Shivpal YadaV (Photo| PTI) 
Nation

Shivpal's name-plate as minister removed from residence

The red beacon atop the minister's vehicle has also been taken away and he has surrendered his official vehicle to the State, sources said.

From our online archive

LUCKNOW: In a signal that Samajwadi Party (SP) state unit President Shivpal Yadav does not want to be taken back in the state government, headed by Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav, his ministerial name plate was removed by his staff from his official residence.

Shivpal, the second most senior minister in the four-and-half years old Samajwadi Party government, was removed last week from the ministry for the second time in the last one month. The red beacon atop his vehicle has also been taken away and he has surrendered his official vehicle to the state's 'Rajya Sampatti Vibhag' (state property division), an aide told IANS.

The move is being seen in political circles as Shivpal's snub to attempts by his nephew Akhilesh to broker a deal with party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav, in which he had reportedly sought revocation of Ram Gopal Yadav's expulsion from the party in lieu of the re-entry of Shivpal and three others -- Om Prakash Singh, Narad Rai and Shadab Fatima -- into his cabinet. 

While Mulayam had initially asked Akhilesh to reinstate the sacked ministers, the Chief Minister refused to yield to the diktat forcing the SP supremo to tell reporters that he had left the matter to Akhilesh.

Former Tourism Minister Om Prakash Singh, one of the ministers shown the door, who was sitting by the side of Mulayam during his presser on Tuesday, left in a huff when the SP chief made this statement.
 

Following paper leak allegations, NTA to announce NEET-UG re-examination schedule within seven to ten days

CBI registers FIR in NEET UG case; finds social media group with 400 members used for sharing 'sample papers'

Amit Shah announces MoU between anti-cyber crime agency, RBI's innovation hub to curb mule accounts

Hegseth defends $1.5 trillion budget to Congress as Iran war cost climbs

Israeli strikes on Lebanon have killed 380 people despite ceasefire

SCROLL FOR NEXT