Akhilesh Yadav backs Ken-Betwa protesters, calls BJP's time over
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav on Sunday, 19 July 2026, launched a sharp attack on the Bharatiya Janata Party government, declaring that it would be better for the BJP to step down 'with dignity' than to remove protesters opposing the Ken-Betwa River Link Project. Invoking the imagery of the Chita Andolan — a symbolic protest in which demonstrators lie on funeral pyres to highlight their despair over displacement and forest loss — Yadav warned that a people pushed to their limits become an unstoppable force.
Context
In his post, Yadav wrote: 'पूरे देश में प्रदर्शनकारियों को हटाने से अच्छा है, भाजपा सरकार स्वयं ससम्मान हट जाए' — 'It is better for the BJP government to step aside with honour than to remove protesters across the country.' He added that if BJP leaders had read history or participated in the freedom movement, they would know that when the power of the people is exhausted of every hope, it becomes a force unto itself. The post was accompanied by the hashtags #चिता_आंदोलन and #केन_बेतवा_विरोध, directly linking his remarks to ongoing resistance against the river-interlinking scheme.
Yadav also invoked the BJP's 'Achhe Din' ('good days') campaign promise, writing: 'भाजपा के राज में लोग जीते-जी अपनी चिता ख़ुद सजा के लेट गये, अब इससे ज़्यादा 'अच्छे दिन' भाजपा क्या लाएगी' — 'Under BJP rule, people have laid themselves on their own funeral pyres while still alive; what more 'good days' can the BJP now bring?' He concluded with a declaration: 'BJP's time is up. The final phase of the BJP now begins.'
Policy Backdrop
The Ken-Betwa River Link Project is the first project to be sanctioned under India's National River Linking Project, which traces its origins to the National Perspective Plan prepared by the Ministry of Irrigation in 1980. The project received Cabinet approval in principle in 2018, with the aim of transferring surplus water from the Ken river to the Betwa basin to address chronic water scarcity in the Bundelkhand region, spanning parts of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.
Critics, including environmentalists and affected communities, have raised concerns over the submergence of forests, disruption of wildlife corridors, and large-scale displacement of Bundelkhand farmers and forest-dwelling populations. Pending environmental clearances remain a subject of scrutiny before judicial bodies. The Chita Andolan — in which protesters symbolically lie on funeral pyres — emerged as a dramatic expression of this community despair over land, livelihood and forest loss.
Stakeholders and Impact
The communities most directly affected are Bundelkhand farmers and forest-dwelling groups whose lands fall within the project's submergence zone. Environmentalists have flagged threats to biodiversity and river ecology in the region. The protest movement has drawn political attention from opposition parties, with Yadav's statement positioning the Samajwadi Party firmly alongside the demonstrators and against the central government's project implementation approach.
Large-scale river-interlinking schemes have historically become flashpoints for centre-state tension and partisan contestation across India. The Ken-Betwa project, cutting across Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh — the latter governed by the BJP — adds a layer of inter-state political complexity to the dispute.
What's Next
Proceedings before the National Green Tribunal and the Supreme Court of India on environmental clearances for the project will be closely watched. State assembly debates on land acquisition linked to the scheme are also expected to intensify. Yadav's intervention signals that the Chita Andolan and the broader #केन_बेतवा_विरोध movement are set to become a sustained political battleground ahead of future electoral cycles in Uttar Pradesh.