Uproar in LS after Rahul Gandhi seeks to quote ex-army chief Naravane's 'memoir'
Rajnath Singh, along with other BJP members, strongly opposed and accused the Congress leader of 'misleading' the House.
PTI
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Rahul Gandhi said he spoke only after BJP’s Surya questioned the Congress party’s patriotism (PTI)
New Delhi, 2 Feb
A row erupted in the Lok Sabha on Monday after Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi sought to quote from the unpublished "memoir" of former Army chief Gen MM Naravane (retd).
Still, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, along with other BJP members, strongly opposed it and accused the Congress leader of "misleading" the House.
As Gandhi rose to speak on the Motion of Thanks to the
president's address, he said he would first like to respond to the charges made
by the previous speaker, BJP MP Tejasvi Surya, against the Congress on
nationalism and began quoting from what he stated was the "memoir" of
Gen. Naravane talking about the India-China conflict of 2020.
However, Singh strongly protested this and asked
Gandhi to clarify whether the book had been published or not.
The uproar went on for about 50 minutes with Speaker
Om Birla repeatedly stating that no book or newspaper clipping can be quoted on
a matter not related to the proceedings of the House, and Gandhi insisting that
the document was authenticated and he could quote from it.
Government sources said Gandhi was reading
"concocted things" on China. They said there was ample material in
the public domain on the decisions taken by India's first prime minister,
Jawaharlal Nehru, on China, and alleged that he "surrendered thousands of
acres of land just to further his own statesmanship."
Gandhi said he never wanted to speak on the particular
issue, but decided to do so after BJP's Surya questioned the patriotism of the
Congress party.
Singh maintained that the book had not been published.
Gandhi then said he was quoting from a magazine article to put forth his views.
Birla again disallowed it and Parliamentary Affairs
Minister Kiren Rijiju called for the Speaker's ruling to be adhered to.
Rijiju said if the leader of the opposition repeatedly
ignores the Speaker's ruling and flouts rules, the House will have to discuss
what action should be taken against such a member.
The minister said Gandhi was setting a wrong example
for young MPs by not following the rules of the House.
With Gandhi unrelenting, the Speaker repeatedly warned
him against quoting the book.
Singh then got up and asked if the book was not
allowed to be published as alleged, then why didn't Naravane go to court
against it. The defence minister also accused Gandhi of "misleading the
House".
Samajwadi Party leader Akhilesh Yadav supported Gandhi
and urged the Speaker to allow the Congress leader to speak.
With both the treasury and opposition MPs unrelenting,
the Speaker adjourned the House till 3 pm.
When the House reassembled at 3 pm, Gandhi again
attempted to raise the India-China border issue and was met with stiff
resistance from the treasury benches.
Rijiju said Gandhi should not say things that belittle
the army.
As the deadlock continued, Birla adjourned the House
till 4 pm.
Several opposition leaders, including TMC's Mahua
Moitra and Kalyan Banerjee, RJD's Manoj Jha, and SP chief Yadav, rallied behind
Gandhi over the issue.
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