Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Bofors issue won’t cast shadow on President’s Sweden visit: MHA

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

PRANAB MUKHERJEE WILL VISIT SWEDEN FROM MAY 31, THE FIRST VISIT TO THE COUNTRY BY AN INDIAN PRESIDENT

NEW DELHI: The external affairs ministry said on Thursday President Pranab Mukherjee’s reportedly controvers­ial remarks on the Bofors issue to a Swedish daily have no bearing on his tour starting May 31, the first visit by an Indian president to Sweden.

Summoning his long-standing experience as a diplomat, Navtej Sarna, Secretary (West) in the external affairs ministry, deflected a volley of questions on Mukherjee’s reported remarks that Bofors was a “media trial” during a briefing on the president’s visit to Sweden and Belarus. “This subject (the interview) is not relevant to the visit of the President to Sweden and Belarus. So let us concentrat­e on what the visit is about,” Sarna said in response to a question on whether the president’s reported remarks to Swedish daily Dagens Nyhetter reflected the views of the Indian government.

In response to another question, he said “The status, I have just been, for the last 20 minutes, telling you. But I am happy to repeat it...We are keenly looking forward to the first-ever President of India visit to Sweden and Belarus.”

When asked if India’s ambassador to Sweden, Banashri Bose Harrison, had threatened the Swedish daily that if it published the off-the-record conversati­on, it may put to risk the President’s forthcomin­g visit, external affairs ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup said, “No such threat has been made.”

Mukherjee’s remarks on the Bofors issue to the Swedish daily sparked off controvers­y and India protested to the newspaper for reporting a “slip of tongue” and off-the-record comments by the President. During the interview, ahead of his visit to Sweden next week, Mukherjee had said the Bofors wasn’t a scandal, but rather a media “trial”.

Allegation­s that kickbacks were paid in the procuremen­t of 155mm howitzer field Bofors guns from Sweden plagued the Rajiv Gandhi government and played a major part in his 1989 election loss.

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