All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) chief Asaduddin Owaisi has criticised the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leadership after his party was denied entry into the INDIA bloc ahead of the Bihar assembly election. The Hyderabad MP said AIMIM had repeatedly reached out for an alliance but was met with silence, despite offering to contest only six seats.
Speaking to NDTV, Owaisi said, “We will fight the election. Our Bihar chief Akhtarul Iman wrote two letters to Lalu Prasad Yadav and a third to Tejashwi Yadav. We said we are ready for six seats, no ministry needed. Just set up a Seemanchal development board. What more can we do?”
“BJP B-team” jibe and Seemanchal focus
Owaisi hit out at the RJD for labelling AIMIM as the BJP’s “B-team,” pointing to what he called hypocrisy in Bihar politics. “They say we are BJP’s B-team. When they took our four MLAs, nothing happened. When the BJP took Shiv Sena’s MLAs, all hell broke loose,” he remarked.
The AIMIM had sprung a surprise in the 2020 Bihar election, winning five seats in the Seemanchal region. However, four of its MLAs later switched to the RJD, leaving the party with only one legislator in the assembly.
Despite the defections, Owaisi stressed his party’s responsibility toward Seemanchal, a region with significant socio-economic challenges. “There is anger, outrage. And the people of Bihar know that we were falsely accused of being a B-team,” he said.
Street protest for alliance
In a dramatic push last week, AIMIM workers reached RJD chief Lalu Prasad’s residence in Patna, beating drums and distributing posters to press their case for an alliance. Akhtarul Iman said AIMIM had even conveyed its willingness to tie up with RJD through intermediaries. “The advice we got was that AIMIM should not contest this time. Despite this, we are ready for an alliance, even with the party that broke away four of our MLAs,” he said.
Owaisi questions India-Pak cricket match
Separately, Owaisi criticised the government’s decision to allow the Asia Cup cricket match between India and Pakistan, calling it a contradiction in policy. “The Prime Minister had said, ‘Blood and water cannot flow together.’ But cricket matches can happen? What message does this send to Pakistan?” he asked, referring to the Pahalgam terror attack that killed Indian security personnel.
He clarified that his remarks were not directed at players. “We will always be proud of our cricketers. We want India to win. But India should not just win cricket matches, it must win the fight against terror too,” Owaisi said.