Amar Singh threatens to quit Samajwadi Party over ‘insult’ by party leaders : The Tribune India

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Amar Singh threatens to quit Samajwadi Party over ‘insult’ by party leaders

LUCKNOW: Senior Samajwadi party leader and Rajya Sabha member from Uttar Pradesh Amar Singh has threatened to quit the party, alleging that he was being insulted, kept on ‘mute’ and sidelined following his return to the fold after six years.

Amar Singh threatens to quit Samajwadi Party over ‘insult’ by party leaders

Says has been sidelined. Tribune photo



Lucknow, August 23

Senior Samajwadi party leader and Rajya Sabha member from Uttar Pradesh Amar Singh has threatened to quit the party, alleging that he was being insulted, kept on ‘mute’ and sidelined following his return to the fold after six years.

In a television interview in Delhi, the former national general secretary of the SP said he found it humiliating that Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav did not take his telephone calls and even kept him waiting.

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This is the second dissension bomb in the SP only days after the rift between Akhilesh and his uncle and Public Works Department Minister Shivpal Singh Yadav was bridged by party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav.

“Is this the way one treats senior party leaders?” Singh questioned while saying that he would talk to Mulayam Singh about the issue and if a solution was not found, he would submit his resignation as Rajya Sabha MP to Chairperson Hamid Ansari.

Singh also accused some people in the party of trying to humiliate him and his associate, actress-turned-politician Jaya Prada.

“She is being deliberately cornered and humiliated,” Singh said while claiming that she was promised a Legislative Council seat. It was also said that Jaya Prada was to be made the Chairperson of the UP Film Council, but that order has not yet been issued.

“Neither Jaya Prada nor I have sought any post for ourselves, then why are we being demeaned?” he asked.

Singh said, “People who were calling the shots during the Mayawati regime are still powerful and senior leaders like Shivpal Singh Yadav and Balram Yadav are being humiliated.” He even accused the party of making him a “backbencher” in the Rajya Sabha while juniors Naresh Agarwal and Surendra Nagar were being asked to present the party views in the House.

“Leaders like me, Reoti Raman Singh, Beni Prasad Verma have been asked to sit quietly,” he said.

Singh’s dissatisfaction with the party has become public at a time when the ruling dispensation is smarting under serious differences within its leaders and is also fighting anti-incumbency ahead of the 2017 state assembly polls.

Only on Monday, Mulayam Singh had held a closed-door meeting to “set things right” between his son Akhilesh, brother Shivpal Singh Yadav and cousin Ram Gopal Yadav.

Insiders, however, said no one was happy with the re-entry of Singh into the party fold but relented when the SP chief put his foot down. A leader also told IANS that while he was reluctantly assimilated in the party, no senior leader wanted Singh to wield power like before. IANS

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