Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
India

BJP, Congress Engage In Slugfest Over IC-814 Hijacking

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Jul, 2015 11:58 AM
    The BJP and the Congress on Friday engaged in a political slugfest over former RAW chief A.S. Dulat's claims that IC-814 hijacking case of 1999 was mishandled.
     
    While the Congress sought Prime Minister Narendra Modi's apology over the "goof-up" by the then NDA government in the case, as claimed by Dulat, the Bhartiya Janata Party retorted that all decisions at that time were taken at the highest level.
     
    "If the BJP still does not accept that the NDA government was blissfully soft on terror, then the people of India will never judge them kindly. The BJP has an ingrained habit of brazening out their own misdeeds, which they are again repeating in this (Narendra) Modi sarkar," Congress spokesperson Tom Vadakkan told the media here.
     
    "The Congress demands that the prime minister and the BJP apologise unconditionally to the nation for having aided, abetted and favoured anti-India elements, terrorists and criminals. They should apologise for having ensured that terrorists were released and flown to safe havens in Pakistan so that they continue to bleed India," he said.
     
    Former Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) chief A.S. Dulat on Thursday said no clear instructions were given to police on December 24, 1999, when the hijacked Indian Airlines plane landed in Amritsar, because of which the hijackers took the plane to Kandahar in Afghanistan.
     
    "Dulat's revelations are a severe indictment of the then BJP government (led by Atal Bihari Vajpayee) and establishes that self-styled nationalism of the BJP is guided by extension of help to terrorists and criminals on humanitarian grounds," the Congress spokesperson said.
     
    He added: "All these instances vindicate the stand of the Indian National Congress. All these instances have been in the public domain but the BJP refuses to acknowledge them. They now stand thoroughly exposed by an inside account."
     
    Another Congress spokesperson Ajoy Kumar told the media that Dulat's comments revealed "disturbing facts".
     
    "They (the BJP) have compromised the interests of the country whenever they have been in power. Who was behind these decisions," he asked.
     
    Dulat's book 'Kashmir: The Vajpayee Years' is slated for release shortly.
     
    The BJP hit back, saying the decision to release terrorists was taken at the "highest level" and no question arises of the prime minister's apology regarding 2002 riots.
     
    "On Kandahar, consultations were held at the highest level by senior leaders of the National Democratic Alliance," BJP spokesperson M.J. Akbar said.
     
    On the Congress' demand for the prime minister's apology, Akbar said: "It was a national crisis and in the spirit of the (Atal Bihari) Vajpayee government, consultations were held with all the parties. Everybody was kept in the loop."
     
    "Should those 400-plus Indians have been allowed to die," Akbar asked.
     
    "On Kandahar, the Congress has a very convenient memory...it's regrettable...perhaps they have occasional lapses of amnesia when it suits them," he added.
     
    The opposition party also raked up the post-Godhra riots issue.
     
    "Dulat says that former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee believed that he lost the 2004 general elections in view of the Gujarat riots...Bharat Ratna Vajpayee has clearly condemned...the shameful incidents of 2002," Ajoy Kumar said.
     
    He said it was Vajpayee who reminded Chief Minster Modi to "follow raj dharma".
     
    "Will Narendra Modi respect the words of the Bharat Ratna awardee and apologise to the country for 2002 (Gujarat riots)," the Congress leader asked.
     
    Responding to the remarks, BJP leader M.J. Akbar also demanded an apology from the Congress for raising questions about Modi's integrity, citing Gujarat riots.
     
    "There is no question of the prime minister's apology regarding 2002 riots. He was exonerated in the matter," Akbar said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Centre scraps affidavits, Punjab claims credit

    Centre scraps affidavits, Punjab claims credit
    The central government has asked states to do away with affidavits for government-related work and promote self-attestation of documents....

    Centre scraps affidavits, Punjab claims credit

    Indian nurses now caught in conflict in Libya

    Indian nurses now caught in conflict in Libya
    In a near replay of the incidents in Iraq, large numbers of Indian nurses are caught in spiralling violence in Libya, where rival militant groups seek to control the...

    Indian nurses now caught in conflict in Libya

    Modi-Mantra: India needs to increase farm output

    Modi-Mantra: India needs to increase farm output
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday urged agricultural scientists to work towards the twin objective of increasing food productivity and enabling farmers...

    Modi-Mantra: India needs to increase farm output

    Kejriwal moves back to Kaushambi house

    Kejriwal moves back to Kaushambi house
    AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal Tuesday moved back to his apartment in Kaushambi here, as he had to vacate his Tilak Lane residence before July 31, a party leader said...

    Kejriwal moves back to Kaushambi house

    Indians no longer need visa to visit Reunion island

    Indians no longer need visa to visit Reunion island
    Indians now do not need a visa to visit the French island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean for stays up to 15 days, French Ambassador to India Francois Richier said Tuesday....

    Indians no longer need visa to visit Reunion island

    Teenaged girl gang-raped at gunpoint in Delhi

    Teenaged girl gang-raped at gunpoint in Delhi
    A teenaged girl was gang-raped at gunpoint by five people known to her in a house in the capital here, police said Tuesday....

    Teenaged girl gang-raped at gunpoint in Delhi