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After Mayawati threatens to pull support in Madhya Pradesh, Congress govt to withdraw 'politically motivated' cases
The move comes a day after Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) supremo Mayawati threatened to reconsider her party's support to the Congress in the state and neighbouring Rajasthan, if cases in connection with Bharat bandh on April 2 last year were not withdrawn.
New Delhi: The Madhya Pradesh government Tuesday said it was going to withdraw all "politically motivated" cases filed by the previous BJP government. The saffron party ruled the state for 15 years since 2003 before being unseated by the Congress in the November 28 Assembly polls. The move comes a day after Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) supremo Mayawati threatened to reconsider her party's support to the Congress in the state and neighbouring Rajasthan, if cases in connection with Bharat bandh on April 2 last year were not withdrawn. Meanwhile, Rajasthan government will withdraw cases related to Bharat Bandh only on merit, said CM Gehlot on Mayawati's demand.
The shutdown was called by Dalit organisations against the alleged dilution of the SC/ST Act due to a Supreme Court order. The April 2 protest had crippled several parts of Madhya Pradesh and the subsequent violence left eight persons, mainly from the Dalit communities, dead. "We are going to withdraw the politically motivated cases filed by the previous BJP government in Madhya Pradesh in past 15 years against the Congress, Samajwadi Party (SP), BSP, Left parties, Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) activists, farmers, employees and journalists," state Law and Legislative Affairs Minister P C Sharma told PTI.
Asked whether Mayawati's threat had prompted the MP government to go for the withdrawal of such cases, he said, "No, it is not the case". "The new (Congress) regime was already considering the withdrawal of politically motivated cases. Majority of these matters are against the Congress," Sharma said. "Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Kamal Nath ji, our senior leaders and Mayawati ji were in talks for quite some time on the issue. "Nath had already announced that all politically motivated cases in MP would be withdrawn," the minister said, but did not give details on when the chief minister had made such a statement.
In a hard-hitting press release issued in Lucknow on Monday, Mayawati had said, "If the newly-elected governments in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan do not act swiftly and withdraw the cases against the innocent persons framed in Bharat Bandh, the BSP may have to reconsider extending the outside support to the Congress governments".
The BSP is supporting the Congress in both MP and Rajasthan, where the latter had fallen short of the majority mark. The Congress won 114 seats in Madhya Pradesh, short of the 116-majority mark in the 230-member House, while in Rajasthan it stopped at 99 seats in the 200-member House. In MP, two MLAs from the BSP, one from the SP and four Independents are supporting the Congress.
In August last year, the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Amendment Bill, 2018, overturning a Supreme Court order concerning certain safeguards against arrest under the SC/ST law, was passed by Parliament.
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