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Having been in power for nearly 10 years at a stretch may have given a lot of political and administrative experience to Punjab’s ruling Shiromani Akali Dal, but the outfit seems to be becoming ‘religious minded’ as the state’s assembly polls draw closer.
The party’s government in the state is already in the middle of a major exercise to offer religious junkets to nearly 125,000 people.
The scheme, being implemented with political and religious fanfare, was approved by the Punjab cabinet in November 2015.
People are being taken on special trains and buses for pilgrimage to locations like Nanded Sahib (Maharashtra), Varanasi, Katra (Mata Vaishno Devi) and Ajmer Sharif.
Last month, Punjab deputy chief minister and Akali Dal president Sukhbir Singh Badal, in a clear move to appease radical and religious leaders, offered prayers at the ‘Bluestar’ memorial inside the Golden Temple complex.
The Akali Dal, its leadership and the Punjab government had, so far, kept itself away from the controversial memorial built by radicals to commemorate “martyrs” in the Army’s ‘Operation Bluestar’ in 1984.
While All-India Sikh Students Federation (AISSF) president Karnail Singh Peermohammed welcomed the move, radical Sikh organisation Dal Khalsa saw a political motive behind it.
The opposition Congress and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) – which is posing a serious challenge to the Akali-BJP alliance and the Congress, ahead of the assembly polls - are accusing the Akali Dal of using religion, especially the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), for its political interests.
“The Akali Dal has been exposed in the way it has used religion to hide its wrong deeds like corruption, vested interests in Sikh bodies like SGPC, goondagardi,” AAP leader Sanjay Singh said.
The Akali Dal has full control over the SGPC, the mini-parliament of Sikh religion which manages Sikh shrines, including the Golden Temple complex.
The SGPC has an annual budget of Rs.1,200 crore.
The Badal government faced testing times last year in August-September when a series of incidents of desecration of the Guru Granth Sahib led to protests and violence in different parts of Punjab.
The Akali Dal leadership blamed it on anti-Panthic (anti-Sikh community) forces and religious prayers were started across the state to defuse the situation.
(This article is published in arrangement with IANS.)
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Published: 30 May 2016,03:32 PM IST