Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

Lalitgate: Sushma Speaks, Congress Attacks Her, Modi

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Aug, 2015 11:05 AM
    External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Thursday made a passionate defence of her role in the Lalit Modi affair, but the Congress tore into her and blamed Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the unending parliament logjam.
     
    Detailing her role for the first time in parliament, the minister -- whose resignation has been sought by the opposition -- sought to give a humanitarian twist to the saga, saying she acted the way she did only because the former IPL chief's wife faced a life threatening situation.
     
    She insisted that she did not recommend to the British government to issue travel documents to Lalit Modi but wanted to help his wife, a cancer patient in Portugal.
     
    In an emotional speech in the Lok Sabha that was devoid of most opposition members, she said the allegations that she recommended British travel documents for Lalit Modi were "wrong and baseless".
     
    "I have not helped Lalit Modi but his wife who is an Indian national, (who is) not involved in any crime. Is it a crime to help a woman like this? If it is a crime, I have committed it. I accept it. If the house wants to give punishment, I am ready.
     
    "If it had been (Congress president) Sonia Gandhi in my place, what she would have done?" she asked, inviting cheers from the treasury benches.
     
    "I never made a recommendation or request to the British government to give travel documents to him."
     
    The minister said she verbally conveyed to the British government that if "it chooses to give travel documents to Lalit Modi, it will not spoil bilateral relationship between the two countries".
     
    In no time, the Congress accused her of impropriety and misuse of office besides a keenness "to help a person wanted by law agencies in India". The party called her statement "hogwash".
     
    "Her statement (in parliament) exposes her," Congress leader Anand Sharma told the media.
     
    "Should a minister be clandestinely arranging or facilitating the issue of travel documents, the request for which was rejected earlier by British authorities?" he asked.
     
    "There was no life threatening situation" to Lalit Modi's wife, he said, adding that Lalit Modi, after getting the British travel document, went on a virtual global tour.
     
    To back its statement, the Congress showed on a projector several file pictures of Modi enjoying himself in tourist havens and partying with male and female friends. 
     
    Sharma said it would have been understandable if Sushma Swaraj had ordered the issue of Indian travel documents to Lalit Modi as he was an Indian national.
     
    "Why intervene voluntarily when the British government and their authorities have not asked the Indian government (whether to issue travel documents to Lalit Modi or not).
     
    "And then to say 'I have made no recommendation', this is ridiculous."
     
    The Congress also targeted Prime Minister Modi, saying he "cannot brazen it out by remaining silent.
     
    "Accountability cannot have dual standards. There cannot be a different rule book for the Modi government and his ministers.
     
    "We in the opposition are duty bound to enforce accountability. It is the PM and his government who are purely responsible for the disruption in parliament.
     
    "The PM is complicit by silence. He is endorsing acts of ... arrogance and obduracy which has caused the logjam in parliament." 
     
    Both houses of parliament have been virtually crippled since the monsoon session began on July 21, with the opposition demanding the resignation of Sushma Swaraj as well as the BJP chief ministers of Rajasthan (Vasundhara Raje) and Madhya Pradesh (Shivraj Singh Chouhan).
     
    Raje is said to have close links with Lalit Modi while Chouhan is being blamed for the Vyapam recruitment scam that has led to around 40 deaths. The Bharatiya Janata Party and the government have said none of them will quit.
     
    Sushma Swaraj said earlier that she had been waiting to respond to charges hurled at her during a debate. "If I do not get a chance to speak, it will be injustice."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Taking IT Route, Haryana Gets Better Of Graft, Touts

    Taking IT Route, Haryana Gets Better Of Graft, Touts
    Revenue or tehsil offices in states are dreaded by most people as they bring to mind images of corruption, harassment and never-ending queues. But in Haryana, thanks to use of information technology (IT), a quiet change is taking place.

    Taking IT Route, Haryana Gets Better Of Graft, Touts

    Baby Survives Falling On To Rail Tracks After Indian Mother Gives Birth In Moving Train's Toilet

    Baby Survives Falling On To Rail Tracks After Indian Mother Gives Birth In Moving Train's Toilet
    A baby boy delivered inside a toilet of a train by a woman slipped through the flush pipe and fell on railway track but survived miraculously in Rajasthan's Hanumangarh district, a railway police official said Monday.

    Baby Survives Falling On To Rail Tracks After Indian Mother Gives Birth In Moving Train's Toilet

    Withdraw 'Objectionable' Fevikwik Ad: Hindu Group

    Withdraw 'Objectionable' Fevikwik Ad: Hindu Group
    The Hindu Janajagruti Samiti Monday demanded immediate withdrawal of the "objectionable" advertisement for an adhesive aired on various TV channels depicting an Indian jawan fixing the shoes of a Pakistani soldier and an apology from the manufacturer for the "extremely tasteless" ad.

    Withdraw 'Objectionable' Fevikwik Ad: Hindu Group

    Entered Politics To Serve The City, Not For Power: Bedi

    Entered Politics To Serve The City, Not For Power: Bedi
    Accepting full responsibility for the BJP's crushing defeat in the Delhi assembly elections, the party's chief ministerial candidate Kiran Bedi Monday said she opted for politics "not for position or power but for serving the city".

    Entered Politics To Serve The City, Not For Power: Bedi

    Roses, Wine And Dine: Indians Celebrate Valentine Day With Fervour

    Roses, Wine And Dine: Indians Celebrate Valentine Day With Fervour
    Couples smiling, walking hand-in-hand, holding bouquets of red roses or bags with gifts and wearing a smile were a common sight across cafes, eateries and streets across India on Valentine's Day, which was celebrated fervently by youngsters Saturday, despite strict warning from Hindu fringe groups.

    Roses, Wine And Dine: Indians Celebrate Valentine Day With Fervour

    Arvind Kejriwal Promises Corruption-free Delhi, End 'VIP Culture'

    Arvind Kejriwal Promises Corruption-free Delhi, End 'VIP Culture'
    Sounding more mature and pragmatic in his second innings, AAP leader and Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal Saturday pledged to make Delhi India's first corruption-free city and end "VIP culture" even as he warned his colleagues against "arrogance" after his party's thumping election win.

    Arvind Kejriwal Promises Corruption-free Delhi, End 'VIP Culture'