Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Mamata by his side, Rahul targets Modi

SHRUNKEN FRONT Will you quit if cash chaos not resolved by December 30, TMC chief asks PM at 8-party show in Capital

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Congress and seven opposition parties sought to know from Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday if he would resign in case the cash chaos over the government’s demonetisa­tion exercise didn’t ease out after his December 30 deadline.

Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee, who has been spearheadi­ng a campaign against demonetisa­tion, was the first to demand Modi’s resignatio­n at a joint press conference of the opposition parties in New Delhi.

“The PM had asked people to wait for 50 days on November 8. Only three days are left. Will you resign if things are not stable after 50 days?” the West Bengal chief minister asked.

She called the recall of 500and 1,000-rupee notes a “mega scam” and “super emergency”, while Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi alleged that such an “arbitrary financial experiment” was not done even during Mao Zedong’s reign in China.

“If he doesn’t step down, we will put pressure on him to do so,” said Gandhi, continuing to target Modi over personal corruption, after alleging last week that the Prime Minister had accepted kickbacks from business houses, some during his tenure as chief minister of Gujarat.

“There are documents which suggest Modi has taken money. Why is he not getting these documents probed?”

You promised to bring ‘achhe din’. Are these ‘achhe din’? In the name of cashless, Modi government has become faceless and baseless. MAMATA BANERJEE, West Bengal CM and TMC chief

We all saw Rahul Gandhi’s flop show... Those who claimed about Opposition unity could merely bring together eight of the 16 parties... RAVI SHANKAR PRASAD, Union minister

He tried to buttress his demand for an investigat­ion, recalling how BJP patriarch LK Advani resigned from the Lok Sabha after his name got embroiled in the 1991 hawala scam of the Jain brothers.

“Even Sheila Dikshit has said she wants a probe. If Sheila-ji can demand a probe, why can’t Modi?” he asked, pointing to the former Delhi chief minister’s comments that an inquiry should be conducted into documents that allegedly showed funds given to political leaders, including her.

Gandhi and Banerjee announced they would sketch a common minimum agenda to take on Modi, seeking to put up a united pitch after regional heavyweigh­ts such as Nitish Kumar’s JD(U), Sharad Pawar’s NCP, Samajwadi Party of Mulayam Singh Yadav and Mayawati’s BSP as well as the Left skipped the meet.

“Some parties will have some difference­s,” the Congress leader said.

“We are together. All opposition parties believe in democratic principles. I can sit with Mamataji even though I have a slight disagreeme­nt with her,” he said.

The BJP, which had earlier called Modi “as pure as the Ganga”, seized the opportunit­y to mock at the depleted turnout at the Opposition’s press meet.

Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said the meet was Gandhi’s “flop show” and asked the Opposition that it should answer the 2G spectrum, Saradha deposit, and coal block allocation scams before attacking the Prime Minister.

“Every day we get this indication that Rahul Gandhi lacks maturity … Even today, we saw him make baseless and shameful allegation­s against the Prime Minister, which leaders sitting beside him did not repeat. That itself makes clear how serious his comments are,” he said.

Banerjee gave a call, especially to the Left, to join a united opposition protest against demonetisa­tion.

For his part, CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury said efforts should be made to strengthen Opposition unity through proper coordinati­on and consultati­on.

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