The stalemate between the UPA government and Team Anna continued even 24 hours after Anna Hazare and his colleagues were formally “released” from Tihar Jail. But the “release” remained on paper as Anna refused to walk out unless the government accepted his demands unconditionally.

“We will only begin negotiating with the government after we get permission for Anna to continue his fast without any conditions,” lawyer Prashant Bhushan told DNA.

Even as the government set up a team of five officers from the Intelligence Bureau to keep a close eye on Hazare’s movements, negotiations between the two sides continued late into the night, with everything hinging on the duration of the fast.

Team Anna wanted Delhi’s Ramlila grounds for 30 days, but the government wanted to keep it down to seven days with a possible extension of an additional week. The government was also firm that the electronic media would not be allowed to cover the agitation live.

And as the day progressed, crowds continued to swell across the national capital. Thousands were camped outside Tihar jail overnight while huge crowds congregated at India Gate and Chhatrasal Stadium. Earlier on Wednesday, director general (prisons) Neeraj Kumar told DNA that as Anna refused to move out of the jail he had been accommodated in the jail’s compound.

Inside Parliament, a furious debate between the government and the opposition raged with prime minister Manmohan Singh standing up to make a statement on Anna’s arrest that was immediately dismissed as “weak and ineffective”, designed to “protect the corrupt”.

Earlier, former IPS officer Kiran Bedi, who played a major role in the negotiations, told DNA that “Annaji has met the senior leadership of the Delhi police and the negotiations are on on the number of days the fast can go on.”

But the decision to arrest Anna and then take him to Tihar seems to have been the biggest strategic blunder that the UPA’s political managers committed. In a battle of perceptions, while the UPA was hell-bent on denying Anna space for the fast, they ended up giving him Tihar jail as a venue on a platter.

With Anna “in jail” the anger among his supporters spread quickly to other states.

“We made huge mistakes,” a senior Congress leader told DNA. “Had we allowed the protests, we would have probably tired them out without granting an inch. The protesters would have left after the initial enthusiasm. But with him in jail, the sympathy factor just galvanised the masses.”

This “blunder”, political and senior home ministry bureaucrats told DNA, was clearly an error of judgment by Union home minister P Chidambaram. There were three major mistakes that Chidambaram seems to have committed, they argued. His refusal to heed police commissioner BK Gupta’s pleas to avoid arresting Anna was the first mistake.

“There was a general consensus among the bureaucracy on this. The idea was to allow Anna to fast while the government hammered out an amicable solution,” a senior official told DNA.

The second mistake was the timing of Anna’s arrest. “It is a standard practice to arrest someone in the early hours and then extern him out of Delhi. But the government dithered and lost precious time and then failed to send him to Pune, as decided.”

The third mistake was to send Anna to seven days judicial custody that brought the crowds running to Tihar jail. People like Arvind Dhillon, (name changed), who is posted in Delhi with the Indian Air Force took leave to join the protests. “I took an off along with a friend from the Indian Navy,” Dhillon told DNA.