Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
India

Won't Back AAP If It Inducts Corrupt In Punjab: Party MP Dharamvira Gandhi

Darpan News Desk, 27 Feb, 2016 11:53 AM
    Dharamvira Gandhi, one of four AAP MPs from Punjab, says he won't support the party if it inducts "corrupt and tainted leaders" from other parties for the Punjab assembly polls.
     
    His statement comes at a time when Aam Aadmi Party leader and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal began a five-day tour of Punjab on Thursday to oversee the election preparations.
     
    "I can see Punjab is ready for change. I, along with my people, will not allow the tyrannical rule of the Akali Dal-BJP combine and the perennially corrupt Congress to make a comeback," Gandhi, 64, told IANS.
     
    "At the same time, I will see to it that my party puts up good and clean candidates and that volunteers are respected. We will not allow corrupt turncoats to dominate the scene," the Patiala-based Gandhi added.
     
    "If people with dubious economic and political background are given plum posts in AAP ignoring volunteers, we will oppose them," he added.
     
    A cardiologist by profession, Gandhi was one of the four AAP candidates elected to the Lok Sabha in 2014. All four winners -- from among the about 400 the AAP fielded nationwide -- came from Punjab.
     
    But Gandhi fell into Kejriwal's bad books as he moved closer to AAP leaders Yogendra Yadav and Prashant Bhushan who were later expelled from the party.
     
    Initially designated leader of the AAP group in the Lok Sabha, Gandhi was suspended from the party's primary membership in August when he attended a meeting of disgruntled party activists.
     
    Gandhi told IANS that the onus of taking him along in Punjab lay with the AAP leaders who he says suspended him on frivolous grounds.
     
    "It is they who suspended me from the party on the plea that I attended a volunteers' meet organised in Amritsar against certain policies of the party.
     
     
    "To go there and listen to volunteers is my fundamental right. They are not from other parties but our people. It is my right as a member of a party and as a concerned citizen to listen to those who worked day and night for us," he said.
     
    "It was not a secretive gathering. There were 3,000 volunteers who had a lot of questions about the functioning of the party and its leadership. I went to listen to their grievances and find a solution. Just because I went there, they (AAP) suspended me in a knee-jerk reaction. For six long months, they have neither expelled me from the party nor have they taken me in. This shows they are on weak ground," said a visibly upset Gandhi.
     
    The AAP plans to contest elections to the 117-member Punjab assembly in what will be its first major electoral battle after it was swept to power in Delhi in February last year.
     
    Kejriwal has claimed the AAP is poised to sweep Punjab amid speculation that some leaders of the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party may shift to the AAP.
     
    Gandhi said: "Let them practise Swaraj, the core of the ideology on which AAP was built, I will be with them.
     
    "Let them have transparency and accountability in the party, let them choose candidates through a democratic process, I will support them.
     
    "But if they don't do it, I cannot support turncoats."
     
    Gandhi also hit out at Kejriwal loyalist Sanjay Singh, who is overseeing the AAP in Punjab.
     
     
    "Sanjay Singh and Durgesh Pathak have no business here. Punjab belongs to Punjabis as Delhi belongs to people there. Every party has observers. They (observers) come for two days and go back. But here these guys have put up permanent camps in Punjab.
     
    "If representatives of a region don't have autonomy in party affairs, how will they function in a diverse country like India then?" Gandhi asked.
     
    The MP also said he won't meet Kejriwal during his Punjab trip.
     
    "Why should I go and see him when no one has approached me or even bothered to inform me?"

    MORE India ARTICLES

    BJP MLAs Thrash Legislator Engineer Rashid In Kashmir Assembly Over Beef

    BJP MLAs Thrash Legislator Engineer Rashid In Kashmir Assembly Over Beef
    The shocking incident took place when Bharatiya Janata Party's Gagan Bhagat and Rajeev Sharma pounced on Engineer Rashid -- whose real name is Sheikh Abdul Rashid -- as soon as the house met, slapped him and kicked him.

    BJP MLAs Thrash Legislator Engineer Rashid In Kashmir Assembly Over Beef

    Ghulam Ali Invited To Delhi, AAP Slams Shiv Sena

    Ghulam Ali Invited To Delhi, AAP Slams Shiv Sena
    Delhi's Tourism Minister Kapil Mishra tweeted: "Sad that Ghulam Ali is not being allowed in Mumbai. I invite him to come to Delhi and do the concert. Music has no boundaries."

    Ghulam Ali Invited To Delhi, AAP Slams Shiv Sena

    Ghulam Ali Shows In Maharashtra Cancelled After Shiv Sena Threat

    Ghulam Ali Shows In Maharashtra Cancelled After Shiv Sena Threat
    Pakistan's renowned ghazal maestro Ghulam Ali will not perform in Maharashtra this week, as his shows were cancelled after a meeting between the organisers and Shiv Sena president Uddhav Thackeray, a party leader said on Wednesday.

    Ghulam Ali Shows In Maharashtra Cancelled After Shiv Sena Threat

    Modi, Merkel Seek To Give Economic Muscle To Indo-German Ties

    Modi, Merkel Seek To Give Economic Muscle To Indo-German Ties
    Modi exhorted German industry to invest and 'Make in India' for a growing domestic market and huge export markets the world over, while Merkel exuded great confidence that ties would see a quantum leap.

    Modi, Merkel Seek To Give Economic Muscle To Indo-German Ties

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Admitted To Hospital After Vein Clot

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Admitted To Hospital After Vein Clot
    Former cricket and BJP leader Navjot Singh Sidhu was on Tuesday admitted to a hospital here after suffering from acute deep vein thrombosis, a deep clot in the blood vessel.

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Admitted To Hospital After Vein Clot

    Dadri Lynching: Ministers Voice Concern, Up Report Sans Murder Charge

    Eight days after a mob lynched a Muslim man following rumours that he ate beef, Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Tuesday warned that threats to the country's secular fabric won't be tolerated.

    Dadri Lynching: Ministers Voice Concern, Up Report Sans Murder Charge