The AAP
Today, the whole of India is keenly watching the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) activities in Delhi. Kejriwal’s demonstration on the streets has won the hearts of the common people in India.
B.B.C. Chandrasekar
Madurai, Tamil Nadu
KEJRIWAL will have to understand that though he won the election, running the government requires administrative skill, financial capability and a high level of statesmanship. If he wants to sustain his party for the long run, he should give up the idea of fighting the general election in 2014 and focus only on the Delhi administration.
Sushil Kumar
Aurangabad, Bihar
THE frenzied mood prevailing among leaders of the AAP is evident in the words of its own supporters and party members. The shock wave of the AAP’s electoral victory in Delhi has now become less important to the media. The AAP’s move to offer subsidised water and power supply to the Delhi middle class is now in a stalemate. The AAP lacks any substantial political ideology that can help it address the many issues of the poor, of the victims of bureaucratic apathy and of the destructive nature of development.
The time is ripe for the AAP to join hands with political sections that are closer to the people who are struggling for their right to live with dignity and for a democratic space in society. In the coming election, voters will not choose either the Congress or the BJP. There is scope for a third alternative, so the AAP should try its best to fulfil the promises it made to the people.
Rajeevan A.K.
Deodhara, Madhya Pradesh
THE AAP is appealing to people’s “moral sense” and not pursuing an ideological course to mobilise them (“A disturbing phenomenon”, January 24). Just before every election, the left approaches Mulayam Singh Yadav, the biggest champion of secularism in India, with an offer to lead a “third front”. People are disgusted by this. They should join hands with the AAP wholeheartedly and oppose it when it deviates from the people’s cause.
Satya Veer Singh
Faridabad, Haryana
Rahul Gandhi
Congress president Sonia Gandhi’s statement that the party did not have a tradition of announcing its prime ministerial candidate was amusing and hypocritical. Her statement attacking the BJP for its “divisive” ideology, terming it the “biggest threat” to the nation, is yet another instance of BJP-bashing.
B . Suresh Kumar
Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
THE article predicted what the Congress party will have to face in the parliamentary election if Rahul Gandhi does not take on the responsibility of being the UPA’s prime ministerial candidate.
Riyas M.
Kumaramputhur, Kerala
THERE is a definite reluctance on Rahul Gandhi’s part to take up the responsibility of leading the nation. In sharp contrast, Narendra Modi, the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, with his tireless campaigning, is able to connect with people in many parts of the country. While Rahul Gandhi’s inability to match his words with action is glaring, the doomsday prediction for the Congress is not helping matters either. As an aspiring leader, Rahul Gandhi ought to display strong willpower and determination in decision-making.
J. Anantha Padmanabhan
Tiruchi, Tamil Nadu
Moths & butterflies
G. Azeemoddin
Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh
Cycle yatra
THE interview of Dr Unni Krishnan Karunakara was inspiring (“Where there is a wheel, there is a way”, February 7). All health functionaries across the world need to learn from the noble work of Medecins Sans Frontieres. I founded a body called the Organisation For Promotion of Social Dimensions of Health (OPSDH) to work towards the change of health practices of individuals and communities and to try and influence the state in policymaking.
I am an avid cyclist. The OPSDH is planning a “cycle yatra” in the last quarter of 2014 to sensitise people and the state on health issues and to study the ground realities. The yatra will consist of promoting health messages, studying local health issues and visiting health facilities, medical colleges, nursing schools and paramedical schools. The yatra will conduct meetings at the place of night halt so that the day’s experience can be shared with the government agencies concerned on the same day itself. The early phase will be confined to Andhra Pradesh and will expand across the nation depending on progress. The OPSDH invites citizens to offer suggestions and to join the yatra, either fully or for part of it.
Araveeti Ramayogaiah
Hyderabad
Oral cancer
ALTHOUGH there is awareness about oral cancer, there is not much focus in the media on oesophageal cancer, that is, cancer of the food pipe (“Tracing the drivers of oral cancer”, February 7).
Deendayal M. Lulla
Mumbai
Suchitra Sen
Bidyut Kumar Chatterjee
Faridabad, Haryana
SUCHITRA made her debut in 1952 in “Shesh Kothaay”, but it was not a success. She did not lose heart and subsequently paired with Uttam Kumar, in “Sharey Chuattor”, which paved the way for her entry into the film world. After that she never looked back. Her career began at a time when there was value-based cinema with standard classics by eminent writers. Sensing the environment and the appreciative audience, she utilised her talents and experimented successfully with cinema, with her performances in most of her films highlighting the joys and pathos of human life. Her role in “Aandhi” made Indira Gandhi see the film and she greatly appreciated Suchitra’s performance.
Jayant Mukherjee
Kolkata
Rape victims
THE article “Rape victims & justice” (February 7) was not only interesting but crystallised a thought that has been troubling me for a long time with respect to child abuse. It is quite strange that no one has ever thought to clearly specify the ages of the victims. Young children cannot be expected to be able to clearly report rape (or an attempt to rape) to their parents or others.
It is therefore essential that a proper demarcation of age groups be enunciated, and particularly in the case of babies and little children, rape or an attempt to rape should be treated with extreme harshness as the victims have been abused when they are incapable of even knowing what is being perpetrated on them.
R. Krishnan
Bangalore
Coal scam
THE way the UPA neglected the letters of Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik regarding coal block allocations shows its autocratic nature (“Vassal States?”, January 24). Constitutional laws need to be strengthened and the UPA must learn to be transparent in its dealings.
Alokananda Bisoyi
Bhubaneswar
Street children
Ramesh Kotian Hosamane
Uchila, Karnataka
Silk route
The articles were interspersed with exquisite photographs and maps. It was interesting to learn about Ferghana, the birthplace of the legendary Babur, who shaped the destiny of India, and about Babur’s unique lineage to Timur and Genghis Khan. These issues are collectors’ copies.
N.C. Sreedharan
Kannur, Kerala