Why Jayant Sinha felicitating Ramgarh killers shouldn’t take us by surprise

Date:

Share post:

Ranchi: Indian Civil Aviation Minister Jayant Sinha is receiving the flak for garlanding eight killers who had lynched Alimuddin Ansari in Ramgarh for allegedly transporting beef. The politician, an Indian Institute of Technology (IIT-Delhi) and Harvard University Alumni had met the accused who had been granted bail and felicitated, on Friday.

But they should not be surprised, as this is not the first time that the minister has supported the Ramgarh killers. In fact, Jayant Sinha, the son of former External Affairs and Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha had written to Raghubar Das, the Chief Minister of Jharkhand, demanding a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) inquiry, immediately after the fast track court at Ramgarh awarded life imprisonment to the 11 accused, in the case.

However, this time because of the outrage on social media, the union minister had to tweet four times in his defence, only to find that there were no takers for his excuses. In fact, most of the Twitterati were in a mood to give only strong reactions.

Some were blunt enough to remind him about paying a visit to the victim Alimuddin Ansari’s family. While some chose to take a jibe by reminding him that he did not get time to meet the families of his own constituency in Hazaribagh who has been abducted in Afghanistan, along with six others from India.

Let’s see how netizens reacted to the excuses of the 55-year-old MP from Hazaribagh:

Hazaribagh-based journalist, Vishvendu Jaipuriar, maintains that Sinha, a former venture capitalist was known as a corporate person before 2014 Lok Sabha election and sees another reason in Hazaribagh MP felicitating Ramgarh killers. “In 2014, Jayant Sinha had become Member of Parliament from Hazaribagh because of Yashwant Sinha. Later, he went on to become the Minister of State, but he could not do away with the corporate culture and has distanced himself from the people of his constituency. So, garlanding Alimuddin’s killer is a shortcut to impress party’s core voters.”

According to sources, a senior upper caste BJP leader, who has been Jharkhand’s state president, is trying to get BJP’s ticket from Hazaribagh for the 2019 Lok Sabha polls. The ticket seeker is a hardliner. Understanding the situation, Sinha, who till now enjoyed the image of being a moderate has decided to stand with the killers of Alimuddin. Also, at a time when Sinha’s stand is being condemned by all, none from the BJP has uttered a word about the same.

But after two days of silence,  Yashwant Sinha, reacted on his son’s act and tweeted:

“Earlier I was the Nalayak Baap of a Layak Beta. Now the roles are reversed. That is twitter. I do not approve of my son’s action. But I know even this will lead to further abuse. You can never win (sic).”

Yashwant Sinha had termed the present situation of India under Narendra Modi as a Communal Emergency.  Significantly, Yashwant Sinha has left BJP too, and been vocal on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the policies of his government.

Shahnawaz Akhtar
Shahnawaz Akhtarhttp://shahnawazakhtar.com
Shahnawaz Akhtar is a senior journalist with over two decades of reporting experience across four Indian states and China. He is the Managing Editor and founder of eNewsroom India, an independent, Kolkata-based digital media platform. His work focuses on human-interest reporting, capturing lived realities, resilience, and voices often ignored by mainstream media
spot_img

Related articles

The Gangster Model? What Maduro’s Capture Means for Global Law

From Venezuela to Gaza, American foreign policy increasingly relies on coercion, resource capture, and selective justice, accelerating global resistance and pushing the world toward a fractured, unstable new order

SIR in Bengal | They Voted for Decades, Now They Must Prove They Are Indian

Elderly voters in Bengal face citizenship hearings due to faulty voter list digitisation, as Special Intensive Revision triggers mass deletions nationwide while Assam avoids exclusions through a different Election Commission process

From Churches Under Siege to Mob Lynching: India’s Failure to Protect Minorities Exposed

Christmas attacks, mob lynchings, racial violence, and political silence expose India’s growing intolerance, selective outrage, and failure to protect minorities, raising serious questions about moral authority and governance

From Banerjee to ‘Byneerjnzee’: AI Errors in Old Voter Rolls Haunt Bengal’s Electors

A Kolkata maid with Aadhaar, PAN and voter ID now faces a citizenship hearing as Bengal’s voter revision puts 1.67 crore electors under scrutiny amid multiple phases and mounting uncertainty.