Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
India

Congress, BJP in war of words over Smriti Irani's qualification

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 28 May, 2014 01:20 PM
    The row over allotment of the human resource development ministry to "non-graduate" Smriti Irani continued Wednesday with the Congress alleging she had misrepresented facts in her election affidavits and the BJP defending the actor-turned-politician.
     
    Congress spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi also said that the party had not targeted Irani personally over her educational qualification but had raised questions about appropriateness of her being given the human resource development portfolio which had once been held by Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad and senior leaders like Karan Singh, V.P. Singh and Murli Manohar Joshi. 
     
    The party asked the Bharatiya Janata Party to explain discrepancies in her affidavits.
     
    Singhvi said that in her affidavit when she was contesting the 2004 Lok Sabha election, Irani had mentioned her qualification as bachelors of arts (BA) which she passed in 1996 from Delhi University's school of correspondence, but in her affidavit for this year's Lok Sabha elections, mentioned her educational qualification as "Bachelor of Commerce Part I, School of Open Learning (Correspondence), University of Delhi - 1994." 
     
    "The first issue is misstatement. Was the affidavit wrong? Only BJP can explain it," he said. 
     
    Incidentally, Irani lost both the Lok Sabha elections. She is at present a member of the Rajya Sabha.
     
    Answering queries, Singhvi said the party was not targeting Irani personally over her educational qualification, but noted that the human resource development minister heads the boards of premier institutions such as the IITs and IIMs.
     
     
    Party spokesman Ajay Maken -- whose tweet: "What a Cabinet of Modi? HRD minister (looking after education) Smriti Irani is not even a graduate! Look at her affidavit at ECI site pg 11!" -- sparked off the controversy, said that he agreed that no qualification was mandatory to be in public life but the party was raising the point about Irani's "appropriateness" for the post.
     
    Congress leader Rashid Alvi told IANS that it was a "fact" that the 38-year-old Irani was not a graduate.
     
    He said there were only 10 ministers in the union cabinet who were either graduates or post-graduates.
     
    "According to my information, there are only 10 graduates or post-graduates among the 23 cabinet ministers. It is unfortunate that the country is going to be run by such a cabinet," he said.
     
    He said though there was no basic qualification required to become a minister, the choice of ministers create an "image of the government".
     
    Bharatiya Janata Party spokesperson Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, however, brushed off the controversy, saying it was borne out of "frustration" within the Congress after its worst election performance with only 44 seats.
     
    "The Congress lost the Lok Sabha polls because of its arrogance, and yet the party is showing no signs to remain humble," Naqvi told IANS.
     
     
    Water Resources Minister Uma Bharti too came out in defence of the BJP vice president.
     
    "What is Sonia Gandhi's qualification?" she asked media persons, countering talk over Irani's apparently "inadequate" educational qualification to head the ministry.
     
    Activist and BJP sympathiser Madhu Kishwar described Irani's appointment as an avoidable "grahan" (eclipse).
     
    "Smriti Irani's appointment not the only one disappointing or controversial but it's like an avoidable grahan on a bright and shining rising sun!" she tweeted Wednesday.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    IM suspects planned to bomb Delhi in 2012 with LeT: Police

    IM suspects planned to bomb Delhi in 2012 with LeT: Police
    Indian Mujahideen suspects Tehsin Akhtar alias Monu and Pakistani national Waqas alias Zia-ur-Rehman were planning to carry out blasts in Delhi in 2012 with the help of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), Delhi Police Tuesday told a court here.

    IM suspects planned to bomb Delhi in 2012 with LeT: Police

    SC says transgenders 'third category', activists term verdict revolutionary

    SC says transgenders 'third category', activists term verdict revolutionary
    Transgenders should be treated as a third category and as a socially and economically backward class entitled to job reservation, the Supreme Court said Tuesday. Activists termed the verdict "revolutionary" but said social acceptance will take longer because of the stigma associated with them.

    SC says transgenders 'third category', activists term verdict revolutionary

    Kejriwal leaves for Varanasi to take on Modi

    Kejriwal leaves for Varanasi to take on Modi
    AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal left Monday evening by train for Varanasi to contest against BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, with hundreds of supporters wishing him the best.

    Kejriwal leaves for Varanasi to take on Modi

    BJP candidate, 30 others injured in Tamil Nadu attack

    BJP candidate, 30 others injured in Tamil Nadu attack
    BJP candidate Muruganandam and at least 30 other people were injured in an attack Monday while they were campaigning in the Thanjavur Lok Sabha constituency in Tamil Nadu, the party said.

    BJP candidate, 30 others injured in Tamil Nadu attack

    A Pakistan where people want Modi as PM

    A Pakistan where people want Modi as PM

    It's true. People of this Pakistan want Narendra Modi to become prime minister of India. ...

    A Pakistan where people want Modi as PM

    Manmohan Singh: A good man let down by the party

    Manmohan Singh: A good man let down by the party
    I have an abiding memory of Manmohan Singh. It goes far back to the days when he was not the prime minister, not even the finance minister, when in the early '90s he took transformational steps to open up and liberalise a collapsing Indian economy and got his name etched in the history of global economics.

    Manmohan Singh: A good man let down by the party