This Article is From Mar 16, 2010

Mulayam asks: Who paid for Mayawati's money garland?

Lucknow:
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The furore over Mayawati's mala reached the Lok Sabha on Tuesday. The Samajwadi Party has demanded a CBI inquiry into the gigantic garland made of thousands of thousand-rupee notes that was bestowed upon the Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister at a huge rally in Lucknow yesterday. (See Pics: Lucknow painted blue for Mayawati's mega rally)

The Samajwadi Party is up in arms asking who paid for the multi-crore garland? The party state secretary asked how the BSP had crores to make a garland for their leader, but not pay compensation to the victims of the Pratapgarh stampede a few weeks ago.

Lok Sabha proceedings were adjourned till 1 pm.

Already known for her lavish self-promotion, Mayawati raised her bar to a whole new level on Monday. There she was, at a huge public rally, accepting the garland worth a staggering few lakhs even according to her own representatives.

The occasion was the 25th anniversary of the Bahujan Samajwadi Party (BSP).  Most of those in the five-lakh-strong audience could not afford one meal a day. That wasn't about to get in the UP Chief Minister's way of having a good time.

The cost of the rally was an estimated Rs200 crore, paid for by Mayawati's party, and not taxpayers, clarified her representatives. Even so, the Chief Minister said, in her speech, "I thank you for your contributions and the money you have given me."

The Opposition insists this proves its claim - "The 200 crore have been spent from government money...this rally is a circus, and she is the ringmaster," says Rita Bahuguna, the president of the UP Congress. (Read: Opposition slams Mayawati)

While the source of the funds are being verified, here's what the money was spent on. Nearly 10,000 policemen, 1600 state buses and 800 private buses, lodging and dinner for 30,000 BSP workers, a thousand quintal of flowers brought in from Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata. Wait, there's more. 

Another 5 crore for food for the audience. A 30-bed hospital on standby with 200 doctors and 500 paramedics on stand-by should there be a stampede or any other disaster. And 10 lakhs for endless strings of lights to tint the city in the BSP's main colour - blue.  

For those who think this may be over the top, Mayawati points out that grand gestures have always been her style, and well, she's worth it. Her penchant for building statues of herself, along with other Dalit icons in large memorial parks, costing the government close to 2000 crore, has been challenged in court. "From all those people criticising installation of my statues, I would like to ask that in which book of law it has been written that statues of living persons cannot be erected," Mayawati thundered, citing in her defence, the party's founder, Kanshi Ram. "In his will, Kanshiramji has directed to install my statues along with those of him," she claims.

In Delhi, in Parliament, Mayawati was attacked repeatedly and agitatedly by Opposition leaders who say she has no business to be celebrating when the communal tension in Rae Bareilly is still unresolved. (Read: Maya's 200-cr rally, despite Bareilly tension)

Mayawati, at her rally, was neither shaken nor stirred. She focused singularly on wooing Dalit voters, traditionally the party's votebank, now being aggressively targeted by Rahul Gandhi.  Using the Women's Bill, which she opposed, Mayawati said in her speech, "Congress and other political parties had always been against Dalits and this is evident from the fact that no separate quota has been carved out for SC/ST women in 33 percent reservation proposed in the Women Reservation Bill."

The scale of the celebrations did have the desired impact on many of those who came to cheer her - a leader of those who feel their voices are never heard. An old woman says, "We send 5 rupees or 10 rupees for her birthday fund from our own money every year." It's a lot for her to afford, but she says this is the only way she knows how to participate in a celebration of a leader whose ascent to power defies generations of suppression.

Not everything went off smoothly though. Mayawati believes a swarm of bees who hovered above her as she gave her speech were part of a political conspiracy. A press release by the BSP promises an inquiry: "Today when Mayawati was addressing a rally at the Ramabai Ambedkar Maidan, someone set fire to some bushes in a nearby compound of the Kendriya Vidyalaya and that set alight the bees from the beehive. These bees then moved rapidly towards the stage and wandered around the Chief Minister for at least an hour. After which they formed a beehive on top of the stage. Without fear, the CM went ahead with her speech so that the rally doesn't get disrupted. But an inquiry is being conducted to find out who has done this."

Somewhere in the distance, bees can be heard bumbling.


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