BJP blasts Congress for politicising statue desecration issue
The Bharatiya Janata Party on Monday lambasted
the Congress for ''politicising'' the situation arising out of
Friday's incident of the desecration of
Dr B R Ambedkar's statue in Bombay.
Strongly denouncing the Congress demand for imposition of
President's rule in Maharashtra, the BJP parliamentary party
observed that the Congress was indulging in double standards.
It said the Shiv Sena-BJP government had conceded all the three
demands of the Congress party -- a judicial inquiry into the incident,
an inquiry by a sitting high court judge, and a time-bound inquiry.
BJP spokesman Jaswant Singh said this was the
first incident of violence since the Shiv Sena-BJP took charge in Maharashtra in March 1995, and the Congress was trying to make political mileage out of it. On the other hand, it had not yet said anything about Bihar where the law and order machinery had
collapsed.
Party general secretary Pramod Mahajan gave a detailed account
of the situation in Maharashtra following Friday's incident to
the BJP parliamentary party which was presided over by former prime
minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
Jaswant Singh said the meeting disapproved the violence that
erupted after the unfortunate desecration of the Ambedkar statue
in which some hooligans ransacked the houses of prominent Opposition
leaders. It was a deliberate and wanton act, he said.
Some arrests had already been made and more arrests were
likely, he said, and asserted that the state government would take
strict action against such anti-social elements.
Regarding the Congress decision not to participate in Tuesday's
confidence vote to be sought by Bihar Chief Minister Laloo Prasad
Yadav, Singh said it was the Congress party's gameplan to ''destroy the
United Front in Delhi and replace it by a Congress-led front to
rule the country."
He said the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam's decision to pull out from the Gujral government was not simply the
beginning of the end of the United Front, but it had already reached the
middle of the end.
Singh said DMK leader M Karunanidhi's charges -- that the UF had abandoned its common minimum programme and some of its constituents are pursuing their
own programmes, and that some constituents are furthering the policy of
political suicide --- against the UF government were
very serious.
UNI
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