Modi strikes poll chord
PARLIAMENT ADDRESS PM slams Congress, gives history lesson; Opposition calls it rally speech
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi was in campaign mode during his speech in the Lok Sabha in the so-called reply to the Motion of Thanks to the President’s address.
Over the course of a 90-minute speech, he targeted the Congress for everything from the partition of India to the crisis in banking to the Kashmir issue to dynastic politics; invoked the spirit of 12 th-century philosopher-statesman Bas a va( ina move clearly motivated by the coming elections in Karnataka); and emphasised his government’s commitment to providing “good education facilities, affordable housing, and good infrastructure”.
The Congress wasn’t impressed. “I think Modiji has forgotten that he is the PM now, he should answer questions and not always accuse the opposition,” Congress president Rahul Gandhi told reporters outside Parliament, adding that the prime minister should answer the public’s questions on Rafale and unemployment.
Modi continued in the same vein a few hours later in the Rajya Sabha. Refuting allegations made a few days ago by the Congress’ s G hula mN ab iAza din the House that the BJP was just repackaging old schemes of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and passing them off as its own, he said his government was not a “name changer” but an “aim changer”. He also made a pitch again for simultaneous elections to the Lok Sabha and the states, an idea that seems to have captured political imagination in recent times.
Earlier, in the Lok Sabha, perhaps irked by the interruptions to his speech — the first was from members of the Telugu Desam Party, an ally of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), seeking a special package for Andhra Pradesh and the second by members of the Congress—the primeminister lashed out at the Congress.
Some analysts said his aggression might have also been caused by continuing criticism of his government’s management of the economy, especially in terms of creating jobs, and his party’s recent performance in the parliamentary by-elections in Rajasthan, where the BJP lost both seats to the Congress.
Even while accepting some of his criticism of the Congress — such as the one on most bad loans in the banking system having their origin at a time the country was governed by the Congress — other analysts said it might have been better for the prime minister to focus more on his government’s achievements than on history.
Still, even the focus on history was not without its political significance. The reference to Basava, the spiritual progenitor of the Lingayats comes in the context of the chief minister of Karnataka’s Congress government, Siddaramaiah, promising to support the Lingayat demand that they be recognised as a separate caste, distinct from Hinduism. Karnataka goes to the polls later this year.
He also spoke about his gov- ernment’s achievements on the development front in the Northeast, where four states go to the polls this year.
Modi accused the Congress of partitioning the country for “petty gains” and maintained that had Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel been the first prime minister, the entire Kashmir would be belonged to India. Patel, a lifelong Congressman, was India’s first home minister, but the BJP has sought to take over his legacy — aided, historians admit, by the Congress’s own effort to magnify the role of Jawaharlal Nehru, the country’s first prime minister.
“Our country did not get democracy due to Pandit Nehru, even as Congress wants us to believe. Look at our rich history. There are several examples of vibrant democratic traditions that date back centuries ago. Democracy has always been integral to India. It is a part of our culture,” Modi said.
Modi’s speech comes at the beginning of a year that will see eight assembly elections, including in some important states such as Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Karnataka, and ahead of 2019’s parliamentary polls. It also comes against the background of charges by the opposition parties that the prime minister does not respond to major issues, and that his government’s style of functioning isn’t democratic.
Apart from highlighting India’s long-standing tradition of democracy, Modi also questioned the Congress’s own internal democracy.
NEWDELHI: India’s defence ministry said in a statement that revealing details of the agreement with France to buy Rafale fighter aircraft would affect the country’ s military preparedness even as Congress president Rahul Gandhi reiterated his allegation that “something wrong” has happened in the deal.
The defence ministry spokesperson insisted that the deal secured by the Mo di government with France was better in terms of capability and price than that notionally negotiated by the UPA. “This would normally not have merited a response but for the serious damage being caused by the misleading statements, sought to be repeatedly perpetrated on a serious matter of national security,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
The spokesperson added that the UPA too, had not revealed details of defence deals. “The demand that the government disclose the details and value of the contract for the Rafale aircraft contracted in 2016 is unrealistic. In keeping with confidentiality requirements, the UPA government had also expressed its inability to disclose the price of various defence procurements, including in its responses to Parliament questions ,” the ministry said in its statement.
Minutes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s reply to the motion of thanks on the President’s address in the Lok Sabha, Gandhi accused him of “protecting” those behind alleged corruption in the Rafa le deal.
The Congress-led UP A government signed a deal with D assault Aviation in 2012 for the purchase of 126 Rafa le aircraft, but the B JP-led National Democratic Alliance claimed that it was not a viable pact and structured to fail. The NDA in 2016 bought 36 Rafale fighters in a G2G( government to government) deal. The principal opposition party also claimed that the new deal meant each fighter would cost ₹1,570 crore as against ₹526 cr ore under the older agreement.
“Provision of exact item-wise cost and other information will reveal, inter alia, details regarding the various customisations and weapons systems specially designed to augment the effectiveness and lethality of the assets, impact our military preparedness and compromise our national security,” the defence ministry’s statement added.
The spokesperson said such details would also come under the ambit of the security agreement signed in 2008. “Thus, in not revealing the item-wise details of the contract, the government is merely following in letter and spirit the confidentiality provi- sions of a bilateral India-France agreement of 2008 signed by the previous government.”
The spokesperson claimed that the deal secured by the Mo di government was better in terms of “capability, price, equipment, delivery, maintenance, training, etc., than that notionally negotiated” by the UPA in a process it could not conclude in ten years. “Moreover, the present government completed these negotiations in just about one year.”
Media reports suggest that while Qatar had bought the Rafa le aircraft, including infrastructure, training and weapons, at EUR 262.5 million, Egypt and India had both sealed the deal at EUR 216.7 million.
Other media reports pointed out that the price escalation of 300% happened during the UPA rule. While 126 aircraft cost $10.4 billion in January 2012, the price escalated to $15 billion in April 2013 and to $28-30 billion in January 2014.
Both sets of media reports were first highlighted by Abhijit Iyer-Mitra, a senior research fellow at a think-tank on Twitter.
The defence ministry also reiterated that agreement was strictly in accordance with the Defence Procurement Procedure in all aspects such as mandating, conducting and monitoring of negotiations and seeking all necessary approvals, including that of the Cabinet Committee on Security, before entering into the pact. The aircraft had already been evaluated successfully by the IAF during 2009-10.
The Congress had also claimed the NDA government dropped a key provision in the 2012 agreement, which mandated the transfer of technology to a reputable public sector undertaking, Hindu stan Aeronautics Limited. One of the reasons for the delay in the 2012 deal was that Dassault was not keen on transferring technology to an Indian company that wasn’t its partner, the party said and linked the NDA’s deal with D assault to a subsequent partnership between the French company and the Anil Ambani promoted Reliance Defence Limited.
But the defence ministry clarified that there was no provision for transfer of technology but only to manufacture under licence. “The government was unable to agree on the terms for even that in its negotiations with the vendor, resulting in the longdrawn exercise under the earlier government ultimately turning futile,” it said
“Further, no Indian Offset Partner for the 2016 deal for 36 Rafale aircraft has been so far selected by the vendor (Dassault Aviation) because as per the applicable guidelines, DA is free to select the Indian Offset Partners and provide their details at the time of seeking offset credits, or one year prior to discharge of offset obligation,” the statement said.