Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Tripura
Chief
Minister
Biplab
Kumar
Deb
is
a
gift
to
headline
writers.
It
is
not
even
two
months
since
he
took
over
from
Manik
Sarkar,
the
CPI(M)
veteran
who
was
Chief
Minister
for
20
years.
Yet,
Mr.
Deb
has
held
the
spotlight
on
himself
for
one
gaffe
after
another.
He
has
said,
in
a
literal
manner,
that
the
Internet
and
satellite
communication
were
in
use
in
ancient
India,
and
that
instances
of
their
use
could
be
referenced
in
the
Mahabharata.
Freely
jumping
across
themes,
he
has
compared
the
Indianness
of
the
beauty
of
Miss
Worlds.
He
has
most
recently
said,
very
seriously,
that
civil
engineers
are
better
trained
to
be
in
the
civil
services
compared
to
mechanical
engineers
as
the
former
'know
how
to
build
society'.
For
some
of
these
he
has
apologised
not
for
others.
He
has
also
made
it
a
habit
of
doing
ridiculous
back-of-the-envelope
calculations
to
ask
the
people
of
Tripura
to,
variously,
consider
how
much
richer
they
would
be
if
they
had
kept
a
cow
or
sold
paan.
Mr.
Deb
is
clearly
revelling
in
his
turn
in
the
sun,
as
the
BJP's
young
talent
come
good
in
a
vital
ideological
face-off
by
hollowing
out
the
Congress's
State
unit
and
humbling
the
CPI(M).
In
the
days
after
the
BJP
swept
the
February
Assembly
election,
winning
35
of
the
60
seats
on
its
own,
with
ally
the
Indigenous
People's
Front
of
Tripura
bringing
in
another
eight,
it
was
said
the
victory
in
the
State
was
as
valuable
to
the
party
as
its
earlier
achievement
in
Uttar
Pradesh.
It
is
against
this
backdrop
that
Mr.
Deb's
irrational
remarks
reveal
the
BJP
to
be
completely
out
of
its
depth
after
its
historic
victory.
On
Mr.
Sarkar's
watch,
Tripura
had
moved
up
the
development
indices.
According
to
the
2011
Census,
with
a
literacy
rate
of
about
87%
it
ranked
fifth
in
India.
Its
sex
ratio
is
a
relatively
respectable
960,
and
mortality
rates
for
infants
and
children
have
been
drastically
reduced.
On
the
flip
side,
Tripura's
good
social
health
indices
are
not
matched
by
those
on
the
economic
front
its
per
capita
income
has
languished
below
the
national
average,
its
infrastructure
facilities
are
poor
and
unemployment
rate
is
extremely
high.
This
is
what
Mr.
Deb
seeks
to
mock.
Rather
than
make
laughable
references
to
technological
prowess
in
a
mythical
age,
he
would
do
better
to
envisage
and
execute
a
firm
plan
to
strengthen
the
State's
economic
health.
Rather
than
wade
into
needless
controversies
by
talking
about
things
such
as
how
a
'quintessential'
Indian
woman
looks
like
which,
given
the
manner
the
remark
was
couched,
is
something
of
an
affront
to
Tripura's
ethnic
diversity
he
should
be
urged
by
his
political
bosses