Business Standard

How the ‘Tiger of Kolhan’ earned his stripes

‘Puppet on a string’ or the puppeteer, the 12th chief minister of Jharkhand holds the threads of power, for now.

- ADITI PHADNIS writes

“In Jharkhand, the motif is jungles, hills, forests, and waterfalls. Leaders are described in terms of their relationsh­ip with these forces. If Champai Soren is known as the Tiger of Kolhan, it is a tribute to his past as an activist of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), who fought long and hard for statehood. When he was undergroun­d, no one was ever sure where he would emerge from: the forest or from behind a waterfall. Hence the name: the ‘Tiger of Kolhan’,” said senior Congress leader Subodh Kant Sahai on the phone from Ranchi as the new Chief Minister (CM) of Jharkhand, Champai Soren (67), corralled his Members of Legislativ­e Assembly (MLAS) and took off to Hyderabad, where they will all stay until February 5, when a floor test in the Assembly is scheduled. Kolhan is the region to which he belongs.

Pratul Shahdeo, spokesman for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the state, is a bit less charitable.

“He’s nothing more than a puppet on a string,” said Shahdeo, speaking to Business Standard. “Hemant Soren was like a character out of the plot of the Bill Clinton-james Patterson thriller, The President Is Missing. For 40 hours, he was missing, and no one knew where he was. Champai will just do whatever the Soren family asks him to do — basically just a puppet.”

Pressure from the Soren clan is only one of the challenges Champai faces as he readies himself to helm the predominan­tly tribal state. If all goes well for him, he will overcome the numerical element of the challenge on February 5 without difficulty.

In the 81-member Jharkhand Assembly, JMM has 29 MLAS, and its ally, the Congress, has 17. The other alliance partners, the Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Communist Party of India (Marxist-leninist), have one MLA each. With the support of 48 MLAS, the INDIA bloc has the numbers to sail through a floor test.

But that’s just the beginning. Late last year, cash worth more than ~200 crore was recovered from several locations linked to Congress leader and Rajya Sabha Member of Parliament from the state, Dhiraj Prasad Sahu.

If that wasn’t reputation­al damage enough, the coalition CM Hemant Soren is now in prison on money laundering and corruption charges. Every other day, there are reports of one or more arrests. Bureaucrat­s are not exempt.

“From gold to uranium, Jharkhand is one of India’s wealthiest states when it comes to minerals. When the state regulates this via licences, obviously there will be corruption,” says Sahai.

But he adds that the BJP’S ‘selective’ use of investigat­ive agencies against Opposition leaders is mainly responsibl­e for the perception of corruption.

However, there are so far no charges of corruption against Champai. He is the first Soren CM who is not from the family. His political career began when he was elected as an Independen­t MLA in a by-election from the Saraikela seat in 1991, nine years before Jharkhand was carved out of Bihar.

He joined JMM, enthused by Shibu Soren, known as Guruji, and Raghunath Murmu, the man known to have created the Santhali script known as Olchiki (also known as Olchemet). The two men taught Champai what it is to be a tribal — to take pride in tribal legacies and traditions. Even today, JMM members say that when Champai is faced with a dilemma, he spends hours before tribal deities, or Sarna.

Ironically, he was defeated from the constituen­cy in the Bihar Assembly polls in early 2000 and couldn’t be a member of the first Assembly of Jharkhand, which was created as a separate state later that year in November. But after that, he has been an MLA from Saraikela since 2005, including being a minister in the BJP government from September 11, 2010, to January 18, 2013.

He is currently serving his sixth term as Saraikela MLA. He became minister of the food supply and transport department­s in the Hemant Soren Cabinet from July 13, 2013, to December 28, 2014. In 2019, he was made Minister of Transport, Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Backward Class Welfare in the state.

His name was floated as CM many times within the party: in 2002, 2006, and 2010. This time too, if Hemant Soren’s family — his sister-in-law Sita and others — had not revolted against a proposal to make his wife Kalpana CM while he was in prison, Champai would have missed his chance again.

The rebellion served him well.

He is a simple man — educated till Class 10 — with seven children and a bank debt of ~78 lakh. But “he retains the enthusiasm and idealism of an activist”, says Sahai, who used to deal with Champai while he was Union home minister.

Jharkhand, as a state, faces many developmen­tal challenges.

But Champai will have the additional responsibi­lity of contesting the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) which the central government will enforce when it returns to power after the 2024 general elections, to protect the tribal identity.

Although the proposal that tribals be kept out of the UCC has been floated, the resistance to a UCC among them is extensive. If Hemant is cleared of the charges against him, he will expect Champai to vacate the seat. That will be the start of another saga.

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