This Article is From Dec 09, 2015

'Rahul Gandhi Instrumental in Disrupting Parliament, Must Give Proof': Government

'Rahul Gandhi Instrumental in Disrupting Parliament, Must Give Proof': Government

Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi. (File Photo)

New Delhi: Hitting back at Rahul Gandhi, Government today dared him to give proof in Parliament on his allegations against the government and Prime Ministers Office on the National Herald issue instead of wasting time of the House, after the opposition party stalled proceedings alleging political vendetta.

Soon after the Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi alleged that the National Herald case is "hundred per cent political vendetta coming out of PMO", Union Minister Rajiv Pratap Rudy said Rahul Gandhi "did not have enough courage" to speak in Parliament on the issue.

"He (Rahul) is instrumental in disrupting the House. Court has taken some cognisance against him and Sonia Gandhi. They are trying to become a hero after the charges against them and at the same time they do not have enough courage to come inside the House and say what they are speaking outside to the media.

"We should ask Rahul Gandhi, if he has courage enough, if he has honesty enough, if he has standing as a leader of his political party, he should come to Parliament and give proof of the statement he has made against the judiciary.

"The proof of the statement he has made against the government and the PMO... he should come and give an explanation in the House and the proof of what he is talking," Mr Rudy said.

Union Minister Nitin Gadkari asked Congress to resolve the matter in court as Government and Parliament have nothing to do with it.

"The House or government has nothing got to do with this ('National Herald' case) either directly or indirectly. It's a court decision. Wasting Parliament's time is not good for democracy," he told reporters outside Parliament.

"I would request Congress party to resolve the matter in court and not disrupt Parliament's working which has no relation with it. Neither Parliament nor government has any right to change the court's decision," he said.

Reacting to Congress's allegation of "vendetta politics" by the government, Union Minister Rajyavardhan Rathore said the party is in a way attacking judiciary as the matter lies with the court.

"Who does not know which party has been doing the politics of vendetta for the past so many years. And if they are saying 'vendetta', that means Congress is blaming the judiciary," Mr Rathore said.

Congress leaders, including Congress President Sonia Gandhi and party Vice President Rahul Gandhi, have been summoned by a Delhi court on December 19 on a complaint by BJP's Subramanian Swamy against them for alleged cheating and misappropriation of funds in taking control of the now-defunct National Herald newspaper.
 
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