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Lok Sabha Elections: Amarinder Singh Blames Navjot Sidhu-Pak Army Chief Hug For Punjab Losses

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 May, 2019 08:34 PM

    Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh on Thursday said he will soon take up with the Congress high command the issue of Navjot Singh Sidhu's damaging remarks ahead of polling in Punjab, which he said might have affected the party's performance in Bathinda.

     

    Speaking about the performance of the Ministers, the Chief Minister said that would be reviewed in the backdrop of the Lok Sabha results in the state.

     

    "We will review the performance of the ministers, it was not a veiled threat made by the party before the elections," he told reporters here.

     

    Though he refused to comment directly on the possible impact of Sidhu's comments on the Congress performance in Punjab, Amarinder Singh said as a Minister, Sidhu's own performance needed to be reviewed.

     

    Asserting that Sidhu had not been able to handle his department, the Chief Minister made it clear that he intended to take up the issue with the high command once things have settled down in the party, post the election results.

     
     

    The Congress in Punjab performed poorly in urban areas, and Sidhu was the minister for urban development, Amarinder Singh pointed out, adding that while everyone had the right to promote themselves in a democracy, it was wrong on his part to made the controversial comments once the battle had started.

     

    Referring to Sidhu's remarks on the investigation into the sacrilege cases, the Chief Minister said the minister evidently did not understand that the Special Investigative Team (SIT) was set up by the state assembly and it was thus the body which had to complete the probe.

     

    The Chief Minister also reiterated that Sidhu's "yaari and jhappi" (friendship and hugs) with the Pakistani Army Chief would not be tolerated, especially by Army personnel, who were being killed by ISI-backed terrorists while he was going hugging their leaders.

     
     

    Amarinder Singh rejected the suggestion of detrimental impact to the Congress by party leader Pratap Singh Bajwa, saying the party had won in the areas in which he was said to have some influence.

     

    Thanking the Congress workers, its leaders and all Punjabi people for the party's victory in Punjab, Amarinder Singh said he would do everything to live up to the people's expectations.

     

    He said the Punjab Congress would introspect on why three areas in Bathinda proved to be weak for the party and also why Sunil Jakhar lost to Sunny Deol in Gurdaspur despite his hard work.

     

    "I do not understand the people's preference for a Bollywood star over an experienced leader," he said, hoping the Indian democracy would evolve more in the coming years.

     

    On Hoshiarpur, the Chief Minister blamed the Congress' defeat to votes being shifted to the BSP, which proved a deciding factor in this constituency and affected the margins in some others.

     

    Overall, the people of Punjab had responded to the government's development and welfare programmes, including farm debt waiver and employment generation, said Amarinder Singh.

     

    Sacrilege certainly worked against the Akali Dal, he said to a question, adding that Hindutva did not impact the polls in Punjab.

     

    On AAP's Bhagwant Mann's victory, the Chief Minister attributed it to his own standing and not to his party, which was politically completely eliminated.

     

    Amarinder Singh trashed a suggestion that the Congress party's nation-wide performance had raised questions on Rahul Gandhi's leadership, saying he had worked closely with Rahul Gandhi, whom he found to be a fine leader.

     

    Winning and losing was part of the game, and if BJP could rise from two seats when Congress was over 300 seats in Lok Sabha, it can, and will rise, again, he asserted.

     

    The Chief Minister said while Prime Minister Narendra Modi had won the elections, he felt the Prime Minister should not do anything to destroy India's secular credentials.

     

    He said he did not agree with the brand of nationalism being promoted by the BJP, as every citizen of India was a nationalist and the nation's strength lay in its diversity.

     

    He made it clear that giving Modi the credit for Balakot was totally wrong as other leaders before him, including Indira Gandhi in 1971, had taken such strong actions and given due credit to the armed forces.

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