Gujarat Assembly elections: PM ends poll campaign with a 'splash'

The PM flew in a single-engine amphibious aircraft from the Sabarmati River to Dharoi Dam in Mehsana district

Archis Mohan Aneesh Phadnis & Vinay Umarji  |  New Delhi | Mumbai | Ahmedabad 

Gujarat polls: Modi ditches road, lands via seaplane; Top 10 developments
Prime Minister Narendra Modi waves to the crowd as he boards a seaplane on the Sabarmati river front in Ahmedabad on Tuesday. Photo: PTI

began the last day of campaigning for the Assembly polls on Tuesday with a splash.

Denied permission by the local administration to hold a roadshow in because of security concerns, the PM took to the skies, through water. The PM flew in a single-engine amphibious aircraft from the to in Mehsana district in the morning. 

Congress President-elect Rahul Gandhi, who was also denied permission to hold a public rally in and held a press conference instead, termed it a “good event”, but a “distraction” from the real issues facing - that of crumbling healthcare, expensive private college education, 3 million jobless youth, alleged irregularities in the and in the business dealings of BJP chief's son.

The 20-minute journey, in a 10-seater Kodiak aircraft, also led to questions being raised whether rules permitted the PM, who is protected by the Special Protection Group (SPG), to fly in a single-seater plane. “How is that the security guidelines were relaxed for this flight? No Z+ protectee is allowed to fly in a single-engine aircraft, much less the PM of our country. Single engine plane. Foreign pilots. Is there any security guideline that will not be thrown out today,” Conference chief and former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah tweeted.

The Directorate General of (DGCA) and the ministry did not comment. A senior government official said there was no violation. “All necessary approvals from the DGCA were taken and due diligence followed,” the official told this newspaper.

Captain John Goulet, president of Goulet Aviation Services, who piloted the seaplane, said: “It was a very pleasing experience. I gave him (Modi) a safety briefing. He is a very good passenger. Seaplanes are very common in many countries. It should be popular in India also as you have lakes, rivers and the coastal areas.”

Chief Minister Vijay Rupani termed the PM's ride a first-of-its-kind in India's history. Congress spokesperson Priyanka Chaturvedi pointed out that such a service was started in the in 2010, and in Kerala in 2015. The Congress also produced a Lok Sabha document that said the UPA government had approved 100 per cent foreign direct investment (FDI) under the automatic route in helicopter and services in 2009.

Nitin Gadkari, Union minister for road transport, shipping, waterways and river development, said Modi's journey was a “big revolution” in the field of transport. He said a policy would be in place in 2018. 

The PM said effective use of waterways augured well for tourism. He said Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the Lakshadweep, the Northeast and places with water bodies, big dams and waterways would benefit with the usage of seaplanes, and these planes could also help in medical emergencies.

Modi boarded the from near the Sardar Bridge, connecting the old city with West. A special jetty was constructed to facilitate the prime minister's boarding, and the event also showcased the Sabarmati riverfront development that had been undertaken when he was the state chief minister. In Dhraoi, the PM held a roadshow to the Ambaji Temple in Banaskantha district. The PM said his campaign journey in began with the blessings of the Ashapura Mata temple in Kutch, and ended on Tuesday with the visit to the Ambaji temple.

Congress President-elect ended his campaigning after a visit to the Lord Jagannath temple. At his press conference, which the Congress said highlighted how their leader was willing to take questions while the PM doesn't, responded to the BJP criticism that he only visited temples in  

“Earlier, I had gone to Is in This is the BJP's propaganda against me,” he said, asking whether visiting temples was prohibited. Some television channels highlighted that the Congress leader has taken to wearing rudraksha beads, considered auspicious, which his grandmother Indira Gandhi would also wear.

Most opinion polls have unanimously forecasted a BJP win, albeit with fewer seats than the 115 the party had won in 2012, when Modi was still the chief minister. The polling for the remainder 93 of the 182 seats is on Thursday. The counting of votes for the and is on December 18.

First Published: Wed, December 13 2017. 02:37 IST