Addressing a rally here, Mayawati claimed that according to reports she had received, the conspiracy behind the caste clashes in Saharanpur district was to get her eliminated.
The plan was that when Dalits will be harassed in large numbers, their leader will go there to wipe their tears, she said.
"BJP people thought that when I will go to Shabbirpur and speak in favour of the Dalit 'samaj' which will arouse passions and there will be a bloodbath, during which along with the Dalits, their leaders will also be eliminated," the former chief minister alleged.
Reacting to the BSP chief's statement, UP BJP spokesman Rakesh Tripathi in Lucknow said, "Mayawati is making such statements as she is left with no issue to deliberate upon. She is feeling frustrated. Most of the founder members of BSP have already left the party, and she is feeling isolated and lonely".
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Tripathi claimed that Mayawati's "casteist politics" had badly failed and she was worried that the BJP government will start investigations into the cases of alleged corruption committed by her.
In her speech in Azamgarh, the Lok Sabha constituency of Samajwadi Party veteran Mulayam Singh Yadav, it was the BJP that was Mayawati's prime target.
The BSP chief said that she would convert to Buddhism along with her supporters if the BJP did not change its attitude towards the backward sections. She also claimed that the atmosphere in the country was worse than the situation during the Emergency days.
She also accused the BJP of weakening constitutional institutions and the media to serve its political motives.
She claimed that the BJP could begin the construction of a Ram Temple in Ayodhya or bring back fugitive Dawood Ibrahim before the next elections to serve its electoral interests.
"To serve its political motives, the BJP has now weakened the constitutional institutions and the media. They have also weakened democracy to a great extent...Things are being done in an autocratic and arbitrary manner...Conditions today have surpassed those prevailing during the Emergency in 1975," she said.
She asked her workers to foil the BJP's plans by exposing them in the public and claimed this "autocratic functioning and narrow RSS agenda" can only be checked in this manner.
Mayawati said the Narendra Modi government had not fulfilled even a fourth of its election promises, and added that the GST and demonetisation had weakened the economy.
She said that the Lok Sabha polls could be advanced this time and asked her workers to start preparations before hand so that the party performs well in the local bodies' elections and also trounces the BJP in the 2019 parliamentary polls.
At the rally, Mayawati said the BJP should change its mindset towards the Dalits, Tribals and backward classes or else she would be forced to convert to Buddhism like Bhimrao Ambedkar.
Recalling Ambedkar, she said that after witnessing discrimination in the caste system in Hinduism, he had called on the Shankaracharyas and seers to modify it. Since it was not done, Ambedkar, a little before his death, converted to Buddhism in Nagpur along with his followers, she said.
Accusing the BJP of taking the "casteist agenda" of the RSS forward, she blamed it for the suicide of Rohith Vemula in Hyderabad and the Una case of Gujarat where some Dalits were assaulted resulting in outrage and protests.
Mayawati also took a dig at Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath saying that he will look after the development of the state when he gets time from "puja paath" (worship) in temples.
"Despite being a representative from the backward Purvanchal area, he has not been able to give attention to its development...He can focus on it only when he gets time from his puja paath in temples. Sometimes he is in his Gorakhnath temple or in Ayodhya or Chitrakoot. Leave alone Purvanchal, the entire state cannot develop under such circumstances," she said.
The previous Samajwadi Party government was not good, but the present government is worse and is even lagging behind them, she said.
She alleged that an atmosphere of fear and terror had been created everywhere in the name of religion and culture.
Muslims and minorities are finding it difficult to sustain, so much so, that they have stopped keeping cows out of fear of cow vigilantes and even Hindus are desisting from it, she added.