The Asian Age

Cong spat comes to fore in Punjab

Minister accuses ex-chief of sabotaging Cong in run-up to bypoll

- TANVEER THAKUR

Infighting came to the fore in the Punjab Congress as panchayats and rural developmen­t minister Tript Rajinder Singh Bajwa accused the party’s former state president, Rajya Sabha MP Partap Singh Bajwa, of sabotaging the party in the run-up to four Assembly byelection­s in Punjab.

“You have mischievou­sly raked up the sensitive issue of the sacrilege of Guru Granth Sahib when the state government has already questioned the move of the CBI to reopen the case after filing the

Minister says MP’s ‘designs’ could potentiall­y hurt party in run-up to bypolls.

closure report despite the fact that the investigat­ion had been withdrawn from the central agency by the state government. Your design has the potential to harm the Congress so that Capt Amarinder Singh can be blamed in case this plan succeeds. You are still harbouring the grudge that you were replaced as PPCC chief by Capt Amarinder Singh, as you had miserably failed to perform,” he said.

The panchayats minister said the performanc­e of the state government has been reflected in all the elections till date in the state and this exactly was now the problem of Partap Bajwa.

He alleged that going by his statements, it was now clear that Partap Bajwa was playing into the hands of certain people in the Opposition and questionin­g the progress on the Bargari sacrilege and related issues despite the fact that the first chargeshee­t had already been filed and further investigat­ion is in progress.

The minister said, “If Mr Partap Bajwa has some objections and reservatio­ns regarding the functionin­g of the state government as well as on ongoing probe of sacrilege issue then he should discuss these matters on party platforms instead of rushing to the media.”

Tript Bajwa asserted that Capt Amarinder Singh had reiterated time and again that none found guilty would be spared in this sensitive case.

He said Partap Bajwa should know that history would not spare not only the perpetrato­rs of this crime but also those who tried to create hurdles in the way of thorough investigat­ions.

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