Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
India

Congress Demands Sushma's Sacking Over Lalit Modi Link

IANS, 15 Jun, 2015 10:26 AM
    An unrelenting Congress on Monday demanded the sacking of External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj for helping former IPL chief Lalit Modi procure travel documents, and pointed out that she could not have acted without the "direct complicity and approval" of the prime minister.
     
    As the controversy swirled over Sushma Swaraj's role in helping Lalit Modi, who is charged with financial impropriety and has been living in London since 2010, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi demanded that Prime Minister Narendra Modi sack Sushma Swaraj for helping a person accused of money laundering.
     
    "The Modi government only talks about anti-corruption," Gandhi said, adding that Lalit Modi was a symbol of black money.
     
    In a detailed statement, All India Congress Committee (AICC) communications cell in-charge Randeep Singh Surjewala said: "Incontrovertible facts, documents and details of 'Modi Gate Scandal' emerging since yesterday (Sunday) clearly reflect active complicity of not only the External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj but also point towards BJP government aiding and abetting a fugitive of Indian law with tacit approval of Prime Minister Narendra Modi."
     
    Sushma Swaraj on Sunday admitted to helping Lalit Modi to procure documents on "humanitarian grounds" to travel to Portugal for treatment of his cancer-striken wife in July last year.
     
    Surjewala said Lalit Modi, "who is squarely involved in a hawala, betting, match-fixing and money-laundering racket amounting to nearly Rs.700 crore", not only had "a direct association as also client-counsel relationship" with Sushma Swaraj's family but "also appears to have a long standing relationship with" Prime Minister Modi and Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah.
     
    Taking potshots at Prime Minister Modi, who follows a pro-active diplomatic engagement, the Congress said: "For a prime minister who single-handedly runs the foreign ministry with the external affairs minister playing second fiddle, Narendra Modi's complicity in providing favours to a legally established offender and absconder - Lalit Modi - is nothing but open to negative interpretation."
     
     
    It wondered how Sushma Swaraj could have acted on her own "without direct complicity and approval of" Narendra Modi, especially a prime minister who "is known to keep tabs even over the dinners and attire worn by his ministers".
     
    The Congress said that on May 26, 2014, the day the Modi government was sworn in, Indian-origin British MP Keith Vaz wrote to Sarah Rapson, Director of UK Visas and Immigration Department, asking for travel documents to be issued to Lalit Modi, living in London since 2010, for two reasons: A family wedding abroad; and accompanying his wife to undergo cancer treatment.
     
    A few days later, Vaz followed up the case with Lisa Killham, a senior UK Home Office official, and cited two reasons for getting travel documents: The wedding of Lalit Modi's sister; and a meeting with the President of the Seychelles.
     
    The Congress said the important facts that stand out in the e-mail were "(a) Government of India has given a push in writing to the case of Lalit Modi, (b) Someone in government of India is working to find a solution, and (c) He wants to travel first to Malta and then to Portugal."
     
    The Congress posed 11 questions to the government, including why Sushma Swaraj facilitated "fugitive" Lalit Modi's travel from one foreign country to another, instead of insisting on the conditionality that he has to return to India first and submit to Indian authorities.
     
    Surjewala also asked why Sushma Swaraj bypassed the Indian High Commission in Britain in the matter and directly approached the British authorities.
     
    Highlighting a "clear-cut case of 'conflict of interest'," the Congress pointed out that Sushma Swaraj's daughter Bansuri Swaraj was appearing in passport cancellation matters of Lalit Modi before the court.
     
    "Is it not a fact that on grant of travel documents by the UK, accused Lalit Modi thanked husband and daughter of Sushma Swaraj? Is 'conflict of interest', thus, not writ large?" the party asked.
     
     
    Aam Aadmi Party leader Ashutosh said it was "high time Prime Minister Modi realises that Sushma ji cannot continue in this ministry nor any other ministry with serious charges against her".
     
    Sushma Swaraj, in a lone tweet on Monday, attacked a senior journalist from a TV news channel, saying: "Look who is preaching propriety..."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi prevails over saffron traditionalists

    Modi prevails over saffron traditionalists
    The Hindutva fundamentalists may be slowly realising that the Bharatiya Janata Party's victory is unlikely to help their cause as much as they would have liked.

    Modi prevails over saffron traditionalists

    122 Indian Nurses Trapped in Iraq Return Home, don't ever want to go back to Iraq

    122 Indian Nurses Trapped in Iraq Return Home, don't ever want to go back to Iraq
    Ending a tense period, 183 Indians stranded in strife-torn Iraq, including 122 nurses - 46 from Kerala freed by Iraqi insurgents, 52 from Telangana and 24 from Andhra Pradesh - arrived home Saturday to a grand welcome while 200 more were on their way.

    122 Indian Nurses Trapped in Iraq Return Home, don't ever want to go back to Iraq

    Indian nurses' ordeal ends, to return Saturday

    Indian nurses' ordeal ends, to return Saturday
    All 46 Indian women nurses seized by Sunni insurgents in Iraq were freed Friday after intense diplomatic efforts, and were set to return to Kerala Saturday morning.

    Indian nurses' ordeal ends, to return Saturday

    Sukhbir Badal meets Rajnath over SGPC controversy

    Sukhbir Badal meets Rajnath over SGPC controversy
    With Haryana giving clear indications of going ahead to set up a separate Sikh body to manage gurdwaras in the state, Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal chief Sukhbir Singh Badal met union Home Minister Rajnath Singh to seek the central government's intervention in the matter.

    Sukhbir Badal meets Rajnath over SGPC controversy

    In Kashmir, Modi vows to walk Vajpayee's path

    In Kashmir, Modi vows to walk Vajpayee's path
    Making his first visit to Jammu and Kashmir after assuming office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi Friday vowed to pursue Atal Bihari Vajapyee's dream of restoring peace in the troubled state.

    In Kashmir, Modi vows to walk Vajpayee's path

    Wear loin cloth if against Westernism, designer tells Goa minister

    Wear loin cloth if against Westernism, designer tells Goa minister
    The controversy over a Goa cabinet minister's demand to ban mini-skirts and bikinis in order to "protect Goan culture" refuses to die down, with ace fashion designer Wendell Rodricks asking him to to wear a loin cloth to work, skip chillies, tomatoes, potatoes, and stop using a table and chair at work if he believes in shunning Western influences and culture.

    Wear loin cloth if against Westernism, designer tells Goa minister