Congress alleged "power-brokers" were running amok in Goa after Manohar Parrikar's absence (File Photo)
Highlights
- Sonia Gandhi was neither PM, nor minister, says Congress leader
- Only those holding positions of power should declare illnesses, he said
- They should declare this in public interest, said Randeep Surjewala
Panaji: The cloak of secrecy surrounding the illnesses of Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar and former Congress President Sonia Gandhi are not comparable, Congress National Spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala said in Goa capital Panaji on Saturday.
He said that while Mr Parrikar is a chief minister of a state, Sonia Gandhi was neither a Prime Minister nor was she holding a cabinet post when she suffered from illness.
"Sonia Gandhi was neither the Prime Minister of India, nor was a minister in the cabinet holding a cabinet post (when the illness occurred)," Mr Surjewala told IANS.
Mr Surjewala was responding to a question on whether the Congress, which is demanding a medical bulletin and a public disclosure of Mr Parrikar's health status, had been equally transparent when it came to relaying information about Mrs Gandhi's prolonged illness, when she was Congress president and headed the National Advisory Council that had been set up to advise then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Mr Surjewala said that only those in positions of power, especially as heads of state, should disclose the nature of their affliction in public interest.
"I can have five ailments. I have for example high blood pressure and I take medicine for it, but I had not disclosed it till today, till you asked me. That does not mean that I have to describe every problem that I have in the public domain. It is only when you are holding a position of power and a position of power as the head of the state (that one ought to reveal the nature of illness)," Mr Surjewala said.
The Congress spokesperson, who was in Goa to address a press conference, also alleged that in Mr Parrikar's absence "power-brokers" were running amok and plundering the state's resources, even as he questioned why a regular health bulletin updating the chief minister's medical status was not being released.
Mr Parrikar is suffering from advanced pancreatic cancer and has been in and out of hospitals in Goa, Mumbai, New York and Delhi for nearly nine months. He returned from New Delhi's All-India Institute of Medical Sciences or AIIMS on October 14 and has not moved out of his private residence for any official event since.
Goa's health minister Vishwajit Rane last month conceded that Mr Parrikar was indeed suffering from pancreatic cancer, even though the state government has refused to release a regular medical bulletin detailing Mr Parrikar's health status.
The opposition, as well ruling coalition allies, have been demanding the resignation of the chief minister, claiming that the administration has come to a standstill due to Mr Parrikar's absence.