A day before Lalu’s date with CBI, Rabri calls RJD ‘crisis’ meeting to prepare for ‘bad news’

Sources said the essence of the meeting appeared to be to send out a message of unity within the party ranks in the face of adversity, including the possibility of Lalu being arrested by the CBI.

india Updated: Oct 04, 2017 19:14 IST
Anirban Guha Roy
Former CM Rabri Devi (centre) at an RJD meeting in Patna on Wednesday.
Former CM Rabri Devi (centre) at an RJD meeting in Patna on Wednesday. (Santosh/HT photo)

A day before RJD chief Lalu Prasad’s date for appearance at the CBI headquarters in New Delhi, to answer questions related what has come to be known as the ‘land for railways’ hotels lease’ scam, his wife and former chief minister Rabri Devi stepped on to the party centre stage.

On Wednesday, Devi convened and chaired an emergency meeting of party MLAs at her residence at 10, Circular Road here, which was attended by other senior leaders of the party, as well.

The ‘core agenda’ of the meeting was stated to be its organisational polls, what with the party having decided to convene a meeting of its national council to elect new party president on November 20.

Sources, however, said the essence of the meeting, at it actually unfolded, appeared more to send out a message of unity within the party ranks in the face of adversity, including the possibility of Lalu being arrested by the CBI.

In an FIR file against Lalu and his younger son Tejashwi Prasad Yadav, the CBI has claimed during his tenure as railways minister (2004-09) Lalu was instrumental in leasing out two railways hotels to private parties in lieu valuable land in Patna.

The land came into the ownership of Tejashwi and Rabri Devi, subsequently, it claimed.

The crisis in the party is all the more grave as the RJD chief’s younger son and leader of the opposition in the Bihar assembly Tejashwi Prasad Yadav too is to face CBI questioning in the same case, on October 6.

Both Lalu and Tejashwi, camping in New Delhi for the last one week, have skipped dates to apppear before CBI twice earlier and there are possibilities of their arrest in case they fail to adhere to the summons issued for the third time.

The unease was evident with Rabri being tasked to address 80 party MLAs, along with district presidents, in an effort to keep speculation at bay. The message of unity was sought to be conveyed in the garb of launching new agitational programmes to take on the BJP led NDA ahead of the 2019 parliamentary polls.

Sources said, party strategists called the meeting knowing well that party chief Lalu’s absence in case of his incarceration in the ‘land for railways hotels lease’ scam case could come as a big jolt to the party and make party MLAs vulnerable to poaching by the ruling JD(U) and BJP.

The party is apparently putting in place safeguards to fend off any attempt of poaching of its MLAs, following reports suggesting a number of Congress MLAs might join the ruling JD (U) in the coming days.

BJP RJD vice-president Shivanand Tiwary was confident the party would weather the storm. “Rabri Devi has steered the party in the past when Lalu was incarcerated . Those opposed to RJD are day dreaming that the party will fall apart”, he said.

RJD MLAs , district presidents and senior leaders attending the meeting discussed the current political scenario in the state, organisational matters and the strategy for the upcoming polls, sources said.

Lalu’s elder son and former health minister Tej Pratap Yadav was also present, along with senior leaders like Jagdnand Singh, Chandrashekhar , Abdul Bari Siddiqui , Chandrika Rai and state president Ram Chandra Purbe.

“The party is already running its membership drive and will hold elections of block, district , state and national president in a phase wise manner”, said Shakti Singh Yadav, state chief spokesperson of the party.

Union minister Giriraj Singh and BJP state president Nityanand Rai, however hit out at the RJD, saying Rabri Devi had once again taken command of the party out of fear of the RJD chief and his younger son going to jail.