BJP to seek recognition of ex-TMC MLAs in Tripura house

IANS  |  Agartala 

A day after six axed legislators joined the Bharatiya Janata party, its leader on Tuesday said the party will urge assembly Speaker to recognise the legislators as its party members.

"I will soon write to the Speaker to recognise the six MLAs as members. The entire process on our side will be completed within one or two weeks," (BJP) unit President Biplab Kumar Deb told IANS.

"There is a big rally to be held here tomorrow (Wednesday). After that I will write to the Speaker to recognise the legislators as members."

Speaker Ramendra Chandra Debnath said the state President and all the six legislators either individually or collectively will have to write letters to him.

"After getting all the letters, I will start the process and talk to the MLAs individually before deciding on their recognition," Debnath told IANS.

Led by Sudip Roy Barman, five lawmakers -- Ashish Kumar Saha, Diba Chandra Hrangkhawl, Biswa Bandhu Sen, Pranjit Singh Roy and Dilip Sarkar -- accompanied by hundreds of former leaders and workers on Monday joined the in the presence of Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, Assam Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma and a host of leaders.

The six legislators, according to the Speaker, are still recognised as West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee-led TMC's legislators.

Veteran tribal leader Diba Chandra Hrangkhawl, who was the leader of the TMC legislature group, said the should choose a new legislature party leader.

"The entire process will depend on the party (BJP). The state President will initiate the process according to his convenience," said Hrangkhaw, a former President.

After the recognition of all six legislators as members, the assembly will get its first saffron party members since the northeastern state got a legislative body -- 32-member Territorial council 60 years ago in 1957.

After the princely ruled merged with the Indian Union on October 15, 1949, Tripura, the "C" category state under the North Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971, along with Manipur and Meghalaya on January 21, 1972, became full-fledged state with 60-member assembly.

The six TMC legislators led by Barman had earlier in June last year resigned from the and joined the to protest the Congress' electoral alliance with the Left for the 2016 West Bengal assembly elections.

They along with rebel legislator Ratanlal Nath voted for the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance's nominee Ram Nath Kovind in the Presidential election on July 17.

A leader said Sarma, a former minister who joined the before Assam elections and is now convener of the BJP-led North East Democratic Alliance, facilitated these TMC legislators' entry into the party.

"Ratanlal Nath will also join the soon," he added.

The has already served a show-cause notice to Nath for anti-party activities and meeting leaders, and according to party sources, he may be expelled soon.

However, Nath has been evading queries about joining the though he has met its leaders, including Amit Shah, in the past several months.

In the 60-member assembly, the of India-Marxist led Left Front has 51 members with CPI-M alone 50 and the has only three members.

The Left-ruled state goes to polls in February next year.

--IANS

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