Cash-for-Votes: Nothing wrong in planning sting, says Sushma
Delhi: In an exclusive interview to NDTV, Sushma Swaraj has said that if the BJP did plan a sting to prove that the Congress was willing to buy MPs to survive a trust vote in 2008, there's nothing wrong with that. However, she said that it is incorrect that BJP leaders are guilty of entrapment, and that the party is open to an investigation of its role in what's known as the "cash-for-votes" controversy. Ms Swaraj told NDTV's Barkha Dutt today that she stands by her demand for a CBI inquiry into the cash-for-votes allegation.
In July 2008, hours ahead of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's trust vote, three BJP MPs arrived in Parliament waving notes that they said amounted to three crores. This, they allege, was money that the Congress had offered to them via middlemen to vote in favour of the government.
The matter had disappeared from the political landscape till a WikiLeaks cable leaked last week brought it back into focus. The BJP was galvanized into action and demanded that the Prime Minister explain a scam of which he was "the main beneficiary."
The government's defence lies in a parliamentary committee which investigated the cash-for-votes allegations. The government claims that the committee concluded there was no evidence of bribery. The BJP points out that two members of that committee wanted further investigations. And the three MPs who were allegedly offered the bribe say that no serious attempt has been made by the police or other investigating agencies to question them.
The Opposition's attack has lost some of its bite, however, because of a story that appeared in news magazine Tehelka yesterday. The story alleges that the BJP's senior leadership had sanctioned the sting and that the BJP had deputed their MPs to find buyers to shame the government. Ms Swaraj described the Tehelka piece "as a blatant lie."
In Parliament yesterday, she made a fiery speech, accusing the Prime Minister for citing excuses to let himself off the hook in a series of recent corruption scandals that have shaken his government, including the cash-for-votes scandal, where he said he was not aware of any malpractice within his party. "I concluded my speech with a couplet," she said today, 'and that couplet was very combative...it means you are accountable...don't be wishy-washy...the question is of your leadership."
"Tu idhar udhar ki na baat kar, yeh bata ki qaafila kyon loota; hamein rahzanon se gila nahin, teri rehbari ka sawaal hai. (Don't talk hearsay, tell us why the caravan was looted; we have no grouse against dacoits but it is a question of your leadership)." - Sushma Swaraj had recited as she threw the gauntlet at Dr Manmohan Singh.
The PM also channeled an Urdu couplet in response, which Ms Swaraj describes as a graceful gesture. "His was not combative...that is the beauty of it...it had humour and it was a sort of pleading - 'I admit I am not worthy of your sight...but note my patience and passion.' I found it charming...I did smile. It cooled the tempers," she said.
The Prime Minister had answered Sushma Swaraj in the words of Iqbal - "Maana ki teri deed ke qaabil nahin hoon main; tu mera shouq toh dekh, mera intezaar toh dekh. (I understand that I am not worth your gaze; but look at my keenness, my patience for you)."
It was a similar confrontation with the Prime Minister a few weeks ago that had placed Ms Swaraj bang at the centre of another controversy. In Jammu on an official trip, the Prime Minister said that he accepted full responsibility for appointing PJ Thomas as the country's Chief Vigilance Commissioner - an appointment that was declared invalid by the Supreme Court largely because of a pending corruption case against Mr Thomas. Dr Manmohan Singh selected Mr Thomas in September, over-ruling the objections of Ms Swaraj, who was a member of the selection committee. Mr Thomas' posting turned into political warfare between the government and the Opposition. But when the PM made his statement in Jammu, Ms Swaraj tweeted that the matter should be laid to rest. The rest of her party, however, led by the president, Nitin Gadkari, disagreed, and said the PM would be asked to explain in parliament his reasons for insisting on Mr Thomas' candidacy.
Discussing the alleged divide between her party and her own opinion, Ms Swaraj said, "My response is always based on issues. On that case (after the Jammu statement), I felt the matter should rest. I genuinely felt that. But I was over-ruled by my president. I admit that...so there is no question of divergent views. He said it in so many words at a press conference...I did not feel snubbed...I was not snubbed...I was over-ruled."
Read more at: http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/cash-for-votes-nothing-wrong-in-planning-sting-says-sushma-93913?cp
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