The Asian Age

Prez hails Tipu’s role, BJP sees red

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Embarrassi­ngly for the BJP in Karnataka, which is opposing the Tipu Jayanti celebratio­ns planned by the Congress government of chief minister Siddaramai­ah, President Ram Nath Kovind on Wednesday waxed eloquent on the Mysuru king’s patriotism

Kovind says Tipu Sultan died ‘heroic death’ fighting the British; BJP claims Siddaramai­ah govt ‘doctored’ speech

when he fought British rule.

Addressing a joint session of the Karnataka legislatur­e on the occasion of the diamond jubilee celebratio­ns of the Vidhana Soudha, the President

said: “Tipu Sultan died a heroic death fighting the British. He was also a pioneer in the developmen­t and use of Mysore rockets in warfare. This technology was later adopted by the Europeans.”

He also lavished praise on Karnataka as a land of formidable soldiers. “Krishnadev­a Raya was the greatest ruler of the Vijayanaga­ra empire and remains an inspiratio­n for all Indians. Kempe Gowda was the founder of Bengaluru, and Rani Chennamma of Kittur and Rani Abbakka led the earliest battles against the colonial powers. And more recently, two of the four finest Army Chiefs, Field Marshal K.M.

Continued from Page 1 Cariappa and Gen. K.S. Thimmayya, were sons of Karnataka,” he said.

But the Tipu reference in the speech had the BJP up in arms. It accused chief minister Siddaramai­ah of doctoring the speech and altering the President’s address to include the reference to Tipu Sultan. “Such speeches for the President are usually written by the state government. He was merely mouthing it. This does not mean we will call off our agitation against Tipu Jayanti,” R. Ashok, BJP MLA and a former state home minister, told the media. Other BJP leaders also alleged the President’s speech was deliberate­ly put on hold until the Siddaramai­ah government had vetted it and made alteration­s. The CM’s office strongly refuted the suggestion, saying the President’s speech was prepared by the President’s office and that they had no role to play in it whatsoever.

However, sources said that last Friday, the President’s press office approached the CM for a background­er on the state and the Assembly building, and the CM commission­ed a veteran journalist to write a piece, which was duly sent to the President. “There was no question of amending the President’s speech,” an official told this newspaper.

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