The Asian Age

TN CM blames DMK for violence in Tuticorin

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The violence and police firing in Thoothukud­i that claimed 13 lives rocked the Tamil Nadu Assembly on Tuesday with chief minister K. Palaniswam­i blaming the DMK, and “some antisocial elements” for the violence and maintainin­g that the subsequent police action was “unavoidabl­e”. He also asserted that stern action would be taken if the Commission of Inquiry finds that anyone mishandled that situation.

Calling the Government Order for closure of the Sterlite copper plant an ‘ eyewash’ and ‘ drama’, DMK members staged a walkout, with their leader M. K. Stalin saying the party would boycott the House proceeding­s “until the chief minister accepts moral responsibi­lity and resigns, and Sterlite is permanentl­y shut.”

Members of DMK’s ally Congress, wearing black badges, sat through the CM’s speech that stretched for over an hour, before walking out saying they did not get the answer they expected from the government. The Congress legislatur­e party leader K. R. Ramasamy pointedly asked if the ‘ incidents’ were “right or wrong” and also demanded transfer of the probe into the violencefi­ring to the CBI.

To this, CM said a Commission of Inquiry, headed by Justice Aruna Jagadeesan, has been set up and based on its findings, “appropriat­e action will be taken if anyone is found to have committed wrongs.”

Earlier, tabling a report on the Thoothukud­i incidents, he said measures like tear gas and baton charge were used against those who indulged in violence.

 ?? — PTI ?? DMK working president M. K. Stalin, attired in black along with his party MLAs, stages a walkout from the Assembly in Chennai on Tuesday over their demand for “permanent closure” of the Vedanta group’s copper plant.
— PTI DMK working president M. K. Stalin, attired in black along with his party MLAs, stages a walkout from the Assembly in Chennai on Tuesday over their demand for “permanent closure” of the Vedanta group’s copper plant.

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