
BJP MP Tejasvi Surya compares Bengaluru infra to Mumbai, says TCS marathon turned obstacle
BJP
MP
Tejasvi Surya
on Sunday criticised Bengaluru's civic infrastructure after participating in the
TCS World 10K run
in the city. He called it a 'matter of shame' that global athletes and citizens had to navigate pothole-filled and garbage-stinking roads, painting a poor picture of the government's flagship initiative of '
Brand Bengaluru
.' He also compared his experience to the Mumbai Marathon, calling it incredible.
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'Just two months ago, I ran in the Mumbai Marathon, and the experience was incredible. And today, it hurt so much to see our city like this,' Surya said.
In an open letter addressed to Deputy Chief Minister and Bengaluru Development Minister
DK Shivakumar
and the civic body–BBMP commissioner Tushar Girinath, Surya said the poor state of roads turned the event into an "obstacle race" rather than a world-class experience. He said many participants, including senior citizens and wheelchair athletes, struggled during the run due to the uneven and broken stretches.
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'No stretch was free of potholes. Many runners stumbled, sprained their ankles and some even got injured,' Surya, Bengaluru South MP wrote on X. He added that garbage dumps, broken footpaths, and dusty roads left a poor impression of 'Brand Bengaluru' before international visitors and participants.
The MP added that as custodians of the city's governance, Shivakumar and BBMP commissioner Girinath were directly responsible for the situation and must be held accountable.
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Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar, who flagged off the event earlier in the day, had said the
TCS
10K was a matter of pride for Greater Bengaluru. 'Events like this are the backbone for making Bengaluru a Greater Bengaluru,' he said, noting that over 35,000 people, including 7,000 elite competitors, had participated.
Earlier this year, in its budget, the
Congress
government had allocated Rs 7,000 crore for upgrading basic
Bengaluru infrastructure
, an increase from Rs 3,000 crore from previous years. The CM has also set aside Rs 1,800 crore for 21 projects under the Brand Bengaluru initiative for 2024-25 and Rs 3,000 crore to address weather-related challenges and enhance the city's drainage and sewage treatment infrastructure.
This is not the first time Bengaluru's infrastructure has made news; prominent Bengalureans, including venture capitalist
Mohandas Pai
and Biocon founder Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, have time and again highlighted the dire conditions and questioned the government's failure to deliver on its promise for infrastructure.
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Fifteen years after the Partition of Bengal, in August 1920, Aurobindo underlined the limits of the slogan and sought a greater mantra: 'We used the Mantra Bande Mataram with all our heart and soul… (but) the cry of the Mantra began to sink and as it rang feebly, the strength began to fade out of the country… A greater Mantra than Bande Mataram has to come.' The first two paragraphs of Bankim's Vande Mataram were adopted as the national song after Independence. The government did not retain the verses that mentioned either 'sapt koti', or the eulogies to the Goddesses Durga and Lakshmi. The obvious reference to Bengali nationhood was removed. Almost up to Independence, few underlined the religious overtones of the slogan, and it remained an essential mantra of an occupied country, a rallying call for its people. It found little resistance from other communities until 1947, when during the Partition riots, 'Bharat Mata ki Jai' was perceived as a communal slogan, the same as 'Allah-o-Akbar'. But, barring some isolated voices against Vande Matram, Mother India remained a largely benign concept that did not attract controversy. During the Ram Janmabhoomi movement of the late 1980s, however, 'Bharat Mata ki Jai' was used for communal mobilisation. Now Bharat Mata was an aggressive image, carrying swords and other weapons, and sometimes riding a tiger. The Anna Hazare movement of 2011, one of the biggest mass mobilisations of recent decades, which shook the Central government and paved the way for the emergence ultimately of Arvind Kejriwal's Aam Aadmi Party, used the image of Bharat Mata as the rallying point for an anti-corruption crusade. More recently, in February 2023, the Indian Council for Historical Research, an autonomous body under the Ministry of Education, faced 'objections' over a photo of Bharat Mata in its office, alongside pictures of President Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In early 2016, after allegedly anti-India slogans were raised at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, leading to a sedition case against its then students' union president Kanhaiya Kumar, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat said that youth should be taught to chant 'Bharat Mata ki Jai'. AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi shot back, saying he would not chant 'Bharat Mata ki Jai' even if a knife were put to his throat, prompting the Shiv Sena to tell Owaisi to 'go to Pakistan'. RSS general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale then referred to Owaisi as 'anti-national' and a 'traitor'. Later, in March 2016, AIMIM MLA Waris Pathan was suspended from the Maharashtra Assembly for refusing to say 'Bharat Mata ki Jai', even as he said he was willing to chant 'Jai Hind'. At the time, the BJP, Congress, Shiv Sena and NCP together backed a resolution to suspend Pathan for the remainder of the Budget Session. However, weeks after the controversy, BJP veteran L K Advani called the row over the slogan 'meaningless', while Bhagwat said nobody should be 'forced' to say 'Bharat Mata ki Jai'. In 2020, in the aftermath of the Delhi riots, former PM Manmohan Singh said the slogan was 'being misused to construct a militant and purely emotional idea of India that excludes millions of residents and citizens' while speaking at the launch of a book titled 'Who is Bharat Mata'.