Business Standard

MODI ASKS STATES TO TAKE ACTION AGAINST COW VIGILANTES

- ARCHIS MOHAN writes

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday asked state government­s to take strict action against cow vigilantes and sought the support of the Opposition in tackling “communal violence” in the name of cow protection. The PM also asked the political class to come together against those seeking an escape route by dubbing action against corruption as a political conspiracy.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has asked state government­s to take strict action against ‘cow vigilantes’ and sought the support of Opposition parties in tackling communal violence in the name of cow protection.

At an all-party meeting on Sunday, a day before the beginning of the monsoon session of Parliament, the PM asked the political class to come together against those seeking an escape route by dubbing action against corruption as a political conspiracy. The PM didn’t mention any political parties, but the Lalu Prasad-led Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Trinamool Congress have, in recent months, accused the Modi government of political vendetta, with central investigat­ing agencies lodging corruption cases against their leaders. In a related developmen­t, Bharatiya Janata Party Rajya Sabha member Subramania­n Swamy in a letter to the PM implored him not to allow dilution of the Prevention of Corruption Act. Amendment to the Act is slated to come up in the Rajya Sabha during the session. Swamy flagged the intent to delete certain clauses of the Bill that have proved to be “very effective in prosecutin­g corruption offences”.

During the monsoon session, which will end on August 11, the Opposition would raise issues of mob lynchings and cow vigilantis­m, political vendetta in the name of curbing corruption, impact of demonetisa­tion, the goods and services tax roll-out and agrarian crisis. The Opposition also plans to demand a discussion on internal security, raise the security lapses that led to the terror attack on Amarnath Yatra pilgrims and the India-China military stand-off in Doklam.

Communist Party of India (Marxist) chief Sitaram Yechury expressed concern that this was “probably the shortest monsoon session in India’s parliament­ary history, with only 14 non-Friday working days for considerat­ion of legislativ­e business.” The Left parties have urged the government to take up the women’s reservatio­n Bill that has been pending for more than a decade.

The Trinamool Congress boycotted the meeting. Congress’ Ghulam Nabi Azad, Nationalis­t Congress Party chief Sharad Pawar, Mulayam Singh Yadav of Samajwadi Party, Farooq Abdullah of National Conference and Communist Party of India’s D Raja, among others, attended the meeting.

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