Arab News

Indian PM opens new parliament building amid opposition boycott

Opposition describes inaugurati­on by Narendra Modi ‘direct assault’ on democracy

- Sanjay Kumar New Delhi

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurate­d on Sunday a new parliament building in New Delhi amid a boycott of the ceremony by 20 opposition parties.

The triangle-shaped, four-story building located in the heart of the capital cost nearly $120 million and is part of a controvers­ial $2.8 billion revamp of the capital’s historic center called the Central Vista project.

Modi said the new parliament building was a “reflection of the aspiration­s of new India.”

“The new parliament building will be a testament to the dawn of a self-reliant India. It will be a witness to our journey toward a developed India,” he said at the inaugurati­on ceremony.

“Some moments in the developmen­tal journey of a nation get immortaliz­ed, today is one such day. The new parliament complex will witness the realizatio­n of our developed India resolution.”

Modi also installed the Sengol, or a symbolic scepter, in the legislatur­e’s lower house, a gold-plated object that the government claimed was gifted to India’s first prime minister on the eve of its independen­ce from Great Britain in 1947. The Central Vista project covers new constructi­on of various government offices, including a residence and office for the premier as well as 10 blocks of buildings to house ministries and department­s. The government has stated that the new upgrades were necessary to increase seating capacity and allow for better facilities. The original parliament building, for example, dates to 1927 and had only around 800 seats combined for both the lower and upper house, while the newly inaugurate­d building had room for more than 1,000 seats.

Yet the project has sparked controvers­y since it was first announced, as civil society groups, opposition politician­s, and environmen­talists questioned the cost and need for all-new buildings. Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party has also been facing backlash for sidelining President Droupadi Murmu by asking the PM to inaugurate the building instead. Though the Indian president is a non-elected and non-executive

position, they are considered a ceremonial figurehead as the country’s first citizen and highest constituti­onal authority.

The opposition boycott was sparked by Modi’s decision to “inaugurate the new parliament building by himself,” which national and regional opposition parties said was “not only a grave insult but a direct assault on our democracy.”

A joint statement issued by the opposition parties on Wednesday said: “When the soul of democracy has been sucked out from the parliament, we find no value in a new building.”

Aditya Mukherjee, writer and former professor at Delhi-based Jawaharlal Nehru University, criticized the timing of the project and how it was carried out.

He told Arab News: “The whole project has been mired in controvers­y right from the beginning because the foundation was laid at a time when the whole nation was passing through a deadly second wave of coronaviru­s.

“No consultati­on was held before the foundation stone for the new parliament was laid.”

Sunday’s ceremonial event, which also involved religious rituals and Hindu priests, also came under scrutiny.

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