Uncertainty over NCP merger: Sharad Pawar heads to Mumbai; Sunetra Pawar returns to Baramati
It was unclear if Sharad Pawar and Sunetra Pawar met or spoke amid merger talks.
PTI
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Sharad Pawar said his late nephew had finalised 12 Feb to announce a merger between the NCP factions (PTI)
Mumbai, 1 Feb
NCP (SP) president Sharad Pawar left for Mumbai from Baramati on Sunday morning, four days after the air crash that claimed the life of his nephew and Maharashtra deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar.
NCP leader Ajit Pawar's wife Sunetra Pawar, who took oath as deputy CM in Mumbai on
Saturday, returned to Baramati in Pune, the hometown of the Pawars, late at
night.
It was
unclear whether Sharad Pawar and Sunetra Pawar met or spoke over the phone amid
the latest political developments and talks about the merger of the two NCP
factions.
Sharad
Pawar has no scheduled programmes in Mumbai.
His
daughter and Baramati Lok Sabha member Supriya Sule left for Delhi on Saturday
to attend the budget session.
The NCP
(SP) chief on Saturday claimed that he had "no idea" about the
swearing-in of Sunetra Pawar as deputy chief minister, and said his late nephew
had finalised 12 February to announce a merger between the NCP factions.
He also
said the process to merge the NCP (SP) and NCP may now face a roadblock due to the death of Ajit Pawar.
"There
was no discussion with me about the swearing-in. Her party (NCP) may have made
the decision. The names of Praful Patel and Sunil Tatkare came up, and it is
learnt that they took the initiative. They might have taken a decision
internally within the party," he said.
The NCP
(SP) chief also said the ruling faction may have felt that someone should take
up the post after Ajit Pawar's death.
Parth
Pawar, son of Ajit Pawar, met Pawar senior at the latter's residence,
Govindbaug, in Baramati, on Saturday. Sule, NCP (SP) MLA Rohit Pawar, and
Yugendra Pawar were also present.
Following
Ajit Pawar’s death on 28 January, merger talks between the two NCP groups—which
had been at an advanced stage—appear to have been put on the back burner, with
Patel and Tatkare remaining tight-lipped while leaders like Narhari Zirwal
advocate unity.
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