NEW DELHI, Sept 7: Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel’s 86-year old father Nand Kumar Baghel was on Tuesday arrested and sent to 15 days in custody for allegedly making derogatory remarks against Brahmins. His lawyer said he did not request bail and would appear before a court again on September 21.
After an FIR was filed against his father, the chief minister has said no one was above law. “Nobody is above the law in my government, even if he is the Chief Minister’s 86-year-old father. As Chief Minister, I have the responsibility to maintain harmony among different communities. If he made a remark against a community, I am sorry. Legal action will be taken,” Bhupesh Baghel told reporters on Sunday.
“Everyone knows about my ideological differences with my father. Our political thoughts and beliefs are different. I respect him as his son, but as Chief Minister, I cannot forgive him for such mistakes which disturb public order.”
Baghel also underlined that the Chhattisgarh government “respects every religion, caste and community and their sentiment”, and gives equal importance to everyone. He tweeted: “As a son, I respect my father, but as a Chief Minister, none of his mistakes can be overlooked which disturbs the public order.”
Baghel’s father, on a recent visit to Uttar Pradesh, had controversially called for a “boycott” of Brahmins and, describing them as foreigners, had urged people not to let them into their villages. “Brahmins will be sent from the River Ganga to Volga. They are foreigners. They consider us untouchables and are snatching all our rights. I will urge villagers to not let Brahmins enter their village,” Nand Kumar Baghel had said.
An FIR was registered in Raipur on the complaint of the Sarv Brahmin Samaj against Baghel senior on Saturday night. The charges on the complaint include “promoting enmity between groups.”
For Baghel, the family drama comes days after he apparently triumphed over his in-house rival TK Singh Deo, who had laid claim to his job saying he had been assured by the Congress leadership of a rotational arrangement for Chief Ministership. Baghel’s half-term was done, Singh Deo had asserted, and it was his turn. The feud became a huge crisis for the Congress. The high command, however, later agreed to continue the present arrangement.
(Manas Dasgupta)