RJD, BAPSA and NSUI will alone

RJD, BAPSA and NSUI will alone
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RJD, BAPSA and NSUI will alone
Highlights

Ahead of the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) polls, the Chhatra RJD, BAPSA and NSUI held several rounds of discussion to form an alliance but the talks did not materialise and the parties decided to go it alone.

New Delhi : Ahead of the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) polls, the Chhatra RJD, BAPSA and NSUI held several rounds of discussion to form an alliance but the talks did not materialise and the parties decided to go it alone.

The Congress-affiliated National Students' Union of India is contesting on the president's post. The Birsa Ambedkar Phule Students' Association (BAPSA) is contesting for the posts of president and general secretary, while the Chhatra Rashtriya Janata Dal, the student wing of the RJD, is contesting for the posts of president and vice president.

Sources said the Chhatra RJD wanted to form an alliance with BAPSA since they are ideologically aligned. They were also in favour of having NSUI in the alliance but the BAPSA had reservations about the presence of the Congress-backed student unit, the sources said.

The sources also said that NSUI and CRJD had interactions over it, BAPSA and CRJD also had some rounds of talks and even the NSUI and BAPSA had discussions but the three parties never sat together and discussed about the alliance.

The sources attributed this communication gap for the alliance not materialising. Jayant Jigyasu of the CRJD said, "We were in favour of the alliance. We were ready to leave the president's post and ready to contest for the post of general secretary.

BAPSA would have fought for the president's post and NSUI for vice-president but things did not materialise." He said that had the alliance formed, the split in votes would not have been there and a formidable alternative to left and right wing outfits would have emerged.

Sunny Mehta, the in-charge of JNU unit of NSUI, said they would have been happy with the alliance but blamed the RJD and BAPSA for not wanting the alliance. "People are scared of the NSUI instead of Left. Last year, our vote share had improved to 14 per cent and this time we are confident of doing well as we have fielded a strong candidate," he said.

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