• Download mobile app
02 May 2024, Edition - 3215, Thursday

Trending Now

  • 830 voters names go missing in Kavundampalayam constituency
  • If BJP comes to power we shall consider bringing back electoral bonds: Nirmala Sitaraman
  • Monitoring at check posts between Kerala and TN intensified as bird flu gets virulent in Kerala

Whats Hot

Upset Congress Skips Lokpal Meet, Urges “Statesman-Like Conduct” From PM Modi

ndtv.com

Share

NEW DELHI: A top committee including Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Chief Justice of India, meets today on the appointment of an anti-corruption Lokpal but the main opposition Congress has refused to be a part of it, objecting to “special invitee” status in the meeting.

“A more apt and statesman-like conduct is expected from the prime minister of the country,” Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge has written in a sharp letter to PM Modi, refusing the invitation.

Mallikarjun Kharge, who is the Congress’s leader in the Lok Sabha, says the invite reduces a “sacred procedure to political pretense”.

“At the outset, let me state on behalf of myself, my party and the entire opposition that ‘Special Invitee Invitation’ is a concerted effort to exclude the independent voice of the opposition altogether from the selection process of the most important anti-corruption watchdog,” writes Mr Kharge.

Accusing the government of calling the Lokpal meet only to satisfy the Supreme Court, Mr Kharge says: “the conduct of your government only seeks to diminish the spirit and objective of appointment of Lokpal in as much as you seek to deny participation, voice and opinion of the opposition.”

The selection panel includes the Prime Minister, the Chief Justice of India, the Lok Sabha Speaker and an eminent jurist. The rules also call for a leader of opposition, but the Congress, the largest opposition group, doesn’t have enough numbers to make the cut. In 2014, when the BJP came to power, the Congress was reduced to just 44 seats in the Lok Sabha.

Two weeks ago, the top court had asked the centre to submit details on steps it has taken towards appointing a Lokpal, which has been delayed for five years. The court had earlier also said that the anti-corruption body should be set up without delay and the lack of a Leader of Opposition should not hold up the process.

The government had told the court that the Lokpal could not be appointed as there was no Leader of Opposition in the selection panel and a change in law that would allow the Congress – as largest opposition group – to be a member has yet to be approved in parliament.

Amid criticism, the government later made a concession and decided to include the largest opposition party in selection panels not just for the Lokpal but also for CBI chief, by changing the law.

Mr Kharge writes that the government should bring an ordinance when parliament reopens this month.

The law to set up a Lokpal or anti-corruption ombudsman was enacted in 2014 after a nationwide campaign by activist Anna Hazare that included Arvind Kejriwal and Prashant Bhushan.

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

COIMBATORE WEATHER