the Ganga during exile.

“We are the descendants of Nishadraj. Here, a temple is being built for Lord Ram and the government was formed in the name of Lord Ram, but descendants of Nishadraj have to beg on the road, what kind of friendship is this?” he stated.

According to Mr. Nishad, the fisherfolk community has 15,000-20,000 votes in all the 403 Assembly seats in the State, 40,000-70,000 votes in 70 seats and 160 seats where they have a good influence.

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