Gul Panag declared AAP candidate from Chandigarh

CHANDIGARH, Mar 13:
Former Miss India and actor Gul Panag today joined Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and will be its candidate for Lok Sabha polls from Chandigarh, a place where she was born and describes as her “family’s home”. Panag said that the country is at the threshold of transformational change which is being led by AAP and Arvind Kejriwal.
“There is a time in every country’s history when staying on the side-lines is no longer an option. We are on the cusp of transformational change in the country that is being heralded by AAP and Arvind Kejriwal,” the 35-year-old actor said.
Panag was declared the AAP candidate by party’s senior leader Manish Sisodia at a chaotic press conference here.
After comedian Bhagwant Mann, who is party nominee from Sangrur Lok Sabha seat, Panag is the second celebrity fielded by the AAP in the region.
Earlier, comedian Jaspal Bhatti’s widow Savita Bhatti was declared as the AAP candidate from Chandigarh seat, but she opted out of the race after reportedly failing to sync with local party activists.
Panag said that Chandigarh is “plagued” with the same issues — dynastic politics, corruption, crony capitalism — which the entire country is facing these days.
Panag’s father Lt Gen (retd) H S Panag had joined the AAP last month.
She also described herself as a city girl to downplay the claims that she is a paratrooper selected by the AAP as she has no longer association with the city and lives in Mumbai.
“My roots are in Chandigarh. It’s been my family’s home since my grandfather Colonel Shamsher Singh settled here in 1965. It’s where I grew up, studied and it’s where my family lives.
“I am delighted to be able to have an opportunity to contribute so directly to the welfare of my people and the country,” she said. She also appealed the youth to join politics.
“One must be part of the politics in the country to cleanse it,” she said, urging people “to join AAP’s movement to secure the future of next generations in the country. “I cannot sit as neutral and be a fence watcher…To bring change in the country one need to jump into the political battle field,” Panag said.
“If your conscious says you can bring change then certainly you can do so,” she said.
Born into a second generation armed forces family in Chandigarh in 1979, Panag has studied and lived across various cities in India due to her father’s frequent transfers.
She recently returned to Chandigarh to complete her Masters in Political Science from Punjab University Chandigarh. (PTI)