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BJP has no guts to move no-confidence motion: Govt

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 6:57 AM IST

Going on the offensive, Government today made a stinging attack on the opposition for the washout of the winter session, virtually singling out BJP for paralysing Parliament saying it did "not have the courage" to move a no-confidence motion.

As the month-long session adjourned sine die, a bitter Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal at a press conference took on the opposition squarely, saying BJP's "unholy alliance" with the Left was to destabilise the government.

Especially targeting the BJP, he said it had launched from time to time "a smear campaign" against the Congress by using JPC like the one on the Bofors issue and said the demand for such a probe in the 2G issue was "most untenable".

"My charge against BJP is that they could not have got courage to move a no-confidence motion. They had the ulterior motive of paralysing the government," he shot back when asked to react to BJP veteran L K Advani's charge that government was threatening opposition with a mid-term poll.

At the same time, he indicated that the Government would again hold discussions with the opposition to resolve the deadlock. "In a democracy, dialogue has to continue. We will not mind. But none planned so far......We hope that having gone so far they would see the reason."

He said that the opposition would be responsible if they carry forward the deadlock to the budget session and if the budget was not passed creating a constitutional crisis. "Do they not understand that passage of budget is so necessary for the country?"

He said that since there was "no ground" for having a Joint Parliamentary Committee, the main opposition party could have moved a no confidence motion against the Manmohan Singh Ministry and "we could not have right to oppose" such a move.

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Seeking to puncture the opposition claim that government was violating rules by opposing JPC, he said no rules are being violated. He instead charged the opposition with dealing a "blow" to parliamentary democracy.

"Democracy is subverted by people who are supposed to be the guardians of democracy", he said adding it was the responsibility of the opposition too to see that Parliament functions.

Bansal said, "Never before in the history of Indian Parliament has a complete session being washed out without transacting any business. This is violative of all the rules of business and ethics. It is rather criminal."

He said the opposition was "not interested" in any in-depth probe by the relevant agencies "in the fear that skeletons from the NDA cupboard would come tumbling out" regarding the allocation of spectrum itself.

Dismissing suggestions that the UPA allies have differed with the government on the JPC issue, he said they have not differed with the government decision even if there could be various opinions.

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First Published: Dec 13 2010 | 4:10 PM IST

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