New Delhi:
Opposition BJP, Left and SP today sought a statement from the Government on the cooperation extended by the US in investigating the role of terror suspect David Coleman Headley in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.
Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitely raised the issue as soon as the House met for the day saying he has given a notice for suspension of the Question Hour to seek a response of the Government on the Headley affair.
The case, he said, has become curious by the day with reports of the Pakistani-origin terror suspect being a double agent and the disappearance and reappearance of the documents he furnished to obtain visa to travel to India.
Even though the FBI had records of Headley prior to 26/11, his name cropped up as one of the masterminds of the Mumbai terror attack only when he landed in FBI lap a year later, he said.
Jaitely wanted the Government to explain what progress the National Investigating Agency (NIA) had made on the Headley case and why his name did not figure in the list of suspects till FBI caught him recently.
He also wanted the Government to explain the extent of cooperation from FBI and on whose behalf Headley was acting.
Brinda Karat (CPI-M) said FBI had full knowledge of the antecedents of Headley and wanted to know the extent of cooperation by the US agency particularly in light of the Foreign Secretary's statement that the US agency was extending full cooperation and the Home Ministry expressing some concern.
"Is there any difference of perception within the Government - between the External Affairs Ministry and the Home Ministry," she asked, demanding that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh should take the House into confidence on the issue.
Amar Singh (SP) wanted to know why the US did not share information on Headley previously and asked the Prime Minister to explain if the US was "cooperating or misleading."
The Prime Minister was present in the House at that time. Chairman Hamid Ansari said the Government would respond at an appropriate time.