Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
India

Congress Attacks BJP For Rahul Photo Remark

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Oct, 2015 10:30 AM
    The Congress on Wednesday slammed the BJP after it dubbed Congress leader Rahul Gandhi's visit to a Haryana Dalit family whose two children were burnt to death as "a photo opportunity".
     
    No one indulges in photo opportunities more than Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Congress spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi told the media.
     
    "When the Congress vice president visits the family and tries to extend a healing touch, to add insult to injury, the BJP calls it a photo opportunity," Singhvi said. 
     
    "Is it not an insult to those dead infants to call an extension of a hand of help or even sympathy at this hour of grief as a photo opportunity?"
     
    He said it was the Bharatiya Janata Party which indulged in photo opportunities.
     
    "Narendra Modi uses high-sounding but hollow acronyms - Yoga Day, Mann Ki Baat, Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan... Are these not photo opportunities?" 
     
    The Congress spokesman did not spare the BJP's allies as well as the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) either.
     
    "The country is witnessing a conceited, but a very consistent and a concerted effort at fanning, creating, promoting inter-community and inter-caste tensions for political benefits. 
     
    "Faultlines that had withered or were waning are being deliberately activated not only by the ruling BJP but by also by its so-called Parivar constituents. 
     
    "Those faultlines are being accentuated and heightened and they are being done with a specific and most crude attempt to polarize both communities and castes," he said.
     
    "And they are being done in conspiracy with allies like the Samajwadi party, the PDP, the Akali Dal... The AAP is complicit in this regard."
     
    Asked why he was attacking the AAP, he said: "There is a lot of anguish and anger among the people of Delhi against the AAP. Even they indulge in a lot of high-sounding and hollow remarks."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Defiant Jaswant takes on NaMo, dares BJP to sack him

    Defiant Jaswant takes on NaMo, dares BJP to sack him
    Rebel BJP leader Jaswant Singh Monday publicly took on its prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi after entering the Lok Sabha polls as an independent, saying his conduct betrays arrogance.

    Defiant Jaswant takes on NaMo, dares BJP to sack him

    After Amarinder Congress fields Sunil Jakhar in Punjab

    After Amarinder Congress fields Sunil Jakhar in Punjab
    Continuing its move to field party bigwigs in in Punjab, the Congress Monday announced that it was fielding Sunil Kumar Jakhar, the leader of opposition in state assembly, as its candidate from the state's Ferozepur seat for the Lok Sabha elections.

    After Amarinder Congress fields Sunil Jakhar in Punjab

    RSS trying to break AAP from within: Yogendra Yadav

    RSS trying to break AAP from within: Yogendra Yadav
    The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is using dirty tricks to infiltrate the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), senior party leader Yogendra Yadav said Monday.

    RSS trying to break AAP from within: Yogendra Yadav

    Defiant Jaswant takes on NaMo, dares BJP to sack him

    Defiant Jaswant takes on NaMo, dares BJP to sack him
    Rebel BJP leader Jaswant Singh Monday publicly took on its prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi after entering the Lok Sabha polls as an independent, saying his conduct betrays arrogance.

    Defiant Jaswant takes on NaMo, dares BJP to sack him

    Jaitley, Amarinder in war of words over Sonia

    Jaitley, Amarinder in war of words over Sonia
    What started as trading barbs over who is an "outsider" in the Amritsar Lok Sabha constituency Sunday escalated into a full war of words between rival candidates - BJP's Arun Jaitley and Congress' Amarinder Singh - after the name of Congress president Sonia Gandhi was dragged in.

    Jaitley, Amarinder in war of words over Sonia

    Should the military have a say in governance?

    Should the military have a say in governance?
    In 1992, the Indian Army chief, General Sunith Francis Rodrigues, had to apologise to parliament for suggesting that the armed forces had a stake in India's governance.

    Should the military have a say in governance?