May 14, 2024

Report Wire

News at Another Perspective

Samajwadi Party chief lauds Nitish on initiating Bihar caste survey

3 min read

By PTI

LUCKNOW: Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav on Sunday lauded Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar for initiating the caste survey saying that the British too had thought in 1931 concerning the transfer, which alone may guarantee the event of all castes.

Talking to reporters at Janeshwar Mishra Park, named after the celebration member and former MP, Yadav stated, “The caste survey is not made today. The British had thought that a caste survey should be done in 1931. The rights of the constitution can be given to different castes and communities only when their count is known.”

“I appreciate and congratulate Bihar Chief Minister for this,” he stated, after paying his tributes to Mishra.

He stated that his celebration has been demanding such a survey for an extended and that he too had throughout his election rallies promised to provoke it inside three months of the formation of the federal government.

About his latest Telangana go to, Yadav stated he had gone there on the invitation of the Telangana Chief Minister, who had invited a number of different CMs too.

ALSO READ | Can Bihar’s caste survey show a headache for PM Modi?

On BJP he stated, the celebration’s days within the state are numbered.

“I want to say today, when their state executive is sitting, that only 398 days are left. Be it poor or anyone else, no one can expect justice today. The rights that democracy and the constitution have given us, those rights are also being snatched away. BJP is deliberately taking decisions that benefit a handful of industrialists. It is promoting its men in all institutions,” he stated.

ALSO READ | Bihar Cabinet provides nod for caste survey at value of Rs 500 crore; units February 23 deadline

On Janeshwar Mishra, he stated, “We are remembering Janeshwar Mishra ji today. He and ‘Netaji’ (Mulayam Singh Yadav) took the socialist movement forward. Today we all take a resolution that we will take this movement even further.”

LUCKNOW: Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav on Sunday lauded Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar for initiating the caste survey saying that the British too had thought in 1931 concerning the transfer, which alone may guarantee the event of all castes.

Talking to reporters at Janeshwar Mishra Park, named after the celebration member and former MP, Yadav stated, “The caste survey is not made today. The British had thought that a caste survey should be done in 1931. The rights of the constitution can be given to different castes and communities only when their count is known.”

“I appreciate and congratulate Bihar Chief Minister for this,” he stated, after paying his tributes to Mishra.

He stated that his celebration has been demanding such a survey for an extended and that he too had throughout his election rallies promised to provoke it inside three months of the formation of the federal government.

About his latest Telangana go to, Yadav stated he had gone there on the invitation of the Telangana Chief Minister, who had invited a number of different CMs too.

ALSO READ | Can Bihar’s caste survey show a headache for PM Modi?

On BJP he stated, the celebration’s days within the state are numbered.

“I want to say today, when their state executive is sitting, that only 398 days are left. Be it poor or anyone else, no one can expect justice today. The rights that democracy and the constitution have given us, those rights are also being snatched away. BJP is deliberately taking decisions that benefit a handful of industrialists. It is promoting its men in all institutions,” he stated.

ALSO READ | Bihar Cabinet provides nod for caste survey at value of Rs 500 crore; units February 23 deadline

On Janeshwar Mishra, he stated, “We are remembering Janeshwar Mishra ji today. He and ‘Netaji’ (Mulayam Singh Yadav) took the socialist movement forward. Today we all take a resolution that we will take this movement even further.”

Copyright © 2024 Report Wire. All Rights Reserved