Congress puts up spirited campaign to stop BJP in Bastar for assembly elections
Congress is putting up a spirited campaign to checkmate BJP in its erstwhile stronghold of Naxal-dominated Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.

The Maoist-dominated areas of the state are going to polls in first phase of the Assembly elections on November 11 and Congress is battling hard to win back the tribal-dominated region which was once its stronghold and had gone the BJP way in the last two elections.
Singh held a road show across the Bastar district headquarters of Jagdalpur on Tuesday evening as a large number of women lined up along roads with lamps to welcome him while many youth rode in their bikes behind his cavalcade, raising slogans in favour of the "vikas purush" (development man).
"We have done so much and we will do much more. But you have to ensure that people come out and press the EVM in our favour," he told the crowd amid concerns in the region over naxal's threat to villagers to boycott polls.
"He has definitely done a lot for the state. The poor would not be as happy anywhere as they are in Chhattisgarh due to his food and health welfare schemes," Prahlad Gaud, a BJP supporter, said.
Not everybody, however, agrees. Congress leaders, now seemingly united, are running a campaign highlighting the corruption of cabinet ministers, accused of pocketing commissions and being involved in mine scandals, who have been "shielded" by Singh against any probe.
"Where is the accountability? The Centre has provided the state thousands of crores of rupees for development but they (state government) have misused and swindled it. The state has gone back in development," senior Congress leader and Chhattisgarh Congress Campaign Committee head Motilal Vora alleged.
Vora also led a road show along with another senior Congress leader Mohsina Kidwai and state leaders in Rajnandgaon, the home constituency of Raman Singh.
"Forget about the state, there is hardly any development in the CM's home constituency", he told voters.
To counter BJP's successful scheme of 35 kg of rice for Rs 1 per kg, the party, in its manifesto, has promised the same quantity of rice free of cost and cheaper electricity, promises dismissed as election stunt by Singh.
Congress leaders say it is imperative to target the "myth" of the CM's pro-development image if the party wants to come back to power and there could not be any better place for it than his home constituency.
Hoping for sympathy votes, it has fielded Alka, widow of former MLA Uday Mudaliar, who was killed on May 25 in the Naxal attack on the party's "parivartan yatra", which had wiped out its top state leadership, including PCC President Nand Kumar Patel.
Opposition leaders allege a politician-contractor cabal rules the state and common people have to pay commission for getting any work done.
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