By D N Singh
Almost an era has ended when the time had taught many of us a lesson and for the then chief minister Naveen Patnaik in 2012 somehow suffering that Freudian slip of his political innings.
He faced fewer threats comparatively and survived too, but did suffer some impact. In some matters, he demonstrated lack of emotion and remained a simple politician.
Then in one day, the chief minister expressed shock at the Delhi gang-rape incident and demanded stringent punishment for the perpetrators of the crime.
In what seems to be a peculiar penchant for politicians to play the role-reversal, Patnaik had never seemed so concerned when the state was shaken by an equally barbaric incident of gang-rape in Pipli, in Puri district. The girl was gang-raped, thrashed and was abandoned with her neck twisted in an open field.
A sorry tale that failed to stir the government from his political stupor.
She died after battling death for over 48 days and the episode was hushed up after customary condolences. Neither there was any show of emotions nor feelings by the chief minister. That was politics.
The state witnessed over 1,250 incidents of rape and murder in 2012 alone and he being the home minister has not been able to demonstrate the gumption for any expeditious convictions.
 Midnight Thunder
Politically, nothing could have been more of a shocker for him than the one his erstwhile advisor Pyari Mohan Mohapatra scripted on May 29 2012 midnight to dethrone him while Patnaik was in London. It was a big blow though Naveen survived. Fear seemingly continued to haunt him and the discomfort lingered on as Pyari was in a not-to-give-up mood and kept battering Patnaik`s image through mind games, though, often, appearing puerile in his (Pyari)manifestations.
By orchestrating political rallies or meetings Mohapatra unsleeved the tricks of mental annihilation to keep Naveen in a state of suspended animation.
Politically, what would happen in 2014 because of Pyari`s rebellion can be difficult to predict, but the traits of disconcerting within the Biju Janata Dal (BJD) are no less explicit. Soft-spoken Naveen till then had not delved into the use of any diatribes against Pyari which points at the implicit fear within the ruling camp. But, what was that fear?
Pyari Mohan, on his part, kept the political fraternity guessing for months saying he was still in the BJD, before suddenly declaring that he would dive into power politics and may seek to lead a government in Odisha as the chief minister.
It may be a perplexing show of political haste but it had exposed how frantically Pyari wanted to finish his run-up to power.
In the role of a political protagonist, Pyari needed time to consolidate before claiming the pulpit or measure upto Naveen Patnaik. What Naveen Patnaik still refuses to concede as a weakness is his unspoken love for the paratrooping corporate houses for whom laws are bent or broken.
He had never allowed his hopes to be shattered by the series of exposes on the coal block allocation scam which involved over a dozen big players and he rather maintained a quizzical cool to retain his hopes for an image recovery.
He had an uncanny reading of days ahead as to how things fritter away with time. He has so far survived the onslaughts of the multi-crore mining scam in Odisha and intends to ward off the stings of the coal scam without being even least finicky.
He knew that the coal scam is a five-star scam in which the Centre also enjoys a substantial share of the guilt. A kind of unholy venture which pumps oxygen into politicians and mafias fatten with that elixir.
Odisha`s growing array of political outfits and some led by non-political heads were a matter of concern for the party in power who may seek alliance of major contenders who matter a bit and influence vote bank.
So, Naveen Patnaik had no other option but to seek a mandate to stay in power and fix the sagging economy back to shape.
Patnaik`s experiments to contain Maoism in Odisha were not in tune with the ground realities and such efforts suffered the worst setback when two major abductions of VIPs were carried out by the red rebels. The way the crisis was tackled invited sharp criticism.
During the abductions, the state government obviously could not profit from the publicities it orchestrated through the series of negotiations all of which culminated in a surrender of sorts before the wishes of the rebels.
In political power games, what always remains the cause of great upset is the role of the Opposition. But, on that score Naveen has not much to fear in view of a sketchy shape of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), busy in a week-long soul searching to elect a president for the state unit. And, in the Congress many factions are behaving like fishwives when the next General Election is barely a year away.
The other slip came with the obtrusive exit of the BJD when Patnaik measured his acceptance for the sixth time by an overestimation of self and left the driving seat for an ex-bureaucrat turned politician and made an ambitious show of himself as someone in the making for the future of Odisha.
Least realising that the tag of his father would not match any other shoulder other than he himself.
He for reasons still unknown Patnaik played a role of a noncommittal ‘Neta’ and allowed the said bureaucrat to wear the garb of a ventriloquist on and off the campaign stages sending a very quizzical message for voters in the ground thus painting the boss in the colours of inertness that somehow stoked a kind of tacit revolt among the BJD cadres and people who loved Patnaik.
Now, also there are reliable sources in the BJD who said that the former officer still enjoys the kind of similar importance inside Naveen’s residence even after the ship-rake in 2024 elections.
Which tomorrow may facilitate a pulverize the last vestiges of the wreckage.
Better Patnaik tries to escape further embarrassment than suffering another Freudian slip before the political epilogue is scripted as who knows what happens in politics tomorrow.