Hitting out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi for targeting the Congress and the Gandhi family over the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Friday said what if someone linked the PM with the 2002 riots in Gujarat's Godhra.
"It is wrong of Modi to connect (former prime minister) Rajiv Gandhi with the anti-Sikh riots of 1984. What if someone starts linking Modi with Godhra," he told reporters here.
Singh said it did not behove the prime minister of the country to "stoop" to such levels for winning elections.
He asserted that the involvement of some individuals in the 1984 riots did not mean that Modi could implicate Rajiv Gandhi or the Congress party in it.
"By the same yardstick, Modi should also have been implicated in the Godhra attack," the chief minister said, while asking the prime minister to refrain from "undermining the prestige of his position with such crude and baseless statements".
"Modi should not forget that the names of several BJP and RSS leaders had figured in the 1984 riots FIR," he said, calling for action in accordance with law against all those found responsible for the mayhem unleashed on innocent Sikhs.
"Modi is unnecessarily dragging Rajiv Gandhi's name to court controversies and divert attention, with his lies, from the real issues," Singh said.
Asked about Congress leader Sam Pitroda's reported statement on the 1984 riots, he said, "If Pitroda has actually said this, it is shocking."
Asked about the 1984 riots, Pitroda had reportedly said, "'84 mein hua to hua."
Describing the riots, which took place in the aftermath of then prime minister Indira Gandhi's assassination by her Sikh bodyguards, as a big tragedy and stressing that justice was yet to be meted out to the victims, Singh said, "If some leaders were involved in the riots, they should be punished as per law."
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