Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Dealing with a killer is a law and order issue, not muscular policy, says Jaitley

Jaitley says dealing with militants is a law and order situation, Ravi Shankar asks Rahul if he will pull up his party leaders

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Friday launched a no-holds-barred attack on the Congress over controvers­ial remarks on Kashmir by Ghulam Nabi Azad and Saifuddin Soz.

Azad, leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, triggered a political row on Thursday by claiming that army operations in Kashmir had left more civilians dead than terrorists. Soz suggested in a soon-to-be-relased book that former Pakistan president Parvez Musharraf was right in saying that, given a chance, Kashmiris would prefer to be independen­t.

On Friday, Union minister Arun Jaitley said to deal with a killer was not just a “muscular policy.” It’s a law and order issue that cannot wait for a political solution. “This is not ‘muscular’. It is the rule of law,” the minister wrote in a Facebook post titled ‘Who is threatenin­g human rights?’ “A fidayeen is willing to die,” he wrote. “He is also willing to kill. Should he be dealt with by offering Satyagraha before him?”

Law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad asked Congress president Rahul Gandhi whether he will take action against Azad and Soz for their remarks.

Azad’s comments have drawn support from terror group Lashkar-e-taiba and will make Pak happy, Prasad said. The Congress’s commitment to the country has undergone a sea change since Rahul Gandhi took charge of the party in December, he said.

He described Azad’s comments as “shameful and irresponsi­ble” and the Congress’s pathologic­al hatred of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the BJP had become a “corner stone” of its politics in which national interest at times takes a back seat.

Union minister Jitendra Singh said Congress leaders’ remarks will lead to questions whether the party and its leaders can be trusted to stake a claim for ruling the country. “What we witness in Kashmir today is, in fact, a cumulative outcome of a series of blunders committed by the Congress leadership, beginning right from the infamous Nehruvian blunders,” Singh said.

The war of words between the BJP and the Congress came within days of the former pulling out of the ruling alliance with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in J&K following a “worsening securit situation”, a developmen­t which brought the state under governor’s rule.

Jaitley drew a parallel between Jehadis and Maoists, and questioned human rights organizati­ons which, he said, “have never spoken about the deprivatio­n of the human rights of the innocent citizens who are victims of their violence.”

“They have never a tear to shed in the indiscrimi­nate killing of the security personnel,” he wrote.

Protecting India’s sovereignt­y and the right to life of its citizens are paramount, and a terrorist who declines to surrender and refuses a ceasefire offer has to be dealt with as anyone taking the law into his own hands is dealt with, he said.

According to Jaitley, Maoistspon­sored human rights organisati­ons only espouse the cause of separatism and violence – be it Kashmir or Chhattisga­rh. They, he claimed, have brought a bad name to the precious and valuable concept of human rights.

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