This Article is From Feb 13, 2014

Pepper spray MP had moved a bill to tackle unruly behaviour

Pepper spray MP had moved a bill to tackle unruly behaviour
New Delhi: In what has to be the irony of ironies, expelled Congress MP L Rajagopal - the man who shot to infamy after he unleashed a can of pepper spray in Lok Sabha today - once wanted stringent steps to curb unruly behaviour in Parliament. Hall of Shame. (Read: MPs vandalize Lok Sabha)

Mr Rajagopal had successfully introduced a private members bill in the Lok Sabha in 2009 to deal with disruptions by MPs and even suggested a mechanism to penalise them.

The Lok Sabha erupted in unprecedented chaos when Mr Rajagopal, an industrialist and opposed to the division of Andhra Pradesh, brought a canister from which he sprayed pepper during noisy protests against the Telangana Bill.

Mr Rajagopal, a two-time Congress MP from Vijaywada, had on July 31, 2009 moved the bill and the motion for its introduction was adopted by the Lok Sabha.

The Disruption of Proceedings of Parliament (Disentitlement of Daily Allowance to Members and Termination of Membership) Bill, 2009 proposed that if a member or a group of them disrupt the house for the third time during the same session, the House may resolve to terminate the membership of such member or a group of members, as the case may be.

The membership of a member or a group of members referred to in the motion shall stand terminated from the day of adoption of the motion by the House, according to the bill's statement of objects and reasons.

The bill also proposed that if proceedings of the House are disrupted by any member or a group of members, as the case may be, leading to its adjournment for a substantial part on that day, no member shall be entitled to receive daily allowance for a day.

"...it is being observed that the proceedings of both the Houses of Parliament are disrupted due to pandemonium and the Houses have to be adjourned for substantial part of the day without transacting any business.

This not only results in loss of precious time of Parliament and public money but also dents the image of Parliament," the bill said.

It said if the proceedings of either House are disrupted and Parliament is not permitted to function and transact the listed business on account of pandemonium, the legislative scrutiny over the Executive is diluted since debates on issues of public importance are withheld.

However, today the same Parliamentarian was in the well of the House where he sprayed pepper after which four MPs had to be taken to hospital for medical attention.  (First pepper spray, then gas masks in Parliament: 10 developments)
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