Atishi takes charge as Delhi CM, leaves Kejriwal's chair vacant
AAP leader Atishi said she would work like Bharat did by keeping his elder brother Lord Ram's 'khadaun' (wooden slippers) on Ayodhya's throne
PTI
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AAP leader Atishi did not sit on the chair used by Arvind Kejriwal and said his chair would remain unoccupied in the chief minister's office. PHOTO: PTI
New Delhi, 23 Sept
AAP leader Atishi took charge as
the eighth chief minister of Delhi on Monday and said she would work like
Bharat did by keeping his elder brother Lord Ram's 'khadaun' (wooden slippers)
on Ayodhya's throne.
She did not sit on the chair used
by Kejriwal and said that his chair would remain unoccupied in the chief
minister's office. She sat on a white chair, which was placed next to
Kejriwal's chair.
Delhi BJP chief Virendra Sachdeva
slammed Atishi, saying it was an "insult" to the post of the chief
minister.
Atishi has retained the 13
portfolios she held in the Kejriwal government, including those of education,
revenue, finance, power and PWD. "I will work for four months as the chief
minister of Delhi like Bharat did by keeping Lord Ram's khadaun on the throne.
Arvind Kejriwal has set an example of dignity in politics by stepping down. The
BJP left no stone unturned to tarnish his image," she said after taking
charge.
"Kejriwal was granted bail by
the Supreme Court, which said his arrest was carried out with ill-intentions.
Had there been somebody else, they wouldn't have even thought for a moment and
sat on the chief minister's chair, but he chose to resign," she said.
Environment Minister Gopal Rai also
took charge at the Delhi Secretariat. New entrant Mukesh Ahlawat, who was
allotted the portfolios of labour, SC and ST, employment and land and building
departments, also took charge at the Delhi Secretariat.
Hitting out at Atishi, Sachdeva
said her gesture was an "insult" to the constitutional rules and the
post of chief minister. "What she did was not ideal. Through her gesture,
she has not only insulted the post of chief minister but also hurt the feelings
of the people of Delhi. Arvind Kejriwal needs to answer -- whether he will run the
government through a remote control," he said.
The new Cabinet headed by Atishi
has a long list of pending projects, schemes and new initiatives to be launched
in the next few months before Delhi goes to polls in February next year.
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