Bodo party safeguards against BJP prowling.

BPF candidates shifted from Assam to foil ‘horse trading’ by BJP

Last week AIUDF shifted candidates to Jaipur; now BPF seeks haven in Bhutan

Agency Report | Guwahati | 12 April, 2021 | 11:10 PM

After the AIUDF shifted its candidates to Rajasthan, another ally of Congress-led Mahajot (grand alliance) in Assam, Bodoland People's Front (BPF), has temporarily taken its candidates to a foreign country.

Veteran BPF leader and former Social Welfare Minister Pramila Rani Brahma, who is in Assam, said: “All the 12 BPF candidates have been shifted to a neighbouring country. BPF President Hagrama Mohilary accompanied the candidates. However, I do not know which country they have gone to.”

Different media reports in Guwahati said that the BPF candidates along with 16 elected members of the Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC) went to Bhutan or Singapore.

Last week, around 19 candidates of All India United Democratic Front were shifted to Congress-ruled Rajasthan. The AIUDF and the BPF leaders said that to thwart “possible horse-trading by the BJP”, they have shifted their candidates to safer locations.

Before the third phase of elections in Assam on April 6, the BPF candidate from Tamulpur, Rangja Khungur Basumatary joined the BJP triggering a huge political controversy.

After the matter was communicated to the Election Commission by Congress and the BPF, the poll panel rejecting the complaints said that the “matter does not warrant any intervention at this juncture”. Though the media reports also said that some Congress candidates also shifted to Rajasthan but the Congress leaders in Guwahati denied such reports.

To take on the ruling BJP in the three-phase elections, the Congress, which governed Assam for 15 consecutive years (2001-2016), formed a 10-party ‘Mahajot’ (grand alliance) with three Left parties — CPI(M), CPI and CPI(ML) — and six regional and local parties — AIUDF, the Anchalik Gana Morcha, BPF, Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), Jimochayan (Deori) People’s Party and Adivasi National Party. (IANS)