Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
India

Congress, BJP Spar Over Pakistani 'Terror Boat'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Jan, 2015 01:18 PM
    The ruling BJP Sunday hit out at the Congress for seeking a probe into the alleged Pakistani "terror boat" incident and said its questioning the matter showed the opposition party had touched a "new low" in politics.
     
    "A new low in Indian politics has been touched, and who has been responsible for this? It's the Congress, the principal opposition party of India. It has touched a new abysmal low as far as politics is concerned," Bharatiya Janata Party spokesperson Sambit Patra told reporters here.
     
    "The Congress has time and again spoken in the same language that Pakistan has spoken. Today, we cannot differentiate between a Congress spokesperson and a Pakistani spokesperson," he said at a press conference.
     
    "Congress has supplied oxygen to Pakistan time and again," he said.
     
    Congress leader Ajoy Kumar, accusing the National Democratic Alliance government of sensationalizing the issue, Sunday said it should come clean on the matter by naming the terror organization involved in the incident as different versions were coming out.
     
    "The government should come clean on it. There is no evidence. How can you say that a terrorist attack was prevented?" he told reporters here.
     
    Congress leader Manish Tewari said that the party did not need lessons on nationalism from the "chaperones of terrorists" and referred to the 1999 Kandahar hijacking incident to say that the BJP leadership had escorted known terrorists to freedom and the party would do well to remember it.
     
    He said his party acknowledged that Pakistan had been waging a "proxy war" against India but said the BJP's reaction was a blow to the bipartisanship required for national security.
     
    "The government needs to put all the facts in the case in the public space," Tewari told Times Now.
     
    Also attacking the Congress, BJP national secretary Shrikant Sharma said there was "nothing new in the Congress speaking the language of terrorists" and accused it of being "soft on terror due to its vote-bank politics".
     
    Patra said if the Congress wanted details about the incident, it could have asked for them but it chose to speak out of turn and raised doubt over a serious national issue.
     
    "The Congress chose not to stand with the Indian government. The Congress chose not to stand with the Indian Coast Guard. The Congress chose not to speak in favour of the Indian intelligence agencies," he said adding that this has helped Pakistan to have "last laugh"
     
    An alleged Pakistani fishing boat was intercepted by the Coast Guard off Gujarat coast when it attempted to escape early Jan 1. The boat sank after its crew allegedly set fire to it and there were no survivors.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    History will be made Monday as Narendrabhai Damodardas Modi takes oath

    History will be made Monday as Narendrabhai Damodardas Modi takes oath
    It would be history in the making, in more senses than one. A man who once helped his family make ends meet by vending tea at a railway station in between his classes, and who once wandered around the country to find his spiritual moorings, will take his oath as India's 14th prime minister

    History will be made Monday as Narendrabhai Damodardas Modi takes oath

    Shazia Ilmi, Capt.Gopinath quit AAP, hit out at Arvind Kejriwal

    Shazia Ilmi, Capt.Gopinath quit AAP, hit out at Arvind Kejriwal
     In a double whammy for the Aam Aadmi Party, two of its key leaders - Shazia Ilmi and G.R. Gopinath - Saturday quit the party and lashed out at its chief Arvind Kejriwal's policies and attitude.

    Shazia Ilmi, Capt.Gopinath quit AAP, hit out at Arvind Kejriwal

    Sonia asks partymen not to bicker in public, learn lessons from rout

    Sonia asks partymen not to bicker in public, learn lessons from rout
    Congress president Sonia Gandhi, re-elected chairperson of Congress Parliamentary Party (CPP)Saturday, asked party leaders not to indulge in "public acrimony" over the party's worst Lok Sabha results for which appropriate lessons need to be learnt.

    Sonia asks partymen not to bicker in public, learn lessons from rout

    India's Muslims welcome Modi's gesture to Pakistan

    India's Muslims welcome Modi's gesture to Pakistan
    India’s Prime Minister-designate Narendra Modi’s gesture of inviting Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to his swearing-in ceremony has raised hopes of a long-lasting peace between the arch rivals among Muslims of this country.

    India's Muslims welcome Modi's gesture to Pakistan

    Modi's gestures: Willingness to make a new beginnin

    Modi's gestures: Willingness to make a new beginnin
    There are indications that Modi may move rapidly in the matter of concluding a treaty on the Teesta river waters with Bangladesh which was blocked by West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee during the Manmohan Singh government's tenure.

    Modi's gestures: Willingness to make a new beginnin

    Mamata not to attend Modi's swearing-in

    Mamata not to attend Modi's swearing-in
    West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee will stay away from the swearing-in ceremony of Narendra Modi as prime minister May 26, but send two of her close associates to the event, a state minister announced Friday.

    Mamata not to attend Modi's swearing-in