The Asian Age

Rahul pushes Opp. unity as he meets 14 parties’ leaders

Breakfast fare: Pegasus, farm laws, fuel hikes

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, AUG. 3

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday appealed to the leaders of 14 other Opposition parties to unite and take on the Central government on the Pegasus spyware controvers­y. He was speaking at a breakfast meet of the Opposition parties called by the Congress at the Constituti­on Club here. Mr Gandhi said: “The single most important thing in my view is that we unite this force. The more this voice (of the people) unites, the more powerful this voice will become, the more difficult it will become for the BJP-RSS to suppress it.” After the meeting, Mr Gandhi along with

several Opposition MPs cycled to Parliament House as a mark of protest against the steep hikes in fuel prices recently. Earlier, he had surprised everybody by riding a tractor to Parliament to highlight the controvers­ial farm laws. The leaders of 15 parties, including the Trinamul Congress, which had been absent at the last such meeting, were present at Tuesday’s gathering. The Aam Aadmi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party were, however, not present. Among the leaders who joined the breakfast meeting were Kalyan Banerjee and Mahua Moitra (TMC), Sanjay Raut and Priyanka Chaturvedi (Shiv Sena), Manoj Jha (RJD), Kanimozhi (DMK) and

Ram Gopal Yadav (Samajwadi Party).

Hours after the bicycle ride, Mr Gandhi tweeted in Hindi: “Our face or name is not needed. All that’s important is that we’re representi­ng the people. In every face are crores of faces who are fed up with inflation.”

He also used Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s poll promise of “Achche Din” (better days) to hit back at him with a taunt: “Yehi hain achche din” (These are the good days)! In another tweet on the Opposition meeting, he said: “One priority -- our country, our people.”

The Opposition parties have been demanding a court-monitored probe into the allegation­s about surveillan­ce through the Pegasus spyware controvers­y. The government has denied the Opposition’s allegation­s.

The Opposition parties had met last week to put forth their demands on the issue, where Rahul Gandhi was also present. The Opposition leaders later jointly addressed the media. Mr Gandhi has been active over the Pegasus issue and his “breakfast politics” is also seen as an exercise by the Congress leader to emerge as the Opposition’s face. Interestin­gly, Mr Gandhi is one of the political leaders who were identified as a possible subject of hacking by the internatio­nal consortium of investigat­ive journalist­s who broke the story about the Pegasus spyware being used for snooping on politician­s, journalist­s, activists and even constituti­onal authoritie­s.

 ?? — PTI ?? Congress leader Rahul Gandhi rides a bicycle in a symbolic protest over fuel price hike at the Constituti­on Club in New Delhi on Tuesday.
— PTI Congress leader Rahul Gandhi rides a bicycle in a symbolic protest over fuel price hike at the Constituti­on Club in New Delhi on Tuesday.

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