Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

Amarinder Singh Demands President's Rule In Punjab

IANS, 11 Nov, 2016 02:36 PM
    Congress Punjab unit chief Amarinder Singh on Thursday demanded imposition of President's Rule in the state in the wake of the SYL verdict and sought early elections, claiming Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal may try to create trouble to further his vested political interests.
     
    "Let there be elections in December," Mr Singh said after sending his resignation from the Amritsar Lok Sabha seat to the Speaker in the wake of the Supreme Court judgement, favouring Haryana in the Sutlej-Yamuna Canal link case.
     
    "We will go to the people over this issue," he said in a statement, adding, "Having failed to safeguard the interests of the people of Punjab, Badal will now try to cause trouble, and so, the sooner he is out of power, the better for the state."
     
    The already fragile situation in the state has been aggravated as a result of this development and is ripe for mischievous elements to whip up trouble, he claimed, adding that terrorist groups from across the border could exploit the situation to create mayhem in the poll-bound state.
     
    "To avoid this, the state should be immediately placed under the Governor's rule and elections should be held by December," he said.
     
    Stating that the Akalis had 10 years to resolve the SYL issue, which they failed to address, Mr Singh added, "It is too late for them to be thinking of ways and means to wriggle out of the situation that is of their own making."
     
     
    He said that during its decade-long rule, the Badal government should have fought the case effectively and should have battled for the implementation of the riparian principles of water sharing.
     
    "Haryana has no riparian rights on Satluj River, just as Punjab has no such rights on Yamuna river water."
     
    "Had the Badal government fought the case properly, keeping Punjab's interests in view, the situation might have been different today," he said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Punjab Orders Alternate Arrangements For Border Area Students

    Cheema said that students who have been shifted to relief camps would get the education in the nearby schools.

    Punjab Orders Alternate Arrangements For Border Area Students

    Indian Citizens Urged To Shift To Machine-Readable Passports

    Indian Citizens Urged To Shift To Machine-Readable Passports
    The Regional Passport Office (RPO) in Mumbai has asked citizens to immediately do away with their handwritten passports, saying not switching to machine-readable ones will cause them problem in getting visas.

    Indian Citizens Urged To Shift To Machine-Readable Passports

    Pak PM Nawaz Sharif's 'Knighthood' Challenged In Lahore High Court

    An honourary title given to Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif by Queen Elizabeth II was today challenged in the Lahore High Court on the grounds that it was a "mark of slavery" and against the "national interest".

    Pak PM Nawaz Sharif's 'Knighthood' Challenged In Lahore High Court

    Pakistan Channels Showing Morphed Clips Of Casualties, Say Army

    Pakistan Channels Showing Morphed Clips Of Casualties, Say Army
    Some Pakistani channels were playing "morphed" video clips showing Indian casualties in surgical strikes against terrorist launch pads across the LoC as only one soldier involved in the operation received "minor injury" during exfiltration, army sources said on Friday.

    Pakistan Channels Showing Morphed Clips Of Casualties, Say Army

    Granny Of Chandu Babulal Chavan, Indian Soldier Captured By Pakistan, Dies Of Shock

    Granny Of Chandu Babulal Chavan, Indian Soldier Captured By Pakistan, Dies Of Shock
    The aged grandmother of Indian soldier Chandu Babulal Chavan, who was captured by Pakistan troops, died of apparent shock on Friday on hearing of the news, a relative said.

    Granny Of Chandu Babulal Chavan, Indian Soldier Captured By Pakistan, Dies Of Shock

    It's Not War Yet, But Punjab Border Villages Face War-like Situation

    It's Not War Yet, But Punjab Border Villages Face War-like Situation
    There has been no gunfire, no alert sirens and no fighter jets dropping bombs. It is not war time yet but tens of thousands of villagers in Punjab's border belt with Pakistan are already experiencing a war-like situation.

    It's Not War Yet, But Punjab Border Villages Face War-like Situation