This Article is From Feb 20, 2013

'Saffron terror' remark controversy: BJP threatens to protest in Parliament, wants Speaker to intervene

'Saffron terror' remark controversy: BJP threatens to protest in Parliament, wants Speaker to intervene
New Delhi: The BJP has made it clear that its attack on Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde, for his "saffron terror" comment will dominate its strategy when the Budget session of Parliament convenes tomorrow.

Party chief Rajnath Singh led workers in a protest march today and they were briefly detained by the police before they could reach Parliament Street. After an all-party meeting called by the Speaker on the eve of the session, Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha and senior BJP leader Sushma Swaraj said she had raised the issue. "Mr Shinde said the BJP and RSS runs terror camps...in that case, I have no right to be the Leader of Parliament, we want the Speaker to address this issue," she said.

At the meeting, the PM hoped to find a "find a constructive solution to all issues." "All political parties have an obligation to ensure smooth passage of the session," he said.  (PM hopes for 'productive' Budget Session)

Rajnath Singh said today that the BJP wants Mr Shinde to apologise for his comments made last month at a Congress conclave in Jaipur. "I appeal to Sonia Gandhi to get the Home Minister to retract his statement and apologise, otherwise we will continue our protest both out on the streets and inside Parliament," he said. Mr Singh said his party would "continue our protest inside Parliament unless the Home Minister is sacked."

The main Opposition party has said that if Mr Shinde does not apologise, they will boycott him in Parliament, which will mean not allowing him to speak at all in either House by disrupting proceedings every time he rises.

Mr Shinde had said in Jaipur last month, "We have got an investigation report that be it the RSS or BJP, their training camps are promoting Hindu terrorism." He later said he meant "saffron terrorism" not "Hindu terrorism."

The BJP's Shinde strategy is a key element of its plans for the Budget session of Parliament that begins tomorrow. It is also part of a larger attempt by the party to regroup its traditional Hindu vote bank. The BJP's ideological mentor, the RSS, has mandated a Hindutva relaunch as part of its action plan for general elections 2014.

The BJP's top leadership met yesterday to discuss the party's strategy to take on the Congress-led government in the Budget Session. Today, they will meet leaders from other parties in the National Democratic Alliance or NDA that the BJP leads, to decide on floor strategy.

The NDA will also leverage the 4000-crore VVIP chopper scandal to attack the government on another count of corruption. It has demanded that the government state who the beneficiaries of alleged kickbacks in the deal are. The BJP has also moved adjournment motions on a host of other issues. It plans to raise drought in states like Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharashtra, allegations against Rajya Sabha chairman PJ Kurien in the Suryanelli rape case and its dissatisfaction with the government's fuel pricing policy.


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