BJP leader Amit Shah vows CM Siddaramaiah 'biggest shock of life' in Karnataka polls

Stepping into the home turf of Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, BJP President Amit Shah on Friday told him that his 'time' has come to an end and he would be mistaken if he thought that saffron ideology could be stalled by unleashing violence against BJP and RSS workers.

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BJP leader Amit Shah vows CM Siddaramaiah 'biggest shock of life' in Karnataka polls

Amit Shah tells Siddaramaiah his 'time' has come to end, promises him 'biggest shock of life'

Lashing out at Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah on Friday warned him against unleashing violence against the BJP and the RSS workers and vowed to deliver the "biggest shock of their lives from Mysuru region".

Shah, on a tour of Mysuru as a part of his fourth round of visit to poll-bound Karnataka, said that Siddaramaiah and the JDS would receive the "biggest shock of their lives" from the region in the May 12 assembly polls.

"It is said that the BJP is a bit weak here (Old Mysuru region), but after seeing the work of the party workers, I expect Siddaramaiahji and the JD(S) to get the biggest shock of their lives from this (Old) Mysuru region," he told a party convention here.

Currently Shah is touring the districts of Mysuru, Chamarajanagara, Mandya and Ramanagara, where the BJP failed to win a single seat in the previous election.

Referring to his gaffe at Davanagere earlier this week, Shah said though he had committed a mistake in his speech while referring to Siddaramaiah's corruption, people of the state would not do the same because they knew Siddaramaiah's rule well.

"Siddaramaiah and Rahul Gandhi were very happy over my gaffe while speaking about Siddaramaiah's corruption. I had made a mistake, but the people of Karnataka will not make it, because they have understood Siddaramaiah's government very well," he said.

In a slip of the tongue at a press conference at Davangere while attacking the Siddaramaiah dispensation as the "most corrupt" one, Shah had said the Yeddyurappa government would get the number one award in corruption.

He had, however, corrected himself after being prompted by BJP MP Prahlad Joshi, who was seated next to him.

Shah also accused Siddaramaiah of playing with Karnataka's pride by not celebrating the "jayanti" of noted Kannada poet Kuvempu or renowned engineer Sir M Vishveswaraiah.

"Siddaramaiah only remembers to celebrate the jayanti of Tipu Sultan (the 18th-century ruler of Mysore) to get votes," he said.

Shah also met the?Wadiyar royal family of Mysuru today at their private palace, triggering speculations about their supporting or joining the BJP.

According to sources, during the closed-door meeting with the scion of the royal family or the present titular Maharaja-Yaduveer Krishnadatta Chamaraja Wadiyar and Rajamata Pramoda Devi Wadiyar, Shah reportedly discussed various issues, including politics.

Amid speculations in the media, Yaduveer, the 27th "King" of the Wadiyar dynasty, recently ruled out his political entry.

"I have told several times that I'm not interested in? politics. There is no chance at all about me joining any? party. I'm not interested in politics. Through social work we? will continue our relationship with the public," he said.

Shah also said that his party, if voted to power, would make efforts to hunt down the killers of RSS and BJP workers in Karnataka, and hand out severest of punishment to them.

"I would like to tell the people of the state that Siddaramaiah's time has come to an end. Soon after BJP forms the next government under Yeddyurappa's leadership, it will make all efforts to hunt down killers (of RSS and BJP workers) from any corner of the world," he said.

Shah was speaking to reporters after meeting the family of BJP worker Raju, who was hacked to death in March 2016.

"They will be sent to jail and handed out stringent punishment," he added.

Shah said Siddaramaiah was mistaken if he and his government thought they could stall saffron ideology from spreading by unleashing violence against BJP and RSS workers.

"In politics, there is no room for violence. If Siddaramaiah and his government think they can stall our ideology from spreading, then he is mistaken," he said.

Targetting the Karnataka chief minister, Shah in a tweet said there are multiple fronts on which CM Siddaramaiah has failed his own constituency. Mandya-Mysuru region has one of the highest farmer suicide rates in the state.

Last year, there were more than 265 infant deaths in just 7 months in Mysuru district, he said.

"Mysuru is just 140 Km away from the state capital, yet it has failed to attract any major investments. In 5 years, CM did nothing to fulfill his promise to widen Mysuru-Bengaluru roadway. It was PM Modi who fulfilled this long-standing demand with a new 8-lane road," Shah tweeted.

Continuing BJP's bid to reach out to the prominent Lingayat community, Shah began his fourth leg of Karnataka visit by meeting it's prominent pontiff at Suttur Mutt here.

"Took blessings of Sri Shivarathri Deshikendra Mahaswamiji of Sri Suttur Math in Mysuru," he tweeted after his meeting with the seer.

The BJP president had begun his third leg of the tour on March 26 by seeking blessings of 111-year old Sri Shivakumara Swami of Siddhaganga Mutt in Tumakuru, a revered seer of the Lingayat community.

The meeting with the Lingayat seers is being seen as an attempt to reach out to the Lingayats/Veeshaivas, who are numerically and politically powerful in the state and form a major voter base for the BJP.

The visit assumes significance as it comes in the backdrop of the Siddaramaiah government's move to recommend to the Centre to accord a religious minority tag to Lingayats and Veerashaiva Lingayats in an attempt to wean away a section of them from the BJP.

(With inputs from PTI)

BJP RSS Amit Shah JDS Siddaramaiah