Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
India

Why Continued Silence On Lalit Modi Issue, Congress Asks Modi

IANS, 16 Jun, 2015 11:34 AM
    The Congress on Tuesday questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "continued silence" on the Lalit Modi issue, saying there cannot be different set of rules for UPA and BJP ministers.
     
    The opposition party also said that the claim about travel documents being issued to the former Indian Premier League chief on humanitarian grounds was "false" and demanded a Supreme Court-monitored probe into the entire controversy.
     
    "We have to ask the prime minister directly (as to) why is he quiet. Can there be two parameters? Can there be a different set of rules when you talk of probity and correctness for ministers of the UPA and the BJP? Why is the prime minister silent," asked Congress spokesperson Anand Sharma while speaking to reporters.
     
    "The PM has to speak about this nexus... there are many questions which have been thrown up. We demand a through investigation into this affair," the Congress leader said.
     
    "They should respect the (probity) parameters they had set for the UPA ministers," he said.
     
    Branding Lalit Modi as a "fugitive" and a "wanted" person, the Congress leader said: "An unacceptable concession was made to this person who should instead have been extradited and prosecuted under the law of the land."
     
    "Why is the (NDA) government protecting him? Whoever is involved should not remain in the government," he added.
     
    Anand Sharma also demanded a Supreme Court-monitored probe into the matter.
     
    "This is not restricted to the travel documents or the humanitarian facade. It has to be done by the Supreme Court and also a special investigative team has to be set up. This has to be taken to a logical conclusion," he said.
     
    Sharma said the Lalit Modi controversy needed to be probed. "He knows some people and they are protecting him," he said.
     
    It was not correct for the Narendra Modi government to facilitate travel documents for somebody who is wanted by law in India, the former union minister said.
     
    "When there was no specific query from the authorities in the United Kingdom to the external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj on the matter, why did she commit impropriety," Sharma questioned.
     
    The Congress leader said that no invasive surgery was conducted on Lalit Modi's wife. "It can be verified from the particular medical facility. After reaching that place... from August 8 onwards, Lalit Modi, his wife and another family member were holidaying."
     
    "Once you gave him a passport in London, he should have been put on a plane and brought to India," Sharma said.
     
    He said it was not only the external affairs minister, but also others who were responsible for shielding the former IPL chief.
     
    "Sushma Swaraj did what was unwarranted; others also can be accused of dereliction of duty and protecting Lalit Modi. Rajnath Singh is the home minister; he has all the intelligence inputs on all offenders; he is instead endorsing the external affairs minister," he added.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Indian student in UAE readies for NASA launch of experiments

    Indian student in UAE readies for NASA launch of experiments
    The experiments of an eleven-year-old Indian student in the UAE would be launched into space under a NASA programme, a media report said.

    Indian student in UAE readies for NASA launch of experiments

    Modinomics will face 'socialist' roadblock

    Modinomics will face 'socialist' roadblock
    As Narendra Modi resumes the task of continuing the economic reforms even if it means administering "bitter medicine", the first dose of which was given on Friday, one might have expected the Congress to offer him wholehearted support.

    Modinomics will face 'socialist' roadblock

    Did not seek to impose Hindi, says Modi government

    Did not seek to impose Hindi, says Modi government
    Amid fire from various political parties and chief ministers for imposing the use of Hindi in non-Hindi speaking states, the union home ministry Friday said it "didn't seek to impose communication in Hindi on states which do not speak the language".

    Did not seek to impose Hindi, says Modi government

    Government set to make Temporary Foreign Worker program more transparent

    Government set to make Temporary Foreign Worker program more transparent
    Employment Minister Jason Kenney and Immigration Minister Chris Alexander are set to reveal reforms to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program Friday. This will include making public the names of employers that have been given the green light to hire temporary foreign workers, reports the CBC.

    Government set to make Temporary Foreign Worker program more transparent

    Abducted Indian escapes, India 'knocking on all doors'

    Abducted Indian escapes, India 'knocking on all doors'
    India said Friday it was "knocking on all doors" and not just in Iraq to free the Indian workers abducted there, as one of them escaped from the custody of suspected Sunni insurgents.

    Abducted Indian escapes, India 'knocking on all doors'

    Abducted Indians in Iraq safe, efforts on to free them

    Abducted Indians in Iraq safe, efforts on to free them
    India Thursday said the 40 Indian workers abducted in strife-torn Iraq are safe and told their distraught families that the "very best" efforts are going on to have them freed.

    Abducted Indians in Iraq safe, efforts on to free them