Amit Shah targets SP govt over Mathura, Kairana incidents
On the recent incidents in Mathura, Shah said that this politics of forcefully grabbing government land was 'very unfortunate.'
Allahabad: Attacking the Samajwadi Partygovernment over recent incidents in Mathura and Kairana in Uttar Pradesh, which goes to polls early next year, BJP President Amit Shah on Sunday said the prevailing "atmosphere of violence" is a matter of serious concern.
"The present Samajwadi government, each day is expressing its helplessness in dealing with these situations," Shah said while citing recent clashes in Mathura as also violence and subsequent migration of over 100 families.
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Launching a frontal attack on the Akhilesh Yadav government, Shah told the two-day BJP National Executive which began in Allahabad on Sunday that, "The lack of development and the lack of governance in the biggest state of India i.e UP is increasingly becoming a matter of serious concern," he said.
Union Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, who briefed reporters about Shah's speech, said the BJP President specially discussed UP and said there was "an atmosphere of violence, which the government has been unsuccessful in curbing."
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On the recent incidents in Mathura, Shah said that this politics of forcefully grabbing government land with "patronage" was "very unfortunate."
Shah also referred to the alleged migration of Hindus from the western UP town of Kairana and said that it is a matter of deep concern.
The BJP President called upon the party workers to work hard and expressed commitment that the BJP will form government in UP with full majority after the assembly polls.
The BJP President said 2017 is a year of challenges in which besides UP, there are polls in Uttarakhand, Punjab, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh.