Umlesh Yadav

Umlesh Yadav is an Indian politician. She is the first politician to be disqualified by the Election Commission of India for a period of three years for suppression of her election expenses incurred when she was elected as an MLA to the Bisauli constituency in the Uttar Pradesh state assembly elections, 2007.[1][2][3]

Personal life

She is the wife of the politician D. P. Yadav. The Yadav family, who became wealthy through the liquor business, may be the richest political family in Uttar Pradesh, with declared net assets of Rs. 260 million (USD 6 million).[4] She is the mother of Vikas Yadav, convicted murderer of Nitish Katara, and convicted in the Jessica Lal murder case. The murder of Nitish Katara was perpetrated because her daughter Bharti Yadav had fallen in love with Nitish.[5] Bharti Yadav got married on 1 November 2009 to a Gurgaon based businessman Yatin Rao, who is a son of a top Haryana government officer.[6][7][8]

In October 2011, the Election Commission of India disqualified Yadav, the sitting MLA from Bisauli in Uttar Pradesh, under Section 10-A of the Representation of the People Act 1951 for a period of three years for failing to provide a "true and correct account" of her election expenses. She had failed to include in her official poll accounts the amount she spent on advertisements, dressed up as news, in two Hindi dailies, Dainik Jagran and Amar Ujala, during her 2007 election campaign. The case arose out of an adjudication by the Press Council of India on the complaint of a losing candidate against the two dailies for publishing paid news. After holding the newspapers "guilty of ethical violations" and issuing a caution to them, the Council sent its adjudication to the ECI "for such action as deemed fit by them". No sitting MP or MLA before Ms Yadav, wife of a liquor baron and strongman, has ever been disqualified by the ECI on grounds of excessive expenditure – and certainly none on account of paid news. This is also the first verdict in the paid news saga – a scandal that has hurt the credibility of the Indian news media and demoralised journalists. In its 23-page order, the ECI made the wider and vital observation that "by suppressing expenditure on 'paid news' and filing an incorrect or false account, the candidate involved is guilty of not merely circumventing the law relating to election expenses but also of resorting to false propaganda by projecting a wrong picture and defrauding the electorate".[1][2][3]

References

  1. 1 2 Paid news claims its price
  2. 1 2
  3. 1 2
  4. http://www.indianexpress.com/news/at-rs-26-cr-d-p-yadav-could-be-ups-richest/27094/
  5. . Abhinav Garg (31 May 2008). "Trial court sees Katara murder as honour killing". Times of India. Retrieved 31 May 2008.
  6. Quietly, Bharti Yadav gets married, S. K. Ahuja, Hindustan Times, New Delhi, 1 November 2009
  7. Bharti Yadav’s wedding to be a ‘simple affair’, Hindustan Times
  8. 4,000 attend Bharti Yadav wedding, Times of India
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