Millennium Post

Cong’s charge against Jaitley motivated, says Sitharaman

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NEW DELHI: BJP leader Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday termed as “motivated” the Congress's demand of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley's resignatio­n over his meeting with Vijay Mallya, saying it is a strategy to deflect attention from the UPA government's “cronyism and favouritis­m”.

The defence minister told PTI that a brief conversati­on which Mallya had with Jaitley in a corridor of Parliament is being “played up” and asserted that responses to the issue have “reinforced” the fact it was not a conversati­on of any merit.

Jaitley, she noted, had already explained as to how Mallya misused his privilege as a member of Parliament to speak to him. To a question about Congress MP PL Punia's claim that he had seen Jaitley sitting with Mallya in Parliament's Central Hall and there would be CCTV footage to corroborat­e it, Sitharaman shot back, asking if the footage would also have audio recording. “It already seems a very motivated allegation,” she said of the Congress' charge against Jaitley. Hitting out at the Congress, she said letters were written to the Reserve Bank of India and State Bank of India during the UPA'S rule to help Mallya. “They are in tour face. How favouritis­m naming that one company has been made... Whose period made it sick? Whose period had favouritis­m and cronyism entering in to suggest to the central bank and written instructio­ns given to banks to lend to this defaulter,” she asked. Look at the strategy with which Congress would want to deflect it, she asked wryly if that “minutes' conversati­on” helped him to go away or all the lending happened (during the UPA rule) because of it.

Multiple loans were given to bogus accounts which did not have credit worthiness, she said. The BJP leader said the Modi government had brought in a law through which defaulters' property can be confis- cated. The UPA government passed some laws but never made rules, she said.

Mallya had Wednesday claimed in London that he had met the finance minister before leaving for the UK, drawing a rebuttal from Jaitley who said he never gave him any appointmen­t but the businessma­n used his privilege as an MP to accost him in Parliament. Immediatel­y after Jaitley's sharp rebuttal Wednesday, Mallya appeared to tone down the seriousnes­s of his comments, saying it was “not fair” to create a controvers­y over this issue as it was not a “formal meeting” and he only “happened to meet” the finance minister.

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