India's
anti-corruption crusader Arvind Kejriwal announced Monday he would head
a state government for New Delhi in a stunning breakthrough for his
fledgling party just months before a general election.
The former
tax official is set to become chief minister in a minority
administration after his Aam Aadmi (Common Man) Party won the second
highest number of seats in the state assembly polls earlier this month.
The
Congress party, which is in power at national level and ran New Delhi
for years before being trounced in the state elections, said it would
provide support for a Kejriwal-led government but would not join it.
"The
people of Delhi want us to form the government. We are ready to form
the government," he told reporters, as elsewhere AAP supporters danced
in celebration and waved brooms -- the party's symbol for a clean sweep
of graft-ridden politics.
Although the Hindu nationalist
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won the most seats in the assembly, it has
declined to form government without a majority, in the fortnight since
the results were announced.
Aam Aadmi won 28 of the 70 seats in the assembly, trouncing Congress whose share slumped to eight.
The BJP, which is expected to come out on top in a general election due in May, won 31 seats and a BJP ally took one.
Kejriwal
had been wary of accepting support from either Congress or the BJP,
given that many voters cited the two parties' record on corruption as
their reason for siding with Aam Aadmi.
But an Aam Aadmi official
said that 74 percent of supporters who took part in an informal poll
had endorsed the idea of it forming a government.
The party, born
out of an anti-corruption movement that swept India two years ago, has
tapped into anger about everyday graft as well as scandals that have
embroiled the national government.
Kejriwal, 44, only started the
party a year ago but has indicated that he wants to field candidates
across the country in the general election.
Although analysts say
his party has no chance of winning at national level given its lack of
finance and infrastructure, the showing in Delhi has underlined its
potential to damage the BJP and Congress when the world's biggest
democracy goes to the polls.
Kejriwal pledged in its manifesto
this month to send corrupt politicians to jail and end the VIP culture
of Delhi's political elite.
He has also promised to slash power
prices for Delhi families by cracking down on falsely inflated bills and
give households 700 litres of free water a month -- promises critics
have dismissed as extravagant and unrealistic.
"We will start
working (on our promises) immediately. The job of any government is to
provide good governance and we are confident of living up to our
pre-poll promises," AAP spokeswoman Shazia Ilmi told AFP.
Chandra
Mohan Sharma, an AAP supporter who turned out to hear Kejriwal's
announcement Monday, said unlike the major parties Aam Aadmi would never
let the common people down.
"They (AAP) just have to remove the
middlemen and change the corrupt system and prices will come down
automatically," said Sharma, 45.
Former chief minister Sheila
Dikshit, who oversaw Congress's defeat in the polls, said her party
would give "issue-based support from outside" to Kejriwal's
administration in Delhi.
"We are not going to be a part of the government," she told NDTV news network.
The BJP slammed Kejriwal's decision to form the government with support from Congress, accusing it of hypocrisy.
"The
AAP has been accusing the Congress of being the most corrupt party in
the whole world. And now just for the sake of attaining power, they have
compromised with the same corrupt Congress," said Harsh Vardhan, the
BJP's chief ministerial candidate for Delhi.
The Congress-led
national government has been hit by a string of major corruption
scandals, ranging from allegations of illegal distribution of cut-price
telecom licences to the 2010 graft-tainted Commonwealth Games.
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