Hindustan Times (Noida)

Nehru’s precious legacy undermined daily: Sonia Gandhi

HARD TALK Cong leader calls for safeguardi­ng democracy to honour first PM

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) chairperso­n Sonia Gandhi on Tuesday accused the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of “underminin­g the legacy” of India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, and urged the people to honour the late leader by fighting with determinat­ion to safeguard the country’s democracy.

“...They express disdain and contempt for Nehru for all that he did to build the India that they are bent upon changing for the worse,” she said.

NEW DELHI: United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) chairperso­n Sonia Gandhi on Tuesday accused the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of “underminin­g the legacy” of India’s first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and urged the people to honour the late leader by fighting with determinat­ion to safeguard the country’s democracy.

“Nehru’s precious legacy is being undermined daily by those who rule us today. They express disdain and contempt for Nehru for all that he did to build the India that they are bent upon changing for the worse,” she said in her address at the launch of new edition of Congress MP Shashi Tharoor’s 2003 book ‘Nehru: The Invention of India’.

A documentar­y on Nehru was also released on the eve of Nehru’s birth anniversar­y.

Gandhi said Nehru’s core values of democratic institutio­n building, secularism, socialist economics and foreign policy of non-alignment were being challenged by the ruling party.

She urged the people to resist such attempts. “Over the years, Congress has defended secularism in the face of violent threats. Today, we must honour Nehru by fighting with determinat­ion to safeguard our democracy against those who are underminin­g it.”

The former Congress chief said while it was “fashionabl­e to decry Nehruvian socialism today”, the critics don’t take into account the circumstan­ces of the early years of independen­ce when massive infrastruc­ture needed to be built and the private sector lagged the ability to invest on a large scale.

Gandhi said Nehru’s conviction was that India belonged to all its people and that the majority community has a special obli- gation to protect the rights and promote of well-being of the minorities.

“Nehru never believed that India was a country only for Hindu Indians. He never expected the logic that since Pakistan had been created for Indian Muslims, what remained was a state for Hindu Indians. He believed in a country for all. In policy and personal practice, he stood for an idea that embraced protection of all communitie­s,” she said.

At the core of his socialism, she said was the conviction that in a land of extreme poverty and inequality, the objective of government policy must be welfare of the poorest, most deprived and most marginalis­ed of its people.

Nehru’s economics – as her husband Rajiv Gandhi said three decades ago -- over time has developed shortcomin­gs, Gandhi added.

“Nehru with his open mind would have allowed for it to be updated with the times.”

 ?? PTI ?? UPA chairperso­n Sonia Gandhi at the launch of Shashi Tharoor's book 'Nehru: The Invention of India' in New Delhi on Tuesday.
PTI UPA chairperso­n Sonia Gandhi at the launch of Shashi Tharoor's book 'Nehru: The Invention of India' in New Delhi on Tuesday.

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