AV 18th February 2017

Page 1

• Sikh group demands public inquiry into UK's role in 1984 Operation Bluestar P5

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Vol 45 | Issue 41

• Mayor to take message to Europe that ‘London is Open’ P18

MOTHER OF ALL STATE POLLS IN INDIA

• Why the Donald could be Trump card for business 18th February to 24th February 2017 P21

Fight for power commenced early February, as five major states in India began to vote. National parties, PM Narendra Modi's BJP, Sonia Gandhi's Congress, and Arvind Kejriwal's AAP find themselves in a headlock, trying to clinch as many states as possible. As the major parties fight for votes, what they failed to comprehend is the role of regional parties, and their influence on their respective regions. Regional parties, and independent candidates often serve as a trump card for the winning party. However, there are states like Uttar Pradesh, where the Yadav rule is so strong, not even Akhilesh's 'gundaraj' could prevent his loyal voters from choosing him yet again. Punjab has AAP written all over it, as the northern state strikes as having lost tolerance for the ruling Badal family. The year 2017 seems to be the year for state parties, as the BJP and Congress play second fiddle in their own orchestrated drama. The thing worth noticing is that Punjab, Goa, Uttarakhand, and Manipur, put together do not even account for half of Uttar Pradesh's population. Some pundits believe that BJP could put up a good show in Rajya Sabha after the elections. Meanwhile, if the Samajwadi Party and Congress doesn't fare well, it may become difficult for them to survive. PUNJAB Turning Punjab Assembly elections upside down, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind

Kejriwal's A a m A a d m i Party is giving ruling Shiromani Akali DalBharatiya Janta Party and the Congress, a run for their money. With an almost lethal combination of a political campaign riding on the incessant drug abuse issue in the state, and people's disenchantment with the Badals, Kejriwal seems to have finally found the recipe to success. Political analysts and election surveys have bet their money on AAP, after the February 4 voting, vote banks seemed to lean their preferences towards the

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Local boy Dev Patel wins BAFTA

Let noble thoughts come to us from every side

party. I f t h e HuffPost-C Voter pre-poll survey is to be believed, AAP is all set to take over Parkash Singh Badal's Punjab. It had predicted that the AAP is poised to win 63 of the 117 seats in Punjab Assembly elections, with Congress maintaining the second place with 43 seats, and SAD-BJP alliance with a petty 11. It expects the Akali-BJP vote-share to halve, with the AAP's victory in the state to be bigger than the combine's last victory tally. But such predictions have proved to be wrong in the past. UTTAR PRADESH Phase 1 of the UP Assembly elections is over, and it appears that the state has locked down in a triangular contest. With Mayawati's

Bahujan Samaj Party, Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janta Party, and UP Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav's Samajwadi Party in alliance with Congress. Not only do the two regional parties make BJP's chance of winning very problematical, Modi's November 8 cash ban did nothing to boost his prospects. To break it down in percentage, Mayawati's BSP can smoothly finish the ride with 20 per cent of the state's Dalits and half of the Muslim population which accounts for 19.3 per cent of the overall population of the state. Add to it 2 per cent Brahmin vote banks and Maya can install yet another statue of herself right in front of Akhilesh's house. Meanwhile, the SP finds support with 10 per cent of UP's Yadavs, 12 per cent of the Muslim vote, 2-3 per cent of the Thakur vote bank, and 5 per cent of other backward classes. Muslim vote is anticipated Continued on page 26

Harrow boy Dev Patel has become the first Indianorigin actor to win a BAFTA Award as the Best Supporting Actor on Sunday for his performance in 'Lion', a film about an Indian boy, which also got the Best A d a p t e d Screenplay honour. He was joined backstage by his family, who cheered for his new earned accolade. The 26-yearold had wooed his audience with his happy go l u c k y teenage character

in Slumdog Millionaire, the movie that went on to win many Oscars in 2008. Continued on page 16

Guilty, says SC, ends Sasikala’s CM dream Sasikala

The Supreme Court of India squashed AIADMK General Secretary VK Sasikala's hopes of becoming the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, by sentencing her to four years in jail for conspiring and abet-

ting with the late J Jayalalithaa's design to "launder ill-gotten wealth" up to £5.36 million. The bench consisting of Justices PC Ghose and Amitava Roy restored Continued on page 26


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AV 18th February 2017 by Asian Business Publications Ltd - Issuu