Kerala BJP's Cooperative Crisis: Scandal, Suicide, and Election Threat

The BJP finds itself in serious trouble as cooperative society scandals erupt in Kerala's capital city. A sitting BJP councillor's suicide has exposed financial irregularities in party-linked cooperatives. Meanwhile, internal rebellion reveals massive loan defaults by senior BJP leaders totaling over one crore rupees. These developments threaten to derail the party's campaign just before crucial local body elections.

Key Points: BJP Faces Cooperative Scam Allegations Before Kerala Local Polls

  • BJP councillor Anil Kumar's suicide linked to cooperative society financial distress
  • Former state secretary M.S. Kumar alleges Rs 1 crore loan defaults by BJP leaders
  • CPI(M) demands probe into cooperative institution political patronage
  • BJP scrambles for damage control ahead of crucial local body elections
2 min read

Cooperative scam allegations rock BJP in Kerala ahead of local body polls

BJP battles cooperative society scams in Thiruvananthapuram amid councillor suicide and loan default allegations, threatening party's local election prospects.

"Moral and financial decay - CPI(M) party daily 'Deshabhimani'"

Thiruvananthapuram, Nov 5

A spate of alleged cooperative society scams in the state capital has put the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on the defensive, threatening to dent its image ahead of the upcoming local body elections.

The party, which has served as the principal opposition in the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation for the past two terms, now finds itself battling allegations of financial impropriety and internal discord.

The crisis deepened after the suicide of Anil Kumar, a sitting BJP councillor in the Corporation and president of a local cooperative society.

He reportedly took his own life following severe financial distress after the institution failed to return deposits.

His death has not only sparked emotional outrage within the party but also turned the spotlight on the functioning of a few BJP-linked cooperatives in the city.

Adding to the turbulence, M.S. Kumar, one of the party's prominent faces in Thiruvananthapuram and a former state secretary, publicly alleged large-scale loan defaults by senior BJP leaders from another Society, of which he is a key office-bearer.

According to Kumar, loans worth over Rs one crore were taken by state- and district-level leaders and never repaid.

One senior leader allegedly owes Rs 40 lakh, while another has defaulted on Rs 35 lakh.

Kumar accused the party's top brass, including state president Rajeev Chandrasekhar, of failing to act despite repeated complaints.

He has also threatened to release the names of all defaulters, claiming that a good number of those who failed to repay loans are BJP members.

His revelations, first reported by the CPI(M) party daily 'Deshabhimani', have created ripples within the BJP and given ammunition to the Left, which has accused the party of "moral and financial decay".

The CPI(M) has demanded a detailed probe into the alleged misuse of cooperative institutions under political patronage.

With the BJP scrambling to contain the fallout, senior leaders are reportedly in talks with Kumar to withdraw his damaging Facebook post.

However, as the controversy widens, the cooperative scandals threaten to overshadow the party's campaign and undermine its credibility in Kerala's politically charged capital.

Meanwhile, in the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation, the CPI(M)'s State Education Minister V. Sivankutty has expressed confidence of a sweeping win, while the Congress-led UDF has already taken the early lead by announcing candidates in 64 of the 101 seats and launching its campaign.

Kumar's allegations have left the BJP rattled, with damage-control efforts now underway.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone from Kerala, I've seen how cooperative societies help ordinary people. If BJP leaders are really taking crores in loans and not repaying, it's a betrayal of public trust. M.S. Kumar deserves credit for speaking up despite party pressure.
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Sarah B
While this is concerning, let's wait for proper investigation. Every party has black sheep. What matters is how BJP handles this internally and ensures justice for the depositors who lost their money.
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Aditya G
The timing is suspicious - just before elections. But truth must prevail. If senior leaders have defaulted on loans, they should be named and shamed. No party is above the law. Hope the investigation is fair and transparent.
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Nisha Z
This is why people lose faith in politics. Cooperative societies are lifelines for middle-class families in Kerala. When politicians treat them like personal ATMs, it destroys lives. The suicide case shows the human cost of such corruption. 😔
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Michael C
As an observer, this seems like a systemic issue that needs regulatory reform. Kerala's cooperative sector needs better oversight regardless of which party is in power. The focus should be on protecting depositors, not political point-scoring.

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