Caught in the midst of sibling rivalry involving his two sons to gain control of the party, octogenarian DMK chief M Karunanidhi has said that he would contest for the top party post next year if he 'was alive'.
"I will contest (for the post) If I am alive after one year," he told media persons in Chennai on Wednesday in what is seen as a message to his sons union Minister M K Alagiri and M K Stalin to put an end to the tug of war on the succession issue.
Initially reluctant to answer the query whether he would contest the organisational election, the 89-year old Karunanidhi said a year was still left for it but spoke about him contesting again when prodded more by the reporters.
The DMK, smarting from its poor show in the April 2011 assembly elections, is dogged by intra-party differences between the camps headed by Alagiri and Stalin.
The succession issue has remained unresolved with Alagiri coming out openly saying in the past he would not accept any leader other than Karunanidhi while supporters of Stalin lose no opportunity to push for his elevation.
The monolithic DMK, known for discipline in its ranks, had recently appointed a committee to look into the matter with Karunanidhi himself declaring that trouble-makers would be watched carefully.
DMK's notices to Alagiri backers: Sibling feud exposed
Advani's proposal on choosing CAG, ECs gets DMK, CPI-M nod
MUST READ: How much ministers splurged on petrol
2G: Court allows A Raja to visit Tamil Nadu
India has ambitious plans to meet infrastructure targets