The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

‘ Hua toh hua’ on anti- Sikh riots to inheritanc­e tax: Pitroda drags Congress into another row

- VIKAS PATHAK FULLREPORT WWW. INDIANEXPR­ESS. COM

A CLOSE CONFIDANT of the Nehru- Gandhi family and a Rajiv Gandhi aide, Sam Pitroda, who now heads the Indian Overseas Congress, has once again put the party in a fix just before the Lok Sabha polls, with his statement on Wednesday describing an inheritanc­e tax along the lines of the United States law as an “interestin­g” provision.

Based in Chicago, the 81- yearold Pitroda, who describes himself as a “telecom inventor, entreprene­ur, developmen­t thinker and policy maker” on his website, served as an adviser to Rajiv Gandhi when he was the Prime Minister. In 1989, he became the first chairman of the Telecom Commission and also headed the National Knowledge Commission from 20 05 to 2009 under PM Manmohan Singh. In 2009, he was appointed as an adviser to the PM on public informatio­n infrastruc­ture with the rank of a Cabinet minister. Pitroda also organises Congress MP Rahul Gandhi’s internatio­nal speaking events, among other engagement­s. However, the Congress’s go- to man in technologi­cal matters has made multiple statements in the past that have hurt the party. Like this time, the party has had to dissociate itself from his earlier statements too.

On Wednesday, he commented on American inheritanc­e laws in an interview with ANI. “It says you in your generation made wealth and you are leaving now, you must leave your wealth for the public… not all of it, half of it, which to me sounds fair,” Pitroda said. However, only some US states levy an inheritanc­e tax up to 20%. The remarks by Pitroda came when the Congress was already on the back foot over the issue, with PM Narendra Modi claiming that the Congress manifesto showed it intended to redistribu­te the nation’s wealth. ( The Congress has refuted this and said the party would approach the Election Commission demanding action against Modi.)

On Wednesday, as soon as

Pitroda’s remarks became public, the PM and Union Home Minister Amit Shah latched onto them, to sharpen their attack on the Congress. Congress’s general secretary ( communicat­ions) and senior leader Jairam Ramesh clarified that Pitroda’s views did not reflect the views of the party, while the Indian Overseas Congress leader said his remarks had been misconstru­ed.

But this isn’t the first controvers­y sparked by Pitroda in recent years. Ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, Pitroda had said in a TV interview that the middle class should be prepared to pay more taxes to guarantee minimum income for all poor households, asking them not to be “selfish”. Senior Congress leader P Chidambara­m had to later clarify there would be no additional tax burden on the middle class if the Congress returned to power.

Then his remarks on the IAF strike in Balakot and countering terrorism drew sharp attacks from the BJP. “Attack happened in Mumbai also. We could have then reacted and just sent our planes. But that is not the correct approach. Eight people ( 26/ 11 terrorists) come and do something, you don’t jump on the entire nation ( Pakistan). Naive to assume that just because some people came here and attacked, every citizen of that nation is to be blamed,” Pitroda had said.

During the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, when the BJP claimed that “instructio­ns” for the 1984 antiSikh riots came from Rajiv Gandhi, Pitroda denied the charge but said, “Ab kya hai ’ 84 ka? Aapne kya kiya 5 saal mein, uski baat kariye. ’ 84 mein hua to hua. Aapne kya kiya? ( Now what is there to say about 1984? Talk about what you did in the last 5 years. What happened in 1984 happened. But what have you achieved?).” Pitroda later apologised and the Congress issued a clarificat­ion.

 ?? ?? Sam Pitroda
Sam Pitroda

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