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          Bangalore, July 28 (IANS) The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)   Thursday asked its first chief minister in south India, Karnataka's B.S.   Yeddyurappa, to step down after the state's ombudsman indicted him in a   large-scale mining scam, but till late evening a defiant Yeddyurappa had not   complied.The BJP leadership announced that it will Friday select a   successor to Yeddyurappa.
 
 
 |  The 68-year-old Yeddyurappa was told Thursday morning to resign immediately   after Lokayukta N. Sanosh Hegde sought his trial for graft in the huge illegal   mining scam that has caused a loss of over Rs.16,000 crore to the   state.
 However, there was no indication from Yeddyurappa when he will   quit as he kept himself busy meeting supporters through the day to firm up, as   his loyalists told IANS, conditions on which he will leave the   office.
 
 The loyalists, requesting anonymity, said the chief minister   wants to name a successor and have a major say in cabinet formation.
 
 On   Thursday evening, word spread that Yeddyurappa has sent his resignation to party   president Nitin Gadkari but within minutes the report was denied by ministers   close to the chief minister.
 
 The BJP camp was a hub of activity with   party in-charge Dharmendra Pradhan meeting groups of legislators to know their   views ahead of a formal meeting Friday to elect a new leader of the legislature   party.
 
 Former party president Rajnath Singh and senior leader Arun   Jaitley will be the party central leadership's observers for the   meeting.
 
 Late Thursday, another former party president and Rajya Sabha   member from Karnataka, M. Venkaiah Naidu landed in Bangalore for talks with   legislators and other state party leaders.
 
 Though Dharmendra Pradhan was   staying in a plush hotel close to Yeddyurappa's residence on Race Course Road   near the Vidhana Soudha (state secretariat), no meeting had taken place between   the two.
 
 Yeddyurappa did not stir out of the house since morning when   party spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad announced in Delhi the BJP parliamentary   board's decision to ask him to quit.
 
 Through the day, state party leaders   and several ministers expressed their confidence that Yeddyurappa will abide by   the "high command" decision.
 
 State party chief K.S. Eshwarappa, Law   Minister S. Suresh Kumar, party spokesperson C.T. Ravi were among those who said   that Yeddyurappa would follow the party directive.
 
 Higher Education   Minister V.S. Acharaya said, "It is a question of time".
 
 Eshwarappa and   Ravi also hoped that Yeddyurappa will not leave the party.
 
 "Ours is a   national party, a disciplined party. No one has made any effort to vertically   split the party. No one (who made attempt to split the party) has succeeded   also," Ravi said.
 
 Among the names doing the rounds as the BJP's new chief   minister are Lok Sabha member D.V. Sadananda Gowda, who is former state unit   head, Rural Development Minister Jagadish Shettar, Eshwarappa and party general   secreatry H.N. Anantha Kumar, who is Lok Sabha member from Bangalore   South.
 
 Earlier, Eshwarappa told reporters: "As a loyal and disciplined   member of the party, Yeddyurappa will obey the decision of the high command and   resign soon. Though the chief minister explained his position on the mining   issue to the party president (Nitin Gadkari) late Wednesday, Yeddyurappa has no   alternative than to step down in conformity with the leadership's decision."
 
 The first chief minister of the BJP in south India rushed to New Delhi   late Wednesday night to brief Gadkari and other party leaders on the Karnataka   Lokayukta's (ombudsman) final investigation report on the multi-crore mining   scam in the state over the years.
 
 Discussions on the probe report and   recommendations of the ombudsman (Justice N. Santosh Hegde) began around   midnight and went on till early hours of Thursday at Gadkari's residence. In   line with the party's policy decision earlier, Gadkari advised Yeddyurappa to   step down immediately and pave way for the election of a new leader in his   place.
 
 The BJP, which came to power in Karnataka on its own for the first   time in May 2008, has 22 more months to rule as the five-year term of the   current state legislative assembly lasts till May 2013.
 
 Even as the   criminal involvement of Yeddyurappa in the mining scam became clear after a part   of the probe report was leaked to the media July 21 and as Hegde told IANS last   week, the party leadership decided to wait for the final report to be made   public and find out if the chief minister's prosecution was recommended under   the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.
 
 In a related development, the   powerful Reddy brothers -- Revenue Minister G. Karunakara and Tourism Minister   G. Janardhana -- and their close ally Health Minister B. Sriramulu also agreed   to abide by the party's leadership decision to remove Yeddyurappa.
 
 The   Reddy brothers and Sriramulu, who hail from the rich mining region of Bellary in   north Karnataka, about 300 km from here, are among others against whom the   ombudsman recommended prosecution for their criminal involvement in the mining   scam.
 
 
 
      
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