Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Pak stays at centre of Gujarat election battle

ExPM seeks apology to nation as meddling row intensifie­s

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Formerprim­eminister Manmohan Singh sought an apology to the nation from Prime Minister Narendra Modi for insinuatin­g that he, and other members of the Congress party, may have colluded with Pakistan; India’s neighbour called Modi’s allegation­s “baseless and irresponsi­ble”; and BJP leaders saw Pakistan’s response as “suspicious” and asked why the Congress had taken 48 hours to admit to a meeting between Congress leaders and Pakistani officials including the high commission­er.

The back and forth over Pakistan started as a sideshow of the ongoing campaign ahead of the second phase of the elections to the Gujarat assembly on December 14, but soon grabbed centre stage.

On Sunday, Modi referred to a Facebook post by a former director general of the Pakistani army, Sardar Arshad Rafiq, saying Congress leader Ahmed Patel should be the next chief minister of the state, and to a meeting in Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar’s residence attended by Singh, the former vice president of India, Pakistan’s former foreign minister, and the country’s high commission­er to India. The prime minister said the meeting happened last week, a day before Aiyar called him “neech” (lowly). Aiyar has since apologised and also been suspended from the primary membership of the Congress.

On Monday, Singh, 85, said Modi’s claim was an “ill-thought transgress­ion” and rejected his charge as “innuendos and falsehoods” . Congress spokespers­on Anand Sharma accused the PM of dragging political discourse to an “unacceptab­le low” by making statements that harmed the dignity of the prime minister’s post.

In his statement, Singh said the meeting on December 6 at Aiyar’s house was restricted to discussion­s about India’s relations with Pakistan and that the Gujarat polls didn’t figure in the conversati­on.

“My track record of public service to the country over last five decades is known to everyone. No one, including Modi, can lamely question it to gain lost political ground,” Singh said.

Pakistan too, refuted charges of a secret meeting. “India should stop dragging Pakistan into its electoral debate and win victories on own strength rather than fabricated conspiraci­es, which are utterly baseless and irresponsi­ble,” Pakistan Foreign Office spokespers­on Mohammad Faisal tweeted.

Hours later, the BJP hit back; law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad slammed Pakistan for giving “lessons”. “What is curious is that this happens and Pakistan comes out with an official statement... in many ways seeking to bail out Congress party. Is it too suspicious? Surely, the country will draw its own conclusion,” he added.

Finance minister Arun Jaitley charged Singh with defying the stated national policy on terror by meeting Pakistani diplomats and demanded to know the context, relevance and necessity of such a meet.

Singh pointed out that Modi went to Pakistan “uninvited” after the terror attacks in Udhampur and Gurdaspur.

“Let him also tell the country the reason for inviting the infamous ISI of Pakistan to our strategic Air Base in Pathankot to investigat­e a terror attack that emanated from Pakistan,” he said.

My track record of public service to the country over last five decades is known... No one, including Sh. Modi, can lamely question it to gain lost political ground. MANMOHAN SINGH, Former PM

It is surprising that for a misadventu­re the Congress indulged in, to which some of its senior leaders became a party, they should expect the PM of India to apologise

ARUN JAITLEY, Finance minister

Meanwhile, the BJP questioned why it took the Congress 48 hours to admit to the meeting at Aiyar’s residence.

“Why was this a ‘hush hush’ meeting? Why was the MEA (Ministry of External Affairs) India not in the loop? Why do Congress leaders meet China and Pakistan envoys secretly?” party spokespers­on GVL Narasimha Rao asked on Twitter.

The Congress’ president-elect Rahul Gandhi, too, stepped into the debate. “The Prime Minister talks sometimes about Pakistan and sometimes about China and Japan. Modiji, this is the election for the future of Gujarat. Talk something about Gujarat too,” he said at a rally in the state’s Banaskanth­a district.

But Modi pressed on with his Pakistan references. At Nadiad, he said in a rally that money that was being routed from Pakistan to fund terrorists in India had stopped after last November’s demonetisa­tion.

The BJP has governed Gujarat for 22 years but the Congress is hoping to unseat it by tapping anger over the agrarian crisis and the implementa­tion of the Goods and Services Tax, and on the strength of a partnershi­p with Patidars, some backward classes, and Dalits. The BJP is counting on its record in the state and the Modi magic to see it through.

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