Hindustan Times (Noida)

‘Petty politics’: Nadda hits out at Oppn letter over violence

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief JP Nadda on Monday lashed out at the Opposition for blaming his party for communal violence in the country and said the February-march assembly elections in five states should serve as an “eye-opener” for those thriving on “vote bank politics.”

“India’s largest state on the electoral map (Uttar Pradesh), a coastal state on the western coast (Goa), a state in the northeast (Manipur), and the hill state (Uttarakhan­d) have given a resounding mandate to the BJP. Due to the BJP, India is seeing a sentiment of pro-incumbency,” Nadda said in a letter addressed to “fellow Indians’’.

He accused Opposition parties of building a narrative against the BJP as the government is cracking down on antisocial elements who ‘’bullied common people.” ‘’Dyed in the wool proponents of vote bank politics that they are, these parties are fearing that their shenanigan­s are being finally exposed comprehens­ively. For decades, they freely patronised lumpen, antisocial elements who bullied common people. Now that these elements are being subjected to the laws of the land, the parties which shelter these elements are panicking and thus taking to this bizarre conduct,’’ Nadda wrote.

The letter comes after 13 Opposition parties issued a joint appeal for peace and harmony following communal clashes across the country. They urged the Centre to take strict action against those responsibl­e for the communal violence. The Opposition parties cited Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “silence’’ on the increasing violence.

“We are extremely anguished at the manner in which issues related to food, dress, faith, festivals, and languages are being deliberate­ly used by sections of the ruling establishm­ent to polarise our society,” the parties. including the Congress ,said in the appeal. The letter came days after violence broke out in at least six states on Ram Navami, leaving at least two people dead.

Nadda hit back, saying the Opposition was trying “to resist” India’s rise under Modi. ‘’Today, India has two distinctiv­e styles of politics – the (ruling) NDA (National Democratic Alliance)’s efforts which are seen in their work, and the petty politics of a group of parties, which is seen in their acerbic words. In the last few days, we have seen these parties come together yet again in a letter (whether in spirit too, time will tell) in which they have waged a direct onslaught on the spirit of our nation and cast aspersions on our hard-working citizens.’’ He rejected the allegation that communal clashes peaked during NDA’S rule. He added in November 1969, when Indira Gandhi was Prime Minister, Hindu ascetics were fired upon when they were sitting outside Parliament after marching towards Delhi with the demand of banning cow slaughter. He added who can forget “Rajiv Gandhi’s infamous words – when a big tree falls, the earth shakes – that justified the killings of thousands of Sikhs” following Indira Gandhi’s assassinat­ion.

Nadda referred to communal violence during the Congress rule. ‘’…Gujarat in 1969, Moradabad in 1980, Bhiwandi in 1984, Meerut in 1987...incidents against the Hindus in Kashmir Valley throughout the 1980s, 1989 Bhagalpur, 1994 Hubli… The list of communal violence during Congress rule is long. Under which government did the Muzaffarna­gar riots happen in 2013 or the Assam riots in 2012?’’

Reacting to the BJP chief’s letter, Congress spokespers­on Randeep Singh Surjewala said: “Mr Nadda, for 53-years after Independen­ce, the RSS refused to hoist the national flag. Your government has systematic­ally weakened our most sacred text, the Indian constituti­on and has weakened every institutio­n. Your party and government continue to feed the masses the opium of communal polarizati­on by inciting violence and hatred. You actually do so to distract people away from the main issues that threaten their existence - price rise, unemployme­nt and a shattered hope for the future.”

 ?? PTI ?? A policeman near a burnt vehicle during the violence in Gujarat’s Himmatnaga­r on April 10.
PTI A policeman near a burnt vehicle during the violence in Gujarat’s Himmatnaga­r on April 10.

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