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“Desh ki ekta ke liye aur bhi maarna padta toh suraksha bal maartey (if even more people were required to be killed for the sake of country’s unity and integrity, the security forces would have done it),” he said. The former Uttar Pradesh chief minister said 28 people had lost their lives in the police firing at Ayodhya on October 30, 1990.
On the VHP’s call, a lakh kar sevaks from across the country had assembled in Ayodhya for the construction of a temple at the disputed Ram Janambhoomi-Babri mosque site. The firing had earned him the nickname of ‘Mullah Mulayam’ by the Muslim community, which accounts for nearly 20 per cent of the state’s population and is considered a force to reckon with by major political parties.
“A number of Muslims had taken up arms saying if their place of worship ceased to exist, then what would remain in the country,” he said, justifying his action to save the Babri Masjid. Yadav said that during a discussion with Atal Bihari Vajapyee, the former prime minister had said that 56 persons were killed in Ayodhya.
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“It’s matter of shame that we won only 47 of the 403 Assembly seats this time,” he said, adding that even after ordering firing “when the opposition termed me as a hatyara (killer)”, the SP succeeded in winning over 100 seats in 1993. “They (youths) now are not like those we had in 1993.
When a leader could not ensure victory on his village booth, what will be the party’s fate. I want to see a strong party and leaders should also mend their ways by ensuring better connect with the masses. Yadav was the Uttar Pradesh chief minister during Ram Janmabhoomi movement spearheaded by the VHP.