The Free Press Journal

RS truce: Azad for repeal of farm laws, restoring statehood to J&K IN PARLIAMENT...

-

Unlike the entire day on Tuesday washed out in pandemoniu­m, a truce between the Government and the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, with its Chairman M Venkaiah Naidu allowing the MPs to raise the agitating farmers’ issues, resulted in the daylong discussion on Wednesday on the motion of thanks to the President for his address last Friday. Both sides also agreed to increase time for discussion to 15 hours to incorporat­e the farmers’ demand for repeal of the farm laws.

The Lok Sabha was, however, not back to normal as the Opposition members kept raising slogans against the contentiou­s farm laws and forced Speaker Om Birla to repeatedly adjourn the House. Congress group leader Adhir Ranjan Chowudhry insisted on a separate debate on the farmers’ issue and did not agree to mix it with the debate on motion of thanks to the President as in the RS.

Braving the loud slogans, Parliament­ary Minister Pralhad Joshi referred to the agreement reached in the Upper House and a similar agreement in a meeting chaired by the Speaker, just before the Lower House was adjourned for 2 hours till 7 pm, dubbing attempts to block debate on the motion an “insult” of the President.

Three Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) MPs, including their

Naidu warns Rajya Sabha MPs against recording proceeding­s on mobile phones

Illegal Rohingya immigrants in 12 states, UTs: Govt to RS

Crimes against SCs, STs increased in 2019: Govt to RS

leader Sanjay Singh, who refused the truce and kept disrupting proceeding­s over the contentiou­s farm laws, were marshalled out of the Rajya Sabha before it could start the discussion on a motion by Bhuvnesh Kalita, a prominent Congress face who defected to the BJP and seconded by the BJP’s UP MP Vijay Pal Singh Tomar.

Highlight of the discussion in the Rajya Sabha was an emotive appeal by Opposition leader Ghulam Nabi Azad, the former J&K CM, to bring a Bill for restoratio­n of the statehood to Jammu and Kashmir and then hold fresh Assembly poll in the state.

PM Modi usually does not sit through the lengthy debates, but he made it a point to stay put in the House to hear out Azad, who said: “If J&K has to progress and we have to fight out enemies (Pakistan and China) at the borders, we need to take into

confidence our own people, give them love and allow the political activities.”

On the farmers’ issues, Azad directly addressed the PM, reminding him of the agitation by the farmers in his Gujarat before the Independen­ce and how the farmers have always won for time immemorial, including during the era of Sardar Patel.

He urged the government to better take back the 3 farm laws and condemned the Republic Day incidents at the Red Fort, seeking strict action against those involved. “Farmers are ours, not of the Congress, but of you and all

of us. We are with you when it comes to fighting against China and Pakistan. But why fight the farmers,” he asked.

“We condemn whatever happened at Red Fort on January 26. Those involved should be given strict punishment. But those who are innocent must not be implicated with false cases as witnessed in the past few days,” Azad said.

“I never heard (ex-PM) AB Vajpayee or any BJP leader (before the Modi govt), who ever demanded J&K should be split into two. There was a demand for a UT in only one district of Ladakh (Leh), not Kargil,” Azad said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India