This Article is From Mar 16, 2023

"If Democracy Was Functioning, I Would Be Allowed To Speak": Rahul Gandhi

Asked whether he would respond to the BJP's allegation that he insulted the nation, Rahul Gandhi said: "I will speak inside the House if they allow me to."

Several Ministers have demanded that Rahul Gandhi apologise to the nation

New Delhi:

Rahul Gandhi today said he "hoped" that he would be allowed to speak in parliament on the BJP's allegation that he insulted the country abroad by questioning the state of democracy.

"But I don't think they will let me speak," the Congress leader told reporters, hours after his brief appearance in parliament.

Rahul Gandhi attended Lok Sabha for the first time since the massive row erupted over his comments in London, with at least four Union Ministers demanding his apology in and outside parliament.

"Today, within one minute of my coming to the House, they adjourned it...I went to parliament with the idea of putting what I feel on the floor of the house," he said.

"If the Indian democracy was functioning, I would be able to say my piece in parliament. What you are seeing is a test of the Indian democracy. Whether an MP is going to be given the same space as those four ministers were given when they raised allegations against me," said the Congress leader.

Mr Gandhi said he had spoken with Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla about permission to speak in the house.

"I asked the Speaker for time to speak in the House. It is my right to speak on the floor of the House," he said, claiming that Mr Birla was "noncommittal" and "smiled".

The Congress leader said the row over his London remarks was "just a distraction" from the questions he had raised in his speech in parliament last month. "I have a fundamental question about Prime Minister Narendra Modi's relationship with Gautam Adani. The government and the PM are scared about the Adani issue, therefore this entire controversy has been prepared," he said.

Speaking to NDTV earlier today, Rahul Gandhi denied that he had made any anti-India speech.

On the BJP's allegation that he insulted the nation on foreign soil, the Congress MP said: "I will speak inside the House if they allow me to."

Asked whether he would apologise, Mr Gandhi smiled.

Several Union Ministers have demanded that Mr Gandhi apologise to the nation for his speeches in the UK, seen to be critical of the government.

"The person who speaks the most in this country, and targets the government day and night, says abroad that he does not have the freedom to speak in India," Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju told reporters.

"Rahul Gandhi can sink the Congress, we don't care. But if he tries to harm or insult the nation, we as citizens cannot be silent. Just because the country has rejected the Congress leadership, doesn't mean he can tarnish the nation abroad," he added.

The Law Minister said Rahul Gandhi spoke the language of anti-India forces.

"It is very sad that an MP lowers the prestige of parliament. Anti-India forces all speak the same language. All anti-India gang members talk on same lines. They repeat whatever Rahul Gandhi says," Mr Rijiju railed.

The Congress has ruled out an apology, pointing out that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has often attacked the Congress on his trips abroad.

"I want to ask those who are seeking an apology that Modiji went to five-six countries and there he (Modi) humiliated our country saying it was a sin to be born in India, now these people same people are curbing freedom of expression," Mr Kharge said.

At a lecture at Cambridge University, the Congress MP said the Indian democracy is under pressure and opposition voices are being stifled.

Rahul Gandhi had said, "Everybody knows and it's been in the news a lot that Indian democracy is under pressure and under attack. I am an Opposition leader in India, we are navigating that (Opposition) space. The institutional framework which is required for democracy is Parliament, free press, and the judiciary, just the idea of mobilisation, and moving around all are getting constrained. So, we are facing an attack on the basic structure of Indian democracy."

The Congress and other opposition parties have accused the ruling BJP of trying to deflect attention from the Adani-Hindenburg row and ducking demands for a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) to investigate the allegations of Hindenburg against the Adani Group. The Adani Group has strongly denied allegations of stock fraud and share price manipulation.



(Disclaimer: New Delhi Television is a subsidiary of AMG Media Networks Limited, an Adani Group Company.)
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