Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
India

AAP video alleges BJP offering bribes-to rule Delhi

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Sep, 2014 08:47 AM
    The AAP Monday released a video showing a BJP leader offering money to an AAP legislator to induce him to quit the assembly to improve the BJP's chances of forming a government in Delhi.
     
    The grainy video shot covertly shows Delhi BJP vice president Sher Singh Dagar making the bribe offer to AAP's Dinesh Mohaniya if he resigned so as to bring down the effective strength of the hung Delhi assembly.
     
    The disclosure triggered an angry rebuttal from Dagar but no senior leader in his party came to his defence, with one saying that whatever the man did was in his personal capacity.
     
    Aam Aadmi Party sources told IANS that they released the video in a bid to prevent Lt. Governor Najeeb Jung from inviting the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to try forming a government in Delhi although it lacks legislative majority.
     
    In the video, played at a press conference addressed by AAP leader and former chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, Dagar is seen exhorting Mohaniya to resign from the AAP and promising him money if he did so.
     
     
    "Char le lena (Take four)," Dagar is heard saying. Kejriwal said "char" stood for Rs.4 crore. Dagar also says in the video that after accepting a "token amount", Mohaniya won't be allowed to go anywhere until the floor test is taken in the Delhi assembly.
     
    Dagar is also heard claiming that some other legislators, including three from the AAP, were ready to resign too.
     
    The BJP now has 28 members in the 70-seat Delhi legislature after three got elected to the Lok Sabha. The AAP has 27 members and the Congress only eight. There are four other members in the house.
     
    According to the AAP, the BJP is inducing rival members to resign from the assembly so as to bring down its effective strength. This will make it easy for the BJP to muster a legislative majority.
     
    Speaking in his usual assertive tone, Kejriwal vowed not to let the BJP take power in Delhi with deceitful tactics.
     
    "The BJP has been wooing our MLAs for the last one month, but we will not let them come to power... They are betraying the people of Delhi," he said. "The BJP's dirty game is exposed today."
     
    The BJP criticised the video but made no effort to defend Dagar.
     
    "They (AAP) have been doing this for long. Earlier they made allegations against (now central minister) Nitin Gadkari ... and now again they are attacking us. This is an attempt to defame the party," BJP leader Vijender Gupta said.
     
    But Gupta quickly added: "Even if Dagar interacted with the (AAP) MLA, it was in his personal capacity and not as a leader of the BJP."
     
    Dagar denied he was trying to bribe anyone and insisted that the AAP legislator had come to see him at his residence saying he wished to join the BJP.
     
    "He came to me 45 days ago and even yesterday (Sunday)... He wanted to join our party," Dagar said. He claimed he had never done any wrong.
     
    Dagar had initially called a press conference at the party office but the venue was shifted to his home in south Delhi. No reasons were given. No BJP leader was with him at the presser.
     
     
    Asserted Kejriwal, who resigned as chief minister Feb 14 after ruling Delhi for 49 days: "Our MLAs are being offered chairmanships, ministerial berths and money but none of them will defect."
     
    The AAP leader said more such videos would be released "at an appropriate time".
     
    AAP leader Manish Sisodia said the video would be submitted in the Supreme Court and a formal complaint against the BJP would be lodged with the Election Commission.
     
    Meanwhile, the Congress urged the Supreme Court to take cognizance of the matter and order fresh elections in Delhi.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Mayawati bares her prime ministerial ambitions

    Mayawati bares her prime ministerial ambitions
    A day after Samajwadi Party supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav said he would stake claim for the prime minister’s post, former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mayawati Friday said if her supporters voted intelligently, a "Dalit ki beti" could well be at the helm of affairs of the central government.

    Mayawati bares her prime ministerial ambitions

    Modi open to pan-India retail tax, pushes for jobs, infrastructure

    Modi open to pan-India retail tax, pushes for jobs, infrastructure
    A pan-India goods and services tax with the support of state governments, a push for infrastructure and privatisation of state units without politics are among the assurances of BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi if voted to power.

    Modi open to pan-India retail tax, pushes for jobs, infrastructure

    Modi for Team India, says won't divide country in name of secularism

    Modi for Team India, says won't divide country in name of secularism
    Pitching for a "Team India", BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi said Friday his appeal would not be to Hindus and Muslims but to the entire people of the country.

    Modi for Team India, says won't divide country in name of secularism

    Arvind Kejriwal admits his 'mistake': I should have asked people

    Arvind Kejriwal admits his 'mistake': I should have asked people
    AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal, who admitted he should have consulted the people before deciding to quit as Delhi chief minister, has launched a dialogue with voters here as he takes on his formidable BJP rival, prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi.

    Arvind Kejriwal admits his 'mistake': I should have asked people

    Delhi policemen learning how to tackle cyber crime

    Delhi policemen learning how to tackle cyber crime
     As many as 65 Delhi Police officials are being trained to tackle the growing menace of cyber crime, officials said Thursday.

    Delhi policemen learning how to tackle cyber crime

    CAG can audit telecom operators: SC

    CAG can audit telecom operators: SC
    The Supreme Court Thursday said the national auditor CAG can audit telecom operators' account books to ascertain whether the government was getting its due share from service providers to whom it given the scarce natural resource that belongs to the people.

    CAG can audit telecom operators: SC