KSO sees conspiracy in oust Nasir campaign
Source: The Sangai Express
Imphal, May 14 2014 :
Expressing regret over the ongoing mudslinging game played by some tribal organisations against one minority community Minister, the Kuki Students' Organisation (GHQs) said that the oust Nasir campaign is a conspiracy hatched in the first place by the pseudo ATSUM (Tombing) who intend to gain mileage by attacking the Minister.
The ongoing tussle to oust the Agriculture Minister Md Abdul Nasir by some tribal organisations surfaced from the alleged physical assault on the ZEO of which the Minister had denied about it time after time.
"The KSO believes no good would come out of this confrontation between the tribal organisations and the Minister who also belongs to a minority community.
If this regretful campaign continues, the whole gamut would depict a communal tone in the end.
This is regretful and is not in the interest of the minority communities of the State including the tribal," said President of KSO (Ghqs) Peter H Mate in a press statement.
The 'Oust Nasir Campaign' won't get any credibility until the tribal organisations lend an ear to Minister Nasir's side of the story.
If the Minister is innocent nobody has the right to make a scapegoat out of him.
To many people this mudslinging campaign is a conspiracy hatched in the first place by the pseudo ATSUM (Tombing) who intend to make some mileage out of it by attacking the hapless minister.
It is a fact that the Muan Tombing led pseudo ATSUM in the past always jumped at the first opportunity to grab headlines by taking up causes which suited their nefarious interests, the KSO statement said while urging the pseudo ATSUM leaders to refrain from misleading the tribal people by trying to drum up public support over some unproven allegations.
To the Kuki students, if Md Nasir is a professed 'anti-tribal', then the minister's conduct is unforgivable.
But Md Nasir is not a proven 'anti-tribal' Minister just for rebuking or reprimanding one tribal official over some Governmental matters, it added.