Photo: Outlook |
Meraj Khalid Noor, popularly
known as Bihar's Osama bin Laden due to his uncanny resemblance to the late Al
Qaeda leader, Friday announced he would contest the Lok Sabha poll against BJP's
prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi from Varanasi .
"I have decided to
contest polls against Modi from Varanasi ," said
Noor, who is president of Ram India ,
a newly floated political outfit.
"After much thought I
decided to fight against Modi," Noor told IANS.
Patna-based Noor was once
the darling of Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader and former chief minister Lalu
Prasad and the Lok Janshakti Party's (LJP) Ram Vilas Paswan to woo Muslim
voters.
It is a different story now.
"I campaigned in the 2004
Lok Sabha polls for Paswan and in the 2005 assembly elections for Lalu," the
businessman-turned-politician said.
He now complains that Lalu
Prasad and Paswan "used me" to attract Muslim votes to their parties.
Noor is tall, well built and
sports a long black beard. Like the now dead Al Qaeda chief, he is always seen in
white robes and a turban to match. The Al Qaeda leader was gunned down by US
commandos in his hideout in Pakistan
in May 2011.
Noor admitted then it was
his mere resemblance to the world's then most wanted man that was capitalised
on as "I am neither a good speaker nor a leader with any support base".
In Patna
and across Bihar , people don't know his real
name. Everyone calls him bin Laden.
According to Salam Iraqi, one
of his friends, Noor plunged into politics in 2004 when he sought ticket from
Paswan's LJP to contest the assembly polls. His plea was turned down.
But Paswan asked Noor to
campaign for his party and he would introduce him as "Osama bin Laden"
at election rallies.
Noor switched over to the
RJD in September 2005 and campaigned for Lalu Prasad.
He was so much in demand
that Paswan and Lalu Prasad would invariably find a seat for him on their
campaign helicopters, even if it meant dropping a senior party leader.
Noor is not a hardliner.
He is the grandson of Kazi
Muzahidul Islam, former president of the Muslim Personal Law Board. His father,
Noor Ahmad, was a close associate of veteran socialist leader George Fernandes.
Such was Noor's image that
Narendra Modi once made a mention about him.
Late BJP leader Pramod
Mahajan accused Lalu Prasad and Paswan in 2005 of glorifying "the most
wanted terrorist in the world" by asking Noor to campaign for them.
SOURCE:
IANS
No comments:
Post a Comment