Amit Shah trained his guns at Nehru while replying to a debate on Jammu and Kashmir Reservation Bill.
New Delhi: Opposition parties on Wednesday attacked Home Minister Amit Shah for his remarks against India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, with Congress leaders saying nobody has the right to insult those who fought against British Rule and offered everything to support the freedom struggle.
BJP leaders, however, asserted that whatever Mr Shah said in the Lok Sabha about former PM Nehru is correct, and history has to be told.
Mr Shah on Wednesday blamed Nehru's "two major blunders" -- declaring a ceasefire without winning entire Kashmir and taking the issue to the United Nations -- for the sufferings of the people of Jammu and Kashmir.
The home minister trained his guns at Nehru while replying to a debate in the Lok Sabha on the Jammu and Kashmir Reservation (Amendment) Bill and the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation (Amendment) Bill.
Reacting to Mr Shah's remarks, Congress general secretary and Rajya Sabha MP Jairam Ramesh wrote on X, "Today in the Lok Sabha, the home minister made deliberately provocative and blatantly false statements on Nehru's role in J&K in 1947 and 1948".
"Dr Farooq Abdullah immediately called out the distorian masquerading as a pseudo-historian," he said. Mr Abdullah is National Conference's president and represents Srinagar in the Lower House of Parliament.
"These are tactics to derail the Congress and INDIA's narratives, and I for one will not fall into Mr Shah trap. His office should get him to read Chandrasekhar Dasgupta's masterly book, 'War and Diplomacy in Kashmir' in which many such myths have been exposed," Mr Ramesh added.
Congress MP Manish Tewari described Amit Shah's remarks against Nehru as "absolutely erroneous" and told PTI that "in hindsight with a six by six vision, you can find fault with any decision of the government".
"Ceasefire happened because the then government was advised by the commander-in-chief of the Indian Army General Roy Bucher," he said, asserting that the ceasefire was "inevitable" at that point in time.
Mr Tewari said, "In so far as taking the matter to the United Nations is concerned, let's not forget that the world was emerging from the devastating second world war which had killed millions and millions of people. The atomic bomb had been used for the first time." He said the United Nations was created as an institution in order to end all future wars and India was a signatory to the UN convention even before it became independent.
"Therefore, the government at that point in time sought the intervention of the United Nations to make Pakistan vacate the territory it was illegally occupying, it was not a wrong decision," the Anandpur Sahib MP added.
Congress Rajya Sabha MP and party's Gujarat unit president Shaktisinh Gohil said nobody has the right to make such comments against India's first prime minister who fought against British Rule and offered everything to support the freedom struggle.
"Be it Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Nehru ji, Baba Saheb Ambedkar, they fought against British, offered everything that they had including ancestral property on the feet of Mahatma Gandhi for freedom struggle," he said.
"Nehru and Patel were two sides of the same coin. The comment that he (Amit Shah) has made today is an insult to Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and Nehru ji. Nobody has the right to do so," he said, adding, "Making such comments at this time is an insult to the country, Sardar Patel, Nehru Ji and their policies. Such politics is not good for the country at all".
Congress Rajya Sabha MP Pramod Tiwari slammed Amit Shah for his remarks, saying, "We would not have got freedom, if Pandit Nehru, Mahatma Gandhi and other freedom fighters were not there. What Nehru saved amid those adverse circumstances (in Kashmir), thanks for that," he added.
RSP leader and Lok Sabha member N K Premachandran said it was "quite unfortunate" on the part of central cabinet ministers describing India's first prime minister's "activities as Nehruvian blunders".
"They are saying that these are the mistakes of the then prime minister (Nehru). May be a mistake but using the word blunder means it is a stupid mistake," he said and asked, "Is it the way of addressing the first prime minister of the country, freedom fighter and architect of modern India." "I don't say that it's unparliamentary. Maybe there is no technical defect in it. But at the same time we have to maintain the decorum and have mutual respect for each other, be it is treasury benches or opposition side," Mr Premchandran told PTI.
Mr Abdullah said,"They have always had differences with Nehru. There is nothing new in it. They will never acknowledge Nehru's work. So it keeps happening. This is politics".
BJP leader and Union Minister Giriraj Singh described Amit Shah's remarks about Nehru as correct and claimed that "happiness" has returned in Jammu and Kashmir since the scrapping of Article 370.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)