He also attacked CBI for working with a "particular frame of mind of treating me like an accused" and said the agency's credentials and impartiality are at stake in the case. He, however, said he would cooperate with the agency.
Rawat, who is in the capital since yesterday, met top Congress leaders including Ahmed Patel, political secretary to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, and Ambika Soni, party general secretary and in-charge of party in Uttarakhand. He met Gandhi yesterday along with some of his Cabinet colleagues.
"There is an enormous challenge now to build the state from here. I can't afford to antagonise anyone. We need the Centre's support. I will again urge the Centre that let us forget on what has happened," he said.
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"I wish to meet the Prime Minister around May 15/16. I am myself in a hurry. I am very keen. There are many pending issues. But right now we want that the message should go that Prime Minister cares about Uttarakhand also," he said, seeking his cooperation in taking the state on path of development.
Questioning the CBI which is investigating a sting on him in winning support of MLAs before the trust vote, he said he will cooperate with the investigating agency and his party has also asked him to do so.
Rawat asked CBI to look into various aspects of the sting
including it being carried out in a prohibited area, of toppling an elected government through a conspiracy and with use of money power, besides violation of norms of selling the sting and the angle of blackmailing.
The chief minister also raised questions on his summoning by the CBI before and after the trust vote, saying the agency cannot do so while during a preliminary inquiry.
"I am not bothered about the CBI. I will say CBI is an impartial organisation, but it should look into the issues raised by me. I am waiting that they should handcuff me if they want... Not in Delhi, but before the people of Uttarakhand. I will accept it considering it as 'parsad'," he said, claiming instead of being treated an accused he is actually a victim as his elected government was toppled in a conspiracy.
On a possible reshuffle in his Cabinet, Rawat said, it is secondary and his priority is how to put the state back on path of development and "how to connect the cut lines".
Asked his opinion about Centre-state ties, he said, "I am not the right choice to be asked this question after what I have experienced in the last two months."